We ended up getting quite the storm yesterday! One broken shovel and lots of soup and hot tea later, we can feel our limbs once again.
Then I tortured myself by looking up tropical vacations on Travel Zoo. I really need to stop doing that to myself.
Luckily, there are always Valentine’s Day goodies to look forward to.
If you care to see the rest of my Valentine’s Day recipes you can check out the Recipes page where I have grouped them together near the top. I recently added a Recipe of the Week feature on my Recipes page too.
I actually didn’t plan on making these No Bake Chocolate Macaroons at all.
I was trying to create my own macaroon recipe (baked in the oven) and they turned out very crumbly. Then the wheels got turning and I thought it would be fun to make a macaroon that required no baking (or dehydrating) at all. I have been doing the vegan baking and cooking thing for over a year and a half now and one thing I have discovered is that my recipes are often the result of a flop or unexpected result in the kitchen. I set off to bake one thing, and something else happens…it’s best just to roll with it.
[print_this]
No Bake Chocolate Macaroons
Yield: 7 large Macaroons
Ingredients:
- 3/4 cup whole grain spelt flour (or other flour minus ~1 tbsp)
- 1/4 cup + 2 tbsp unsweetened shredded coconut
- 2 tbsp cocoa powder, sifted
- 1/2 cup brown sugar, lightly packed (or regular sugar)* see note
- 1/2 tsp kosher salt
- 1/4 cup coconut oil, melted
- 2 tbsp Almond Milk (or other milk)
- 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
- Melted chocolate or coconut for rolling the balls in (optional)
Directions:
1. In a medium sized bowl, mix the dry ingredients together (spelt flour, shredded coconut, sifted cocoa powder, sifted brown sugar, and kosher salt).
2. Add the melted coconut oil, almond milk, and vanilla. Stir until combined.
3. Grab some of the mixture and roll it into a ball in your hand. Repeat for the rest of the mixture. You can roll the Macaroons into more shredded coconut or dip them in melted chocolate if you like! I made 7 large Macaroons.
Note: Eric found the texture of the brown sugar was a bit ‘sandy’. If you think this would bother you, you could use regular white sugar, or even try dissolving the brown sugar in the coconut oil in the microwave.
[/print_this]
The no-bake spree continues!
They are ready in 5 minutes flat.
Gather your 8 ingredients.
Substitution questions:
- You can substitute the spelt flour for another kind of flour, but you may need to use less flour because spelt flour saturates more easily (maybe use 1 tbsp less of another kind of flour)
- You can substitute regular white sugar for brown sugar
- You can use any kind of milk you prefer (here I used chocolate Almond Milk)
- You might be able to get away with using a different oil, but the flavour will change…so don’t hate me if you don’t like it!
Sift the dry ingredients. Nobody wants a clump of bitter cocoa in their Macaroon. ;)
Mix dry + wet.


Roll into balls!


I loved rolling the Macaroons into coconut to finish them off. You need to press down quite hard for it to stick.
You can also dip them in melted chocolate and roll them into seeds or nuts.
The result is a no-bake chocolate macaroon with a lovely, authentic macaroon flavour. They are soft, so if you prefer some crunch, you could always add in some chopped nuts or crisp rice cereal to your liking.
Eric loved the taste, but he wasn’t crazy about the texture because he thought the brown sugar made the texture a bit ‘sandy’. You could probably prevent this by using regular white sugar or you could try dissolving the brown sugar into the coconut oil in the microwave. Personally, I didn’t mind the ‘sandy’ texture myself.
Store them in the fridge or freezer.
For the rest of my Valentine’s Day recipes, see here.








