Vegan carrot cupcakes with cashew frosting
Vegan carrot cupcakes with cashew frosting
Today’s recipe is another autumn classic, which I have been planning on making for a while – deliciously moist carrot cupcakes fragrant with spices and topped with luscious and pillowy cashew cream. I’ve dragged my feet as I was worried that they may sabotage a goal I’ve set myself in my personal life, but I have worked out a way to deal with it.
Inspired by a chat with my therapist, I have been on a journey of honouring commitments to myself a little more lately and I’m learning to set myself small and tangible goals – something I have not grown up with really. The goal I’m working on right now is to get fitter and to lose just over half a stone (or 3.15 kg for the metric minded amongst you) by the end of the year. It’s something I have promised myself countless times and I have let myself down every single time. This time I really want to prove to myself that I can achieve a goal if I focus on it and approach it in the right way.
While it is certainly far more challenging when making cupcakes is in your job description (that’s been a handy excuse since I started this blog), I know it is about changing my mindset and not resigning myself to the status quo or changing profession again. The truth is that I’ve been an emotional eater my whole life and that mindless instinct to grab one, another and maybe another half of a cupcake or a handful of nuts or some photoshoot leftovers is something I have felt powerless to stop, until now. I’ve always completely felt owned by that urge until after one of my therapy sessions my mindset has started to shift. Little by little, I am slowly getting better at stopping myself from opening that fridge / cupboard door. It’s like they say, it’s a muscle that you can train. The more I say ‘no’ to myself when I catch myself wanting to eat for the wrong reasons (sadness, frustration, loneliness or because I hate something going to waste), the more I am able to do it. It’s really freeing and empowering.
Aside from working on my emotional eating, I’ve also committed to my daily exercise a bit more seriously. I keep a calendar pinned to my wall and I aim for 40-50 minutes of exercise 6 times a week. It’s been almost 4 weeks since I embarked on this ‘project’ and I can see my body start to change, which is very motivating. I feel better about myself and about my ability to change things I don’t like. I am more in control. It feels good.
I was careful to set a realistic goal and quite far into the future as I don’t want to do anything too drastic – it will only make me throw in the towel sooner or later. I want to make very measured, incremental progress that is sustainable and which will allow me to weed out some bad habits I have gotten myself into over the years. I want to take this opportunity to teach myself to be consistent and patient – something I did not grow up around.
Part of the reason why I am telling you all this is so that I can feel accountable but also to let you know that if you face similar food struggles that seem to own you, you are so not alone. So anyway, don’t worry, I won’t stop making sweet desserts as I really love baking. I will learn to be more mindful and more in control around them. These cupcakes are delicious (I did have one and gave the rest away), easy to make and if you don’t want to bother with making the cream, simply stir some nuts (walnuts or pecans would be my choice) through the batter for some added texture. I hope that they will brighten up your weekend if you decide to make them.
WET INGREDIENTS
- 200 ml / ¾ cup + 2 tbsp maple syrup or other liquid sweetener
- 60 ml / ¼ cup smooth tahini
- 180 ml / ¾ cup smooth apple sauce
- 220 g / 7¾ oz coarsely grated carrot (2 cups, lightly packed)
DRY INGREDIENTS
- 250 g / 2 cups all purpose flour or GF all purpose flour mix (I use this one)
- ¾ tsp baking soda
- 1¼ tsp baking powder
- 1½ tsp cinnamon + ½ tsp cardamom OR 2 tsp cinnamon
- pinch of salt
CASHEW FROSTING
- 60 ml / ¼ cup almond milk
- 105 ml / 7 tbsp maple syrup, adjust to taste
- 45 ml / 3 tbsp lemon juice
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
- 250 g / 2 cups raw cashews, soaked in boiling water for 20 minutes
- 1 tbsp agar powder (3 tbsp agar agar flakes)* + 90 ml / 6 tbsp almond milk
- Set the oven to 180° C / 355° C. Line a standard 12 hole muffin tin with paper liners or line the bottoms with circles of baking paper and grease the sides generously.
- In a large bowl mix together maple syrup, tahini and apple sauce until well combined.
- Next, mix in grated carrots.
- Place a sieve over the bowl with wet ingredients and sift all the dry ingredients through it. Fold the dry ingredients into the wet ones using a spatula and a gentle clockwise folding motion until no flour pockets remain. If you use wheat flour, be careful not to over mix.
- Divide the batter evenly between 12 muffin holes. Bake for about 21 minutes (they are done when a toothpick comes out fairly clean). Let the muffins cool down completely before removing from the tin and icing.
- Once cool, remove from the tin and decorate with the frosting. I also decorated with a light sprinkle of cinnamon and orange zest.
CASHEW FROSTING
- Place all the liquids at the bottom of your blender. Start off with 3 tbsp of plant milk, add the 4th one later (if needed).
