Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream

Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream | Edible Perspective

This post is sponsored by Frontier Co-op.

If you follow me on snapchat (@edibleash...yes, I'm obsessed and also 32), then you may have seen my 10+ failed attempts at this vegan vanilla waffle. Vegan waffles are not the easiest things to make, especially when you throw non-glutinous flours in the mix. But, I was determined and am so glad I stuck it out. Because now, I think I just may have my new, forever, morning waffle.

I can usually tell when a recipe is doomed after the first try or two. But I knew this waffle had potential from the beginning. The main problem was, it just wouldn't hold together as I opened the waffle maker. The exterior was golden and crispy, the flavor was spot-on, it was made with nutrient dense flours, but it just wouldn't hold. So there I stood, trial after trial, scraping waffle bits out of every crevice of the waffle maker, eating most of them and pondering my next attempt. It drove me batty. But this persistence that sometimes comes over me when creating new recipes, is where I feel my true sense of purpose in the kitchen.

I jumped around from adding things like arrowroot starch, psyllium husks, and flax, hoping something would stick. Literally. While a few worked okay, the texture just wasn't what I was after. During these trials, I also started playing around with aquafaba, a new to me cooking ingredient. It sounds completely crazy, but aquafaba is simply the liquid inside of a can of beans (typically chickpeas or white bean liquid). You know, the stuff you drain away and never use! I recently heard this can be used as a vegan egg replacer and figured it was worth a shot to try. While I can't say it works just like an egg in this recipe, it definitely seemed to help keep this waffle together and maybe also help lend a crispier texture (not positive on that). I actually think it's more useful as an egg-white replacer, as it can literally be whisked into meringue....made of bean liquid...insane.

What I figured out to be the most crucial aspects to this recipe were, creating a thick but still pourable batter and thoroughly greasing your waffle iron with cooking spray. The aquafaba probably helped a bit, too. 

With a generous pour of Frontier Co-op's organic vanilla extract, a 1/2 scraped vanilla bean pod, and a few dashes of their cinnamon, this waffle has the perfect flavor profile. There's a little banana that sneaks in there as well, that adds sweetness, flavor, and moisture. 

Now let's move on to the vanilla maple cashew cream. Actually, I think the photos of the cream will tell you everything you need to know. Only thing you have left to do is start cooking. Seriously, get on it right now.

Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream | Edible Perspective

(whisked aquafaba below)

Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream | Edible Perspective
Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream | Edible Perspective
Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream | Edible Perspective
Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream | Edible Perspective

Print Recipe!

Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream

gluten-free, vegan // yields 2, 6-inch Belgium waffles

vegan vanilla waffles:

  • 1/2 cup gluten-free oat flour
  • 1/4 cup + 2 tablespoons sorghum flour
  • 2 tablespoons almond flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • few dashes of cinnamon
  • 1/3 cup well-mashed, ripe banana
  • 2 tablespoons unsweetened vanilla almond milk (or milk of choosing)
  • 2 tablespoons melted, unrefined coconut oil
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 1/2 vanilla bean pod, seeds scraped
  • 1/4 cup + 2 tablespoons aquafaba (drained liquid from canned or boxed chickpeas)

vanilla maple cashew cream:

  • 1 cup raw cashews, soaked overnight
  • 1 1/2 inches vanilla bean (cut to size, but not scraped)
  • 6-10 tablespoons unsweetened vanilla almond milk
  • 2-4 tablespoons maple syrup
  • pinch of fine grain sea salt

Preheat your waffle maker to medium.

Mix together flours, baking powder, and cinnamon. In the bowl you mashed your banana in, add the milk, oil, vanilla, and vanilla beans. Mix together well. Add the wet to the dry and stir a few times. (It will still be very dry.)

In another bowl, rapidly whisk the aquafaba until very foamy on top. Pour over the flour mixture and gently stir until fully combined. (The batter will be thick and slowly pourable. It should not be runny.)

Thoroughly coat your waffle iron with cooking spray.

Pour half the batter in the center of your waffle iron and clamp down. Cook for 1 - 1 1/2 cycles. (1 1/2 cycles works best for my waffle maker to have crispy edges and a tender but cooked interior.) Carefully remove the waffle, coat with oil again, and cook the next waffle. 

While the waffles are cooking, place cashew cream ingredients in your blender. Start with 6tbsp milk + 2tbsp maple. Turn on and work to high until fully smooth (about 30-60 second). Add more milk to thin out and maple to sweeten as needed. Mixture will thicken as it sits.


Notes:

  • Sub other flours at your own risk.
  • I've found cooking spray to work the best to coat the waffle iron, as opposed to brushing on oil. With vegan and especially vegan/GF waffles, this is an absolute necessity to prevent sticking and the waffle pulling apart.
  • If your vanilla bean seems dried out, cut the 1 1/2-inch piece and let it soak with your cashews overnight.
  • For a quick-soak method for the cashews, place cashews in a small pot and cover with water. Bring to a boil, remove from the heat, and cover with a tight fitting lid. Let soak for 1 hour. You can also add the vanilla bean to this when you remove from the heat.
  • I used 3 tablespoons maple and just over 1/2 cup milk for the cashew cream, for a lightly sweetened and fairly thick mixture.

 

Vegan Vanilla Waffles with Vanilla Maple Cashew Cream | Edible Perspective

I hope these are your new, forever waffles, too.

Enjoy!

Ashley

Today's post is sponsored by Frontier Co-op, and I received compensation for writing this post. Opinions are always my own. If I didn't love it, you wouldn't hear about it. Thanks for your continued support!

