To say that I had baking indecision yesterday would be an understatement! Whenever I am time-crunched and baking for someone special, my mind just draws a blank and nothing seems right.
I looked over my recipes page for a quick + easy recipe that was calling my name…
Snickerdoodles? Too Christmas-y.
Pumpkin Gingerbread with Buttercream? Too much time.
No Bake Date Squares? Too hippy. (joking…well kinda, LOL)
Chilled Double Chocolate Torte? Too rich for afternoon.
Pumpkin Pie Brownie Cupcakes? Too Thanksgiving-y.
Too indecisive.
So I let Eric choose!
He has this uncanny ability to simplify things that I like to complicate. Eric thought about it for a mere millisecond and then said quite definitively, ‘Carrot Muffins.’
That wasn’t a question.
My eyes lit up like a Christmas tree.
…and then I remembered how much I hate grating carrots. Whenever I grate carrots I always seem to nearly grate my finger off. It’s a dangerous tool!
Somehow, I sweet talked Eric into grating the carrots for me and I kept all my fingers intact. It was a win-win situation.
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Vegan Carrot Spice Muffins
Adapted from FFVK.
Yield: 12 muffins
Dry:
- 1 & 3/4 cup whole-grain Kamut flour (or white whole wheat flour)*see note
- 1/4 cup natural sugar
- 1 tbsp ground flax seed
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp baking soda *see note
- 1 tsp cinnamon
- 3/4 tsp ground ginger
- 1/8 tsp ground cloves
- 1/2 tsp kosher salt
Wet + Mix-ins:
- 1/3 cup + 2 tbsp pure maple syrup
- 1/3 cup unsweetened applesauce (oil replacer)
- 1/2 cup coconut milk (the cream on top from a full fat can) OR yogurt * see note below
- 1/4 cup + 3 tbsp water
- 1.5 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 1.5 cups grated carrots (about 3 small-medium carrots)
- 1/2 cup raisins, soaked in water and drained
- 1/3 cup chopped & toasted walnuts
Directions:
1. Toast the walnuts (optional) on a baking sheet for about 8 minutes at 300F. Remove and set aside. Preheat oven to 400F and line a muffin tin with liners.
2. Whisk all dry ingredients together in a large bowl. In a smaller bowl, whisk together the wet ingredients (maple syrup, applesauce, coconut milk, water, vanilla). Add the wet to the dry and mix until just incorporated. Batter will be THICK!
3. Fold in the carrots, raisins, and walnuts. Scoop batter into the muffin liners, filling batter to the top. Bake for about 18 minutes at 400F until a toothpick comes out clean. Allow to cool for about 10 minutes. Makes 12 muffins.
Notes: 1) I love Kamut flour because it is a whole grain, but it bakes up light just like all-purpose flour. It also has a mild taste. The original recipe used white whole wheat flour. 2) Next time I would reduce the baking soda to 3/4 tsp as I could detect the baking soda taste every so slightly. 3) The original recipe used soy yogurt. I used coconut milk (the cream from the top of can, not the watery liquid) and it worked well, resulting in a very moist muffin. However, the batter was VERY thick when mixing!
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As I mentioned above, the original recipe by Susan called for Soy Yogurt, but since I don’t buy soy yogurt often, I thought that the cream from the top of a coconut milk can would work. It resulted in a super moist muffin and I was really happy with the outcome. I do think the cream made the batter extra thick though, which is why I had to add 3 tbsp more water. You can use yogurt if you wish…whatever floats your boat!
The muffins are quite easy to make- especially if you can find someone to grate for you! ;)
After about 18 minutes in the oven, they were perfect!
Modifications I made to the original recipe are as follows:
1) I used stone-ground Kamut flour. I love Kamut flour because it bakes up just like all-purpose…light and fluffy! It is not as dense as spelt flour, but is still high in protein.
2) I used maple syrup instead of agave nectar and I added 2 tbsp more maple syrup because it is not as sweet as agave.
3) I used coconut cream as a sub for soy yogurt. It resulted in a very flavourful and moist muffin!
4) My batter was very thick as a result of the cream, so I added 3 tbsp more water.
5) I added 1/3 cup chopped and toasted walnuts for a great crunch and healthy fats.
6) I used 1/2 cup soaked raisins. I soaked them in a bowl of water for about 15 minutes, drained, and then added them in. This results in plump raisins!
Despite all these changes, they turned out FANTASTIC!!
Everyone enjoyed them as a light afternoon snack. Eric and I loved them so much, I made another batch last night for the work week.
This morning, I enjoyed a bowl of Carrot Cake vegan Overnight Oats. I have tried making carrot cake VOO before and I wasn’t impressed with the taste, but I finally got this bowl right!
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Carrot Cake Vegan Overnight Oats
Ingredients:
- 1/3 cup rolled oats
- 1.5 tbsp chia seeds
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon
- 1 cup non-dairy milk
- 1 small carrot, finely grated (yield: about 1/2 cup)
- 1 tbsp pure maple syrup
- 1/2 Carrot Spice Muffin, crumbled over top
- Sweetened & shredded coconut, sprinkled over top
Directions:
1. Before bed, in a small bowl, whisk together the oats, chia seeds, cinnamon, milk, and maple syrup. Place in fridge overnight.
2. In the AM: Crumble 1/2 a muffin on top and sprinkle with coconut. Add more milk as desired and serve cold.
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A-M-A-Z-I-N-G.
Thanks for your kind words about my Grandpa yesterday. For those of you who missed it, my Grandpa was diagnosed with Leukemia at the end of 2010. He has been undergoing chemo treatments to help fight the cancer and send it into remission. As you can imagine, he has good days and tough days, but he is a fighter. The doctor is hopeful that he will be in remission by the end of the year if things go well.
My Grandpa, Diane, and I yesterday:
My Grandpa is such an inspiration to me. He remains VERY positive, upbeat, active, and lively despite his illness. He is an active church member, always spending time with his family, and he continues to enjoy physical work at their cottage as the weather gets warmer.
They tapped a bunch of maple trees last weekend at their cottage and were boiling down some maple syrup when we arrived yesterday!!
I had no idea that the sap is CLEAR like water when it comes out of the maple tree. Only when boiled down does it turn into a beautiful dark amber colour.

Grandpa was talking about the past few months and he said a couple things that I will never forget.
‘When I was really sick with pneumonia at the beginning of January, everything blacked out for a while and I had this vivid dream. There were people walking down this road with candles in their hand, all going in the same direction. I heard a voice that said to me, “You can chose to die or you can chose to live…the choice is up to you.” and then I saw my Granddaughter and she said to me, “Papa, don’t go.” and I chose to live.’
Then he said with great pride, ‘I’m still LIVING!’
Yes, he is. :)








Girlllll, I love carrot muffins! Thank you for this amazing recipe :) I think you have a special grandpa and he has one special granddaughter! You two are too cute!
xxoo
What a sweet story, thank you for sharing…
Also you should totally get the shredder attachment for your food processor – makes the job a breeze! (Or just make sure your hubs is around for shreddin!)
Wow… super teary, that’s an awesome story!
Those carrot muffins look great too! I love muffins!! :)
Thank you for sharing about your grandpa, angela. What an inspiring gentleman. Your story made me miss my grandpa – he was a lovely person, too. So glad you had family time together.
I avoid carrot recipes because of the grating! Eric is a good sous-chef!!
Those muffins look amazing! Such a great rounded top. It sounds like your Grandpa is doing great and staying very active. I wish I could go out, tap maple trees and boil my own syrup. yum!
Aww, your grandfather sounds amazing…plus, the fact that he makes his own syrup. Epic!
You are so lucky to have such a wonderful grandpa in your life. And he’s lucky to have you to bake him these muffins! :-)
Thanks guys! xo
Any husband that grates carrots is a keeper!!!! Your Grandpa sounds like an amazing man. Glad he is doing as well as can be expected!!!! He makes his own syrup?? OOOH….
What an inspiration. So positive & uplifting, I bet it’s a joy to be around him. I tell my Grandma the same thing, she seems to never let stuff get her too down!
P.S. You could use your food processor to grate your carrots…just do it! Once you discover it is amazing, you will wonder why it took you so long :)
They look delicious!!! I bet your grandpa really enjoyed them :D
Your grandpa sounds like such an amazing person Angela! He seems strong and courageous–so glad he’s doing better. And that’s crazy! maple syrup from scratch?! never would have imagined.