Sending good wishes and prayers your way for happy writing :) Now excuse me while I go find the ingredients to make these for my Valentine this year (which may or may not be myself, which may be the best thing ever).
These look wonderful and simple, thanks for the recipe!
I pass through a lot of phases, I was on a lentil kick for awhile, now a hemp seed kick – like I have theme ingredient weeks. :-)
To start a large project I have to eliminate as many distractions as possible and break the project down into smaller projects with an outline or agenda.
I know you’ll do great with the cookbook goal! I’ve been liking many pasta/rice dish type stuff lately. I made your avocado pasta last night with a lil twist! It was good and my 1 yr. old nephew looooved it. But afterward, the whole night, my tongue felt funny! I wonder if I have a funny thing (not really allergic though) going on with avocado~do you get that too?
Have you ever read “Bird by Bird” by Anne Lamott? It’s a wonderful book about the writing process.
Your back door view looks similar to ours…
Those macaroons look fab, though! :)
Hi, I just wanted to share something I tried today and thought it might fit with the Valentine’s Day theme… I make overnight oats a lot (good dorm food!), and today I made them with the juice drained from a can of beets instead of almond milk.
They were so red and so sweet and I figure there’s gotta be lots of nutrients in that dark dark juice right??
Yum! Those look so good. I seriously need to get some stinkin’ coconut oil. Everyone’s using it in their recipes these days and I feel like I’m the only one without it!
These look awesome! I am sending a Valentines gift in the mail and would love to include one of your creations, would you recommend sending these or the chocolates I remember seeing during your project food blog hike series? Thanks!
To be honest, I am not sure how well either would ship or what their shelf life would be outside of the fridge/freezer because I haven’t tried it myself. They are fairly delicate…so I would worry about them in the mail. Anyone else tried shipping them?
What about shipping granola? That ships wonderfully!
Ooo good idea! Granola it is. Thanks :)
I cannot wait to try these! They sound amazing, and I have all of the ingredients at home already. :) I’ve been on an orange foods kick for month, including sweet potatoes, butternut squash, carrots, and pumpkin. In fact, I sort of have a problem.
OH I am so excited that you are starting the journey of writing a book! I know you will do great.
Currently I am loving my Tofu Stiry Fry with Vegan Fried Rice absolutely love this healthified chinese recipe!!!
Good luck with the writing Ange! When your cookbook comes out I will SO be buying it! Right now I’m in a soup/stew phase, and recently finished a bit of a salad phase… but I miss them so I think I’ll be bringing them back next week! :)
Ooh, unique concept! These look totally different from macaroons that I’m used to, but I’m sure they are great!
I think I would be interested in a cookbook with recipes like these. I am really starting to cook a lot more adventurously since using cookbooks!
I am having the MOTHER of all eating phases. A love affair with oven roasted cinnamon Sweet Potato Fries dipped in a mixture of Coconut Butter and Maple Syrup.
I can’t stop. I am going to turn orange :)
That sounds like a piece of heaven!
I go through phases where I’m trying new recipes like crazy, then go through a period (usually when life gets a little bit hectic) where I eat the same 10 dishes constantly… :|
I love letting my creativity out in the kitchen though, it’s such a rewarding thing!
can’t wait to hear more about your book!! :)
Never write the introduction first! Or if you do, just know that it is just a starting point and not the actual introduction that will end up in the published version.
I have to stop looking at sandals resort pictures….. you’re not alone!
Starting a paper is always the hardest part. I am a history major, so I write a ton of papers. I am not always sure where my paper is going or how it will end up. It can change so easily based on one little thing you find out doing research.
So I always write my introduction last. Plus I write both the into and conclusion in a seperate word documetn so I can compare them next to each other. This way I know I am making the points that I want too.
I can’t wait for your cookbook! it is going to be amazing!!
Whoops – I should have read all the comments before posting mine!
Those look delish- definitely bookmarking :)
Starting a big project is hard- if I’m having trouble getting started, I usually just try to DO IT- get something, anything down. I tell myself it doesn’t have to perfect, I can change it later, it’s just to get the juices flowing. Turns out, the usual reason for me not starting- I’m scared it won’t be perfect. If you give yourself permission to be less than perfect the 1st go around, so much more gets accomplished!
I’m totally on a sweet potato or banana oatmeal pancake kick lately!!! I just can’t get enough of this breakfast treat!
I love writing. . . and I hate writing. Thank goodness writing is a component, but not the main component of my job! For research projects, and standard business projects, writing is so often formulaic, that the trick is to actually not “write it in your sleep”. . . I’m currently about to start a more interesting project for work — a monograph/white paper that has to argue certain security implications, and I will tell you how I’m organizing it (since I’m already over my head).
First, assemble a TEAM — find someone who will brainstorm with you, someone who can address technical issues, and someone who will work on editing. Writing is a pretty solitary task, but I think that we taught to believe a lie in most academic settings (until you get into the more adanced publishing realm) that you write “in a box.” Writing is iterative and collaborative. If you organize your writing around the key points (I like to start with 1 page that is a simple thesis/paragraph, supported by bullets with assumptions/facts/supporting themes — and then each of these can be worked out), you can then set up a series of meetings with others to discuss these points. I happen to find discussing what I’m writing very motivational. So I set up my meeting in adance, and write with the idea of having the teammate(s) review it. I find breaking it up this way much less intimidating, as you are working toward specific goals — and getting support along the way.
I can only agree with these tips!!!
The subject of my Master Thesis was quite theoretical as I developed a new concept. I was going crazy because I did not have a “real” applied project that would deliver input. Everything had to come from myself. So, I had to talk and discuss with others about ideas and thoughts all the time especially when working on a new aspect. Planning those brainstroming sessions could be very helpful. You could bring background people with different backgrounds to get different views.
When it comes to the getting started with a big project, I always need to breakt the task down into smaller ones. For example, making the basic chapter structure, or, when starting on a chapter, making bullet points with the main content and then start writing from that.
A big project can make me feel really anxious just because it’s so big! Breaking it down makes it more manageable for me.
Congrats on writig you book proposal! I hope your book will also be available in Germany :-)