- Add about half of the drained and rinsed cashews. Blend until smooth, adding more cashews as the mixture gets thicker and thicker.
- At some point, the mixture will become very thick and heavy and your blender may struggle to turn. To remedy this, start making circles on the surface of your mixture (in the direction of the turning blades) with a spatula to prevent air pockets forming under the mixture’s surface. Be careful not to dip the spatula in too deep as you don’t want to accidentally touch the turning blades. If you follow the technique I’ve described above, there is enough moisture in this recipe not to have to use any more liquid, which means you’ll end up with a smooth, creamy and thick frosting.
- The mixture will thicken a little after it’s been well refrigerated but to be able to pipe it, I recommend adding agar agar as a firming agent. Activate agar agar according to the instructions on the packet. I recommend using powder as it’s 3 times more potent than flakes and easier to activate – you need to rehydrate it in liquid (almond milk in this case) for 10-15 minutes first before bringing to the boil. Flakes need a lot of simmering and I found that they never fully dissolve.
- Once activated, add agar agar to the frosting and blend well and then give it another blend before putting it into the piping bag so that you break any lumps. I like to transfer it to a bowl and give it a really good whisk with a wire whisk to make sure the icing is smooth before I put it into my piping bag.
It's so hard to find gluten-free, vegan AND sugar-free things online. So so happy this worked and the recipe is rather forgiving so there's room to even lessen the sugar in here more.
Flavour:
Fruity and a good level of sweetness. I saw others make this with less maple syrup though, which I'm going to try on my next batch, and rather sub more applesauce or add a mashed banana.
Texture:
Fluffy and moist, despite baking it around 25-30 minutes instead of the prescribed 21 minutes. I could have really gotten away with baking it shorter, I think it would have given even better results.
Frosting:
(Bear in mind that I rushed this part.)
I made the cashew frosting the day before and achieved a wonderful smooth consistency and flavour. Had to use much more liquid (almond milk) as I used dates to sweeten it and not maple syrup.
I struggled to get as smooth a consistency after adding the agar agar (first time every trying it), and found that I lost my flavour balance after adding it too.
I piped it in a rush but it held its form!
I'd experiment more with agar agar to get that Instagrammable-baking-for-someone-look, but honestly would have been perfect to just top it as is for a more rustic-feel cupcake.
Anyway, trying your banana bread after this. So stoked it turned out so well! Thank you!
Re: sugar
Yes, I just saw from the reviews that others had success with adding more applesauce or even a mashed banana to lessen the maple syrup, so I figured I'd try it, and see how much it will affect the texture. I wouldn't want to lose the texture because it was superb, but at the same time, trying to reduce sugar and live gluten-free and vegan comes with its sacrifices haha! That said, I'm open to any other suggestions to substitute -- maybe agave syrup?
I'm slowly getting more confident in vegan gluten-free baking (your blog is helping so much), so definitely looking into get a blender as badass as that one soon. Thank you for the suggestion!
I think you didn't mean to reply to Laureen's comment? If the question is for me, I used a no-brand piping equipment that I purchased from a small store when living on a Greek island. The piping nozzle I used is plain 1.25 cm / 0.5" nozzle though. Hope that helps. Ania
I don't think it will work that well unfortunately. You want to use soaked cashews blended (with extra moisture) until they get all smooth and creamy. Grinding them will give you a gritty texture of a nut meal, which is not what you want in a frosting. Hope this helps! Ania
Can I make these cup cakes in advance? If so how long do you think they'd stay fresh in an air tight container? Or would you recommend freezing them?
Also would it work with oat or coconut milk instead of almond?
Thank you, they look delicious!
The cakes themselves should stay moist for 2-3 days in an air-tight container, you could also freeze them (but I would without the frosting would be better). Yes, oat milk will work just as well. Hope this helps! Ania
This looks amazing and I’m just wondering what I can use instead of tahini and apple sauce?
Thanks so much xx
That would be a lot of tahini as the recipe already calls for 1/4 cup of it so it would use 1/2 cup tahini intotal and 1/2 cup cup yoghurt or plant milk unless you really love tahini flavour :) x Ania
Apologies for a late reply, I was on holidays... You could try but I don't think you will quite get the same amount of firmness. Agar agar is akin to gelatine so it's far more potent. However, if you don't particularly care about being able to pipe the frosting, then arrowroot should suffice definitely. Hope this helps! Ania
I didn't make the frosting, as I did not have any cashews [like mentioned earlier, I just needed to get rid of some carrots before they went bad], but would love to make it again with frosting. I'm sure it takes the muffin up to a whole other level!
These muffins are perfect, I could’t stop mysefl from eating all of them 😍
Now I am wiling to try one of Uour cake recipes for my baby boys 1st birthday. We both can’t consume dairy products and You are my only hope for vegan as well as tasty and correct recipe🥰