Chocolate Cinnamon Cake with Sweet Pecan Glaze

If you've already consumed a few too many cookies and/or slices of pie, I've got you covered with this chocolate cinnamon cake with sweet pecan glaze. It's everything you've ever wanted in a holiday dessert!

This post is sponsored by Bob's Red Mill.

Chocolate Cinnamon Cake with Sweet Pecan Glaze | edibleperspective.com

I feel like cake totally takes the backseat during the holiday season. Why is that? Maybe they look weird without birthday candles? Maybe people find more comfort in cookies and pies and fruitcake (<-- joke)? Maybe cake feels somewhat too perfect for this season with it's crisp, frosted edges? 

Whatever the reason may be, I've tried to solve them all with this cake. It has an extra dose of comfort from the cinnamon and molasses. It also gives off a bit more rustic + casual feel with its 1-layer, glaze-topped presentation. 

Word to the wise. If any dessert you make turns out a bit messier than expected, calling it "rustic" makes everything okay. 

Bob's Red Mill gluten-free flours + coconut sugar for a Chocolate Cinnamon Cake recipe | edibleperspective.com

In this cake you'll find a few of my very favorite gluten-free flours from Bob's Red Mill. I've been using their flours for longer than I can remember. I still can't get over the variety of flours they have and how many of them are gluten-free. The quality of their products never disappoint, and I kind of have a thing for their displays in stores. It must be the architect/designer in me, but the grid of BRM bags stacked on shelf after shelf always makes me way too excited.

Chocolate Cinnamon Cake with Sweet Pecan Glaze perfect for your holiday dessert table! | edibleperspective.com

Sorghum flour is one I've been experimenting with lately, as it helps add a lighter texture to gluten-free baked goods. I love the nuttiness from the almond flour and also the moisture and richness it adds to this cake and other baked goods. Oat flour rounds this group out, adding even more nutty flavor with a hint of sweetness. 

Gluten-free Chocolate Cinnamon Cake with Sweet Pecan Glaze | edibleperspective.com

And now for the topping. Can we just take a moment here?

Sweet Pecan Glaze cake topping | edibleperspective.com

It pretty much tastes like a caramel glaze, thanks to the out of control amazing flavor from coconut sugar. Have you tried coconut sugar yet? If not, you must!

This topping comes together in just a few minutes and is way easier to pour all over top than it is to frost a cake.

Plus it's warm.

And crunchy.

And it would be good as a topping on basically anything. 

Or eaten with a spoon.

Chocolate Cinnamon Cake with Sweet Pecan Glaze | edibleperspective.com

Print Recipe!

heavily adapted from Lindsey + Sarah

CHOCOLATE CINNAMON CAKE WITH SWEET PECAN GLAZE

gluten-free, dairy-free // yields 8 slices

for the cake:

  • 1/2 cup + 1 tablespoon coconut sugar
  • 1/3 cup sorghum flour
  • 1/3 cup gluten-free oat flour
  • 1/3 cup blanched almond flour
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon
  • 1 1/2 large eggs
  • 3/4 cup + 1 tablespoon light (canned) coconut milk
  • 1/4 cup unrefined coconut oil, melted
  • 2 tablespoons blackstrap molasses

for the glaze:

  • 1/2 cup chopped pecans
  • 1/2 cup powdered coconut sugar (see notes for instructions)
  • 3 tablespoons unsweetened almond milk
  • 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
  • pinch of salt

Preheat your oven to 350° and thoroughly grease an 8-inch round pan with coconut oil.

Stir all dry cake ingredients in a large mixing bowl, until no clumps remain from the coconut sugar. In a medium bowl whisk the eggs then whisk in the milk. Add the molasses to the melted coconut oil then pour into the milk mixture and whisk to combine. Pour into the flour mixture and whisk until you no longer see dry flour. Pour into the pan and place in the oven for 45-55min, until a toothpick comes out nearly clean (it should feel slightly sticky).

Let cool in the pan for 30 minutes. Slide a thin spatula around the edge of the pan and gently nudge the cake with your spatula in a few places to loosen. Place a hand gently on the top of the cake and flip to release. Gently place upright on a cooling rack until fully cooled.

While the cake cools, place pecans in a dry pan over medium heat. Toast for about 6-8 minutes until fragrant and just starting to brown. Stir frequently. Remove nuts from heat.

Just before serving place nuts back in the pan over low heat. Stir the milk, powdered coconut sugar, cinnamon, and salt in a small bowl until smooth. Pour into the pan with the nuts and stir until heated through. Slice cake on a large plate and pour the glaze overtop and serve immediately. Or, slice cake and serve with glaze on the side.

Notes:

I used Bob's Red Mill coconut sugar, sorghum flour, GF oat flour, and almond flour in this recipe.

To make powdered coconut sugar: Place 1 cup coconut sugar + 1 tablespoon arrowroot starch (or cornstarch) in your blender. Blend on low working to high until powdery. Scrape corners and bottom of blender and blend again if needed.

Feel free to leave the cinnamon out if desired and sub honey instead of blackstrap molasses for a more traditional chocolate cake flavor. You can also use refined coconut oil if you'd like zero coconut flavor.

Chocolate Cinnamon Cake with Sweet Pecan Glaze, totally gluten-free! | edibleperspective.com

Happy Friday!

Cake me.

Ashley

Today’s post is sponsored by Bob's Red Mill. Product opinions are always my own. If I didn’t love it, you wouldn’t hear about it. I truly appreciate your continued support!