Recipe by Hallie // @Spinachdaddy
What's better than seasonal veggies like carrots and squash? Adding chai spices! And what's even better than that!? pastries. Bringing you the best seasonal biscotti that will make any pumpkin spice lover swoon
Shopping cart: Zero waste spice dust
Ingredients:
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100 grams rye flour
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185 all purpose flour
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2 tsp baking powder
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pinch of salt
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90 ml olive oil
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175 grams sugar
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2 eggs
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1/2 tsp vanilla
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1/2 tsp zero waste spice dust
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1/3 cup chopped walnuts
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1/4 cup toasted buckwheat
Carrot Kabocha Crunchies:
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2 carrots
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3 inch knob of kabocha squash ( or honeynut, acorn, butternut, buttercup)
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1/4 cup sugar
Make The Crunchies:
Preheat oven to 325 F.
Wash and Peel 2 carrots into long, thin strips. Hollow out a kabocha, and cut off a 3 inch piece. Peel from the side long strips.
Lay peels on a clean dish towel, gently pat excess moisture from them.
Line a big baking sheet with parchment. Throw peels onto the sheet. Sprinkle the sugar evenly over top of your peels, then toss them so they are thoroughly coated.
Bake for 20ish minutes, then shake tray, and bake for another 10-15ish minutes till they are perfectly crunchy and dry. Some may be burnt, but we have to sacrifice for perfection sometimes.
Make The Biscotti
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In a stand mixer, beat your oil and sugar on medium speed for ~3 minutes.
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While it’s mixing combine your flours, salt and baking powder. Set aside.
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After 3 min., add each egg one at a time, waiting till the first one is fully incorporated before adding the second.
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Beat in vanilla and spices. Then add in 1/2 of your dry ingredients. Mix on low till incorporated, and add the second half. Mix till just right ( no loose flour left), and then using a spatula, fold in the toasted buckwheat and about 1.5 cups of crushed carrot kabocha crunchies.
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Split batter into 2 equal parts. Dump one half on a lined baking sheet. With lightly floured hands, form a long flattened log (maybe ~10 inches long, 4 inches wide, and 1.5 inches high— or whatever feels right ya know, baking is intuitive!)
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Repeat with the other portion of dough, making sure the two logs are sufficiently far apart on the sheet (atleast 4 inches of space— if that isn’t possible use two sheets).
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Sprinkle logs with some sugar just because, or not, and bake 35 minutes until the edges and top of logs are firm.
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Remove them from the oven, and lower the temperature to 325 F. Let the logs cool for 10 minutes, and on a cutting board, slice logs diagonally into 1/2 inch thick slices (or however thick/ thin you’d like the final cookie to be), and place the slices back on the baking sheet, cut side down.
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Return sheets to oven and bake for an additional 10-20 minutes (this is largely dependent on how thin you slices them) till golden, and only slightly soft— they will crisp up and dry out once cooled substantially so don’t let them become rocks in the oven.
Note:
You could go the extra mile and dip each log into melted (or burnt!) white chocolate (I’d add a bit of lemon zest too so the sweetness isn’t the only thing you taste)— that sounds extra delightful.
But if you’re on a spiritual health journey or plan to eat these with the morning coffee or as a nutritious snack (they are full of veg!?), omit and enjoy as is.
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