First: Those carrot muffins look fabulous. I plan to bake some this week — just need to find someone to grate my carrots. Sounds like a good “Hubby job”.
Second: I loved reading this post about your grandpa cause it brought up many memories about my own grandpa. I miss him so.
The end of your post gave me chills! Your grandfather sounds like an incredible person. This really hit home for me because my own grandfather (Poppie) passed away from a rare type of leukemia several years ago. Grandpas are the best. :)
Those muffins sounds great! I love your grandpa’s attitude! :)
Perhaps, not something related to this post at all but I have seen this on internet: http://omg.yahoo.com/blogs/thefamous/natalie-portman-gives-up-veganism/1043
I think I would have agreed with her remarks about being careful during a vegan diet; however I disagree since I follow up your blog and try to implement as much as possible in my new healthy eating lifestyle. I am neither a vegetarian nor vegan but your blog has brought so much fresh and healthy ideas to me. I am now eating much less meat and trying to be careful with dairy products. And oh yes, I haven’t touched coffee for the past 3 weeks yayy! I am very happy that you are there and bringing such light to my life.
Thank you!!!
No coffee! Wow! Do you drink tea?
Yes I read that too. Many vegans switch to vegetarian diet or even eat meat during pregnancy. She is right about certain like B12 being crucial to the baby’s health. In my opinion, it is always, always best to put the baby first and if she felt the need to eat some dairy then so be it!
hi, just curious, what is wrong with drinking coffee?
Angela, I’m very touched with your grandad! I truly with him good health.
I am working and living in a post-conflict region, in where our social life is very much based on eating out and drinking. Drinking macchiato or other sorts of strong coffee is a part of daily life, and sometimes it is something that you cannot avoid especially if you happen to have meetings with local interlocutors on daily basis. Food variety is very much limited, mainly based on meat products, greasy, with little -mostly prickled- vegetables. In addition to my binge/junk-food eating, this life style left me 7-8 additional kilos in the past 3 years. Angela’s blog is helping me to slowly to listen and understand what my body wants. When I read Eric’s success in not drinking pop in the past year, I have decided to limit my bad habits too. I am now hardly drinking pop, trying to find 100% juice at stores or squeeze fresh orange by myself, not drinking coffee* but substituting it with green or fruit teas. Being aware of healthy options has given me more options on what to cook in the past few weeks. I am not restricting anything from myself, but trying to be careful. Doing more sports is my next challenge, let’s see how far I can go..
*Drinking too much coffee in such an environment has given me not only an appetite for coffee (of course, that goes without saying, and not a bad thing) but also stomach ache, fast heart beat and low blood pressure. In my opinion, over-dosed caffeine is not good for health; however I am not a specialist or whatsoever.
Angela, can we meet someday? ;)
Your photos are STUNNING. God. You make me a) want to live where your living (seems peaceful) and b) (duh) EAT THE CARROT MUFFINS.
But not just devour them…to savour them. And enjoy food…does that make sense? Coming from someone with past “issues”, binging, etc…that means something to me.
Now – do you ever use Agave? I’ve never really bought into the hype. I’ll stick with my syrup, eh? ;) I guess you don’t do honey because it’s not vegan?
This recipe looks phenomenal. It’s so nice to see recipes that aren’t full of fake substitutes or powders or crazy ingredients. Rather, just real-down-home goodness.
Eric is smart. Carrot muffins rock. Almost, almost, as much as banana…almost..
thanks!
I rarely use agave because it is so controversial regarding health issues. ANd no, I dont use honey in my diet.
Great post.
I smiled when I saw how sophisticated your maple syrup maker was.
Look at the one my cousin made:
http://www.amysquesttoskinny.com/2011/04/evicted.html
:)
that is a force to be reckoned with!!!! lol. Whatever works right!
I notice so many of your recipes call for the cream from the top of the coconut milk can. What do you use the rest of it for??
in smoothies :)
Those carrot muffins look great, if I made those for my Grandpa he would love me forever.. (he already does so it would be.. double-forever?) Ha anyways, maybe that can be his next goodie. Your Grandpa sounds like a real fighter :)
I also have an un-related question. Do you keep your raw buckwheat groats or chia seeds in the refrigerator/freezer? I’ve heard that helps them keep longer, but wasn’t sure if they’d be fine at room temp.
I keep them on the counter…Ive never thought to put them in the fridge/freezer!