This will be our first major holiday eating real food and Paleo. Not only will I be cooking for my husband and mom, but my brother-in-law and his girlfriend are coming in from out of town. My husband and mom are worried that I'm going to ruin one of their favorite holiday meals (and scare away the girlfriend with my "crazy" eating habits:)). Oh, ye of little faith... At any rate, in order to allay their fears, I'm testing possible recipes. Starting backwards with dessert, I present to you: Chocolate Coconut Pots de Creme Pie! I was actually going for a chocolate cream pie, which is what I made for Thanksgiving in a former life (it was one of those "healthy" pies -- low fat, etc.). But, all of the cream recipes I found (and there was a lot of time searching on the internet) were made with cornstarch (and quite a lot, at that)...an ingredient I try to avoid. So, instead, I took a french chocolate pudding mixture (pots de creme) and added in a few ingredients from a traditional cream pie (ghee [well, okay, usually butter, but dairy doesn't agree with me...so ghee it is], and vanilla). Simply divine, if I do say so myself:)
[A side note here: although I've done my best by using real food and/or high quality ingredients, this should still be considered a treat or special occasion food. And, if you are like me and still working on your body composition, take it easy on the pie. Eat as much high-quality meat and veggies as you can first, then savor and enjoy your slice of pie, each delicious bite by delicious bite -- with absolutely no regrets. I hope that this is sufficiently decadent that one small piece will prove satisfactory.]
Pudding Ingredients:
- 2 cups coconut cream (the cream portion of the canned coconut milk (don't shake the can!) -- save the remaining "water" for another use; watch that your coconut milk doesn't have a lot of additional "gunk")
- 6 (pastured) egg yolks (save the egg whites for another use...or make a meringue for this pie)
- 9 ounces extremely high quality chocolate, finely chopped
- 2 Tbs ghee
- 1 tsp vanilla
Crust Ingredients:
- 1 cup soaked nuts of your choice (I used hazelnuts)
- 1 cup unsweetened shredded coconut
- 1/4 cup melted coconut oil
- 2 Tbs chocolate chips (I used these ones, which are dairy-,soy-, and gluten-free)
Directions:
First, start with the pudding.
- In a medium saucepan, bring the coconut milk to a simmer over moderately high heat.
- Meanwhile, in a small bowl, whisk the egg yolks until combined.
- Slowly wisk in about 1/2 cup of the hot milk to temper the egg yolks, then transfer the mixture to the saucepan. [Take your time with this step -- you do NOT want scrambled eggs!]
- Cook the custard over moderate heat, whisking constantly, until mixture is slightly thick, about 2 minutes or so.
- Add the chocolate, ghee, and vanilla, then remove the saucepan from the heat.
- Stir until the chocolate is completely melted, then strain the mixture through a fine sieve into a bowl.
- Return mixture to the saucepan. Return the saucepan to the stove over low heat and stir until mixture is fairly thick (for me, this took about 25 minutes or so).
- Pour the chocolate pudding into a small bowl, place plastic wrap or natural wax paper on the surface of the pudding (to prevent a "skin" from forming) and refrigerate until the pudding is chilled, at least 6 hours or overnight. [If, after chilling, your pudding has gotten too thick, simply heat it gently with a water bath or a few seconds in the microwave until desired consistency is reached.]
Next, make the pie crust.
- Preheat oven to 325 degrees F.
- Pulverize the nuts in your food processor until crumbs are formed (not quite a flour).
- Add in coconut flakes and melted oil. Pulse a few more times.
- Melt chocolate chips and add to the mixture. Pulse a few times until chocolate is mixed.
- Press mixture into a pie pan.
- Bake for 20-25 minutes.
- Let cool.
Finally, ready to eat.
- Pour pudding mixture into the crust.
- Serve and enjoy. [Optional: Homemade whipped coconut cream on top.
Part of Real Food Wednesday by Kelly the Kitchen Kop, Pennywise Platter by the Nourishing Gourmet, and Fight Back Friday by the Food Renegade.
Chocolate Avocado Pudding is good also.
ReplyDeleteI've been meaning to give that one a try!
ReplyDeleteLOL! I'm sure whatever you make will taste amazeballs. I brought paleo cabbage rolls and pumpkin pie up to Cold Lake, AB for the famned damily Canadian Thanksgiving and no one knew the difference.
ReplyDeleteWhen in doubt, add bacon. Bacon makes everything yummy.
Bacon...I love bacon...
ReplyDeleteI am sharing this with a friend--YUM!
ReplyDelete