Ingredients
Adapted from MarthaStewart.com
1 Large Butternut Squash (about 1-2/3 cups to 2 cups)
2 eggs worth of Ener-G or Smash up a banana and 1/4 cup applesauce
1 tsp vanilla extract
3/4 cup agave nectar
1/2 Cup Softened Vegan Butter (earth balance)
1 Tbsp Chia Seeds
1/4 tsp Salt
1/4 tsp Pumpkin Spice
1/4 tsp Nutmeg
1/2 tsp Ground Ginger
1 tsp Cinnamon
1 tsp Baking Soda
1 tsp Baking Powder
2 Cups Gluten-free Flour (I suggest something neutral like brown rice flour or regular flour if you’re okay with gluten)
Directions
1. Preheat oven to 400º degrees. Wash, dry and cut the squash in half length wise and remove seeds and place on a baking sheet. Brush on some extra virgin olive oil. Bake for about an hour. Check to see if the squash is done by piercing it with a fork.
2. Scoop the squash out, allow to cool and puree in your food processor. Set aside.
3. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, chia seeds, baking soda & powder, salt, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and pumpkin spice and set aside.
4. In a large bowl, whisk together the agave, vanilla, eggs substitute and butter. Add the dry ingredients and whisk until smooth. Then whisk in the butternut squash puree. My batter was a little dry so I added a little almond milk and Organic canned pumpkin.
5. Prepare your muffin pan and add the batter a little over halfway. I made 12 cupcakes, you can make more. Bake at 350º for 18 minutes. Insert a toothpick in the center and check to see if it comes out clean.
That’s it! Allow to cool and then smother with pumpkin butter, almond butter or just eat plain! Enjoy!!!
Ingredients:

*1 1/2 cups extra virgin coconut oil, melted
*3/4 C hemp butter
*1/2 C ZSweet (see bottom of post)
*1 teaspoon peppermint extract
*3 drops of liquid stevia peppermint
*3 drops of liquid stevia chocolate
*1/4 C agave
*3/4 C vegan carob chips (melted) or powder
*1/2 C raw cacao nibs
*1/2 C hemp butter
*1/4 C agave
*1/4 C powdered ZSweet
*2 drops of liquid stevia peppermint
Line mini cup cake tins with paper liners. Melt coconut oil by placing jar under hot water. when coconut oil turns to a liquid, pour the oil in medium bowl. Slowly whisk in hemp butter until smooth.
Whisk ZSweet into wet batter. Add in peppermint extract, liquid stevias, and agave one at a time and blend.
Slowly stir in the carob and cacao powder a spoonful at a time. Stir raw cacao nibs one at a time. Batter should run off the spoon easily, but not too runny.
in a small bowl, mix together hemp butter and agave.
Add ZSweet and Liquid stevia and mix. with two spoons, drop a small teaspoon full of filling into prepared paper liners.
Spoon a tablespoon full of prepared batter on top of the filling. Freeze for 15 minutes. Store in the freezer.
Yield: 50 candies
A fellow LA vegan chef, Kelly Keough, introduced me to ZSweet. This recipe was my first time experimenting with the calorie free sugar substitute, and to be honest I didn’t taste any difference. I am going to keep experimenting with it and let you know my thoughts! So far, so good!
for the layers:
*1 1/2 C Pure canned pumpkin (not pumpkin pie filling) I like Trader Joes Organic canned pumpkin
1. Prepare the brown rice lasagna according to the box instructions, until al dente (firm, not hard)
2. For the pumpkin sauce, mix pumpkin, egg replacer and 1/4 C almond milk. Then mix in nutmeg, salt, pepper and sage.
3. For the mock ricotta cheese:
In your high powered blender, blend mac nuts, almonds, water, 1 tsp of salt, and apple cider vinegar. This will take about 7-8 minutes. Blend until very smooth.
Add the rest of the almonds, 1/4 c at a time, waiting until they are finely ground and fully incorporated. Taste and add more salt, if desired.
Blend until smooth, with a very slightly grainy texture (It should NOT be gritty). You may want to finish this in your food processor (unless you have a great blender).
4. Make the “cream” sauce by melting the butter on low heat. When it’s melted, whisk in tapioca starch, then remove from heat. Slowly whisk in almond milk, then turn the heat back on and whisk constantly until the consistency is thickened enough to coat a spoon. (about 3-5 minutes)
5. Begin layering all the ingredients. Start with a small amount of the pumpkin sauce to layer on the casserole dish and to act as a non stick ingredient. Then add strips of lasagna. Then pumpkin sauce, then mock ricotta cheese. Add a layer of fresh spinach leaves. Then
drizzle the cream sauce on top.
Repeat the layers until you reach the top of the casserole dish. Sprinkle the nutritional yeast on top for a mock parmesan flavor.
6. Bake at 400 degrees for about 30 minutes. Remove from oven, let sit for 10 minutes and serve warm.
7. Enjoy your delicious lasagna and store the leftovers or have a big meal and share with friends (with wine!!)!

The full interview can be found on the Inspiral website, where I designed their new raw and vegan full menu! I wish they were closer!!! I miss their desserts BADLY
(vegan tiramisu anyone!?! eek!) Full Interview: Click Here
1. take all ingredients for the crust and mix in the food processor. Once they are combined, take the filling and push it into a pie/tart pan with your fingers. (the best kinds are the ones that have a removable bottom) Chill in the fridge for an hour or freezer for 30 minutes.
2. Mix the filling ingredients and add on top of the filling. Put back in the fridge or freezer for at least an hour. Viola!
You’ll never know (or anyone else) that this is completely gluten-free, vegan, dairy-free and HEALTHY for you! Cacao is the highest ranked antioxidant in the world!
*Top with raspberries, strawberries and/or nuts and drizzles of cacao! (an easy cacao topping is mixing cacao powder and agave with a spoon until it’s runny)
I spent a few months during the summer designing a smoothie menu for a new vegan and vegetarian cafe in Brentwood, CA called Rivva. I tried to really think about who the clientele would be, and what they were open and ready for. It was a challenge because I know there are people who have never had anything like a raw cacao smoothie, but then I know there is a demand for raw, organic products and I wanted to provide that. I found the balance: creating a few simple smoothies with fresh organic fruit and then loading up superfoods and deliciousness on the other recipes.
Here’s an example of a recipe I created for Rivva:
(Serves 1)
½ c. blueberries
6 oz. coconut water
½ banana
½ tsp. spirulina
½ tsp. maca
1 c. ice
Blend all ingredients and enjoy.
Rivva also has organic frozen yogurt in a variety of flavors and amazingly fresh and creative vegetarian salads. What I like most about the salads is that you can pick a few different kinds (like the restaurant Lemonade) so that you have more choices on your plate.
The owner, Chris, is from Ireland and is an absolute gem. He’s so kind hearted and you feel that energy coming through the store and products.
I definitely recommend going in and checking out the place, if anything, just to try my smoothies!!
The Dead Food List
These items are often featured in raw food recipes, restaurants and products, but they are not commonly found raw. Many raw food websites, books, etc. have a “high raw” philosophy that allows for some cooked food. This list is intended to help you be aware of cooked items, so that whenever you want to, you can eat Purely Raw foods.
Several of these items are often labelled as “raw” and/or sold by “raw” websites, yet they have been heated. You can purchase a few of these items raw, when they’ve been specifically produced for the raw food community. The seller will usually mention the measures taken to keep the product raw in these special cases, when you are not sure, always ask.
We contact the producer no matter what the label says. More often than not, we find a step that involves too much heat. Please do the same. The more health aware customers contacting producers and suppliers about their methods, the better for everyone!
Agave Nectar
Has to be treated and altered from it’s natural state to taste ‘sweet’. Even when labeled or advertised as raw, if it is sweet, it has been heated. Some manufactures claim that lower air pressures can be used to keep the heat below 45c/115f and thus producing sweet “Raw”? nectar.
Almonds
Many Almonds come from America, and those Almonds nearly always come from California. Because of a new law, (Sept ’07) all California Almonds produced are pasturised and therefore no longer raw.
Bragg’s Liquid Aminos
Made from a base of cooked ingredients.
Brazil Nuts
If shelled they’ve been baked, boiled or steamed. (substitute Walnuts, Pine Nuts or Hazelnuts)
Cacao
After harvest cacao pods are piled up to ‘sweat’ or ferment for 3 to 4 days. During this time the temps can reach above 140f. They are often heated again during the drying process. We would like to find a source for fresh cacao pods or cacao beans that will sprout, if anyone has one.
Cashew Nuts
Most cashews that are sold as raw are heated to shell and boiled to remove strong toxins. Even those that sprout and grow, make some raw fooders sick. (Substitute Pine Nuts, Hazelnuts)
Dried Fruit
Blanched, gassed, and high temp dried. (Dry your own fruit).
Frozen Vegetables
Blanched or boiled even when labelled “Fresh frozen”. It will make your recipes taste and smell off. (Fresh is best!)
Ground Almonds
Blanched before grinding. (Grind your own.)
Hijiki/Hiziki (seaweed)
Dried at high temps.
Juice
All packaged, bottled and canned juice is pasteurized unless it states clearly that it is not.
Macadamia Nuts
Dried at high temps. (substitute Hazelnuts or Sunflower Seeds)
Maple Syrup
After the Maple sap is taken from the tree, it is boiled to reduce it into syrup and make it sweeter.
Miso
Even un-pasteurized Miso is made from cooked ingredients.
Nama Shoyu
Made from a base of cooked ingredients.
Nori (seaweed)
Both black and green are dried at high temps. The colour is not a sure sign. Even ‘Clearspring’ brand when sold as raw.
Nutritional Yeast
Basically baked to kill the yeast. (substitute Pine Nuts, lemon and a little raw salt.)
Oats
Steamed to keep out worms in storage.
Olive Oil
Must say unfiltered and cold pressed and even then you should check with the producer. (substitute Avocado)
Olives
If canned, jarred or packed they’re usually cooked and normally in bad oils as well.
Peacans
If shelled they’ve been boiled or steamed. (substitute soaked Walnuts or Hazelnuts)
Sugar
All processed sugar has been boiled and dried at high temps. Even ‘Raw’ sugar is NOT raw and often dyed brown.
Tahini
High temps during processing. Even stone ground, unpasteurized and made with un-roasted sesame seeds does not ensure that it is raw. Check with the manufacturer. (substitute self-ground sesame seads and a little raw Olive Oil.)
Wild Rice
Neither wild nor raw. Blanched after havest to keep out bugs.
*2 C nuts (soaked almonds)
*1/2 C dates
*1 tsp vanilla extract
*1/2 tsp sea salt
*1/4 C coconut oil, melted (not in a microwave)
*1/4 C-1/2 C chocolate chips (depending on your love of chocolate)
1. With a food processor, grind up all above ingredients except the chocolate chips. If you process them for a long time they will taste much more like cookie dough, if you process for less time they will have a nutty consistency which is fun and tasty, too!
2. After processing to desired consistency, drop the chocolate chips into the dough and mix with a spoon. Then pulse 3-4 times to mix it and grind the chips into the mixture.
3. Take a cookie sheet and spread the cookie dough into the pan, using your fingers to press into the corners and flatten into one even, level, layer.
4. Put in the fridge or freezer for 30 minutes to an hour to harden.
5. I then took it out and used heart cookie shape cutters but you can roll them into a ball and leave them that way, use another shape, or take the ball and flatten it into a round “cookie”. sky’s the limit!
ENJOY!!!
That’s right, Starbucks is now offering a vegan frappacchino option!
Made with soy milk instead of regular milk, this popular drink can now not make your stomach hurt in addition to the sugar high (and then low) you’ll get.
I don’t love that it’s made with soy milk (I’d prefer almond or oat milk) but it’s definitely a step in the right direction for such a huge corporation. It reflects a demand of us, “the people”, and shows that we CAN make small changes over time!
Benefits to using soy vs regular milk:
*no animal products used
*no cholesterol
*no saturated fats
Apparently they even have a new blender for vegan customers, it’s pink, so make sure if it’s important to you that you ask for it to be used!
For more info, check out this link
Recipe:
*8 oz Coconut Milk (coconut butter + filtered water) or Almond or Oat Milk (can buy boxed)
*2 Tablespoons Cacao Powder
*2 Teaspoons Cacao Nibs
*1 scoop (2 Tablespoons) Protein Powder of your choice (Raw, Brown Rice or Whey)
*2 drops of chocolate stevia concentrate
*2 drops of vanilla creme stevia concentrate
*handful or two of ice
Optional:
*maca powder- 1-2 teaspoons
*banana or dates (take out the pit!) for sweetener instead of or in addition to stevia
**toppings: buckwheat grawnola, goji berries, cacao nibs