Sunday, April 5, 2026
Candied violets - violette candite, step by step.
Saturday, May 10, 2025
After dinner chocolate kawakawa
This is better than after dinner chocolate mints, and very much a New Zealand foraging option! Kawakawa abounds in the 'bush' (forest) where I live and it is by far my favourite NZ foraged leaf. I often make tea, use it for custards instead of vanilla, and in other recipes.
But these chocolates are my best creation to date, or so I think - so if you copy them please credit me ;-) (I had far too many recipes from this and my other blogs taken without credits, a bit cheeky really, especially if Kiwis do it: New Zealand is a small place, too small to do this!!).Melt a block of dark chocolate in a deep plate or terrine (not in a bowl - you want something with more surface than deepness) over a pot of hot water. Forage your kawakawa leaves, wash them well and pat them dry. Holding the stem place them shiny side down onto the chocolate, and then on a tray lined with cooking paper, chocolate side facing up. Add a little chocolate with a teaspoon if you missed a bit - you want to cover the whole surface of the leaf. Don't make it too thick though, thin after-dinner chocolates are more 'rstylish'.
Refrigerate until set, then turn upside down and gently peel the leaves off the chocolate (they will come out easily). Keep in the fridge until serving time. One side will be darker, while the other (the one that touched the leaf) shiny. The chocolate will be coated with the scent and mild peppery taste of kawakawa. I prefer them to chocolate mints, and so did my family, plus they look so cool!
A part from being served as an option to after dinner mints, they are also great with ice cream and to decorate cakes, cupcakes and desserts.
Sunday, April 27, 2025
Vegan and sugar free chocolate mousse
Thursday, February 10, 2022
Vegan coconut and blueberry puddings with lavender and nata de coco
Ingredients:
A cup of frozen blueberriesa few cubes of nata de coco in