You might think I’d be getting farmers’ market-ed out by this point. How can I keep up my frenetic pace of purchasing fresh produce? Well, it’s not like I buy a week’s worth of groceries everywhere I go. I buy one or two items, and only what I need for specific recipes I have planned (plus a few whimsical purchases (yes, I call half a dozen corn a “purchase of whimsy”…). My last expedition was to the Fete Éco-Bio Paysanne out at Tohu, the home of Cirque du Soleil. I was expecting more a of a farmers’ market setup with tons of fresh produce, and there was some of that, but mostly it was companies offering samples of products, everything from energy bars to soy and rice milk, to yogurt, cheese, ionic foot baths, reflexology, skin care, make-up and two raw restaurants’ booths. There was a lot of variety, but I found a conversation I had with a “raw” woman the most interesting.
She started off by explaining the concept of “raw” in a very much “holier-than-thou” kind of way, discussing how bad everything else was for your body, and eating raw is the best thing in the world for absolutely everyone. She got into talking dogmatically about soaking nuts, at which point I interrupted her practiced rant to tell her about the raw banana cream pie I had just made. I told her, self-congratulatorily, that I’d soaked and dehydrated the nuts, but before researching the recipe I hadn’t known that this should be done. Her response was something along the lines of, “Sorry to burst your bubble, but almost as important as soaking your nuts is the length of time for which you soak them,” and certainly I hadn’t soaked them properly, even though she didn’t ask me for specifics. I went home and found out later (since she didn’t know off-hand…) that almonds need 8-12 hours, but cashews only need 2-3. Now I wondered if soaking for too long was an issue, because I certainly hadn’t under-soaked them, but this woman had berated me for my nut ineptitude. Apparently it’s not really an issue for most nuts, but cashews are already processed twice so they really don’t need much soaking to get them soft. Also, if they soak too long, or dry too slowly, they get a “disagreeable” taste. The soaking is supposed to remove the enzyme-inhibitors that make it harder to digest the nuts, but cashews you don’t have so much to worry about because of the processing. Walnuts, brazil nuts, macademia nuts, etc. soak longer.
Anyway, the point is that I got away from that booth fairly quickly and found my way to the Crudessence booth, my favourite raw-food restaurant in Montreal. They had samples of their “cheese”-cake that was FAR superior to both my raw orange chocolate cheesecake and this banana cream pie, which were both very good, mind you.I think it’s mostly because they use a LOT of agave nectar so it’s incredibly sweet.
I’ll get on with it now. I got this recipe from the same raw site as my last orange chocolate cheesecake, Rawmazing, and I decided to just do one big pie instead of mini, what they call “individual tart servings”, but which are much too big for that. This is a perfect dessert when you want to be full after a meal without eating a whole bunch of sugar and things that aren’t “good for you”. This is NOT low in fat or sugar, but it’s all the healthy kinds – nothing refined, nothing saturated.
The original recipe calls for 2 tablespoons of coconut butter in the crust as well, but I just skipped it since the orange cheesecake recipe had the same kind of crust but didn’t call for it and I’m slightly intolerant.
Oh, and since this cake only lasts a few days in the fridge, freeze it after 2. It’s even better when you eat it frozen since the banana becomes silken and smooth.
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