Eat Well

Desserts For Two

Raw Coffee Slice

Recipe / Georgia Harding

I think chocolate and coffee are a match made in heaven. This nourishing slice is a guilt-free piece of heaven and a must to share with a coffee-loving significant other.

Makes: 12 slices

Base

200g hazelnut meal
¼ cup sweetener such as rice-malt syrup, honey or maple syrup
1 tbsp cacao powder

Filling

350g cashew nuts (soaked for minimum 2–3 hours)
¼ cup sweetener (rice-malt syrup, honey or maple syrup)
1/3 cup coconut oil
50–70mL espresso coffee, cooled (approx. 2 shots)

Raw Chocolate*

½ cup melted coconut oil
4 tbsp sweetener (rice-malt syrup, honey or maple syrup)
4 tbsp cacao powder
* Alternatively, you can use 150g dark chocolate, broken into pieces

In food processor or blender, add hazelnut meal, sweetener and cacao and mix until fully combined.

Press into 20cm × 30cm slice tin (lined with baking sheet) and place in freezer while you make filling.

Drain liquid from cashews and rinse well. Process cashews in food processor. Add remaining filling ingredients and mix on high speed until smooth and creamy. You may need to scrape the sides of processor a few times. Spread filling over base and return to freezer to set (about 20 mins).

Either melt dark chocolate in bowl over pot of hot water or make raw chocolate by mixing all ingredients together.

Once filling is set, pour over melted chocolate and set in freezer (approx. 5 mins).

Cut into squares with large, sharp knife run under boiling water.

Store in freezer until

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Eat Well

Eat Well3 min read
Basil (Ocimum basilicum)
Basil is a delightful herb to have in your garden and your kitchen. Simply rubbing the fresh leaves between your fingers releases that distinctly sweet, peppery smell reminiscent of a flavour that graces so many favourite dishes. Basil is a member of
Eat Well1 min read
Terrine
A The w6rd “terrine” dates back to the Middle Ages and it simply describes an earthenware dish used for cooking. Over the centuries, the cooking vessels have evolved to include ceramic, glass and cast iron and “terrine” has also come to mean the food
Eat Well1 min read
Eat Well
Editor Terry Robson Deputy Editor Kate Holland Sub-Editor Michelle Segal Designer Michaela Primiano Feature Writers Lolita Waters, Lisa Guy, Carrol Baker, Lee Holmes Chefs Naomi Sherman, Lisa Guy, Lee Holmes, Raquel Neofit, Sammy Jones, Ames Starr On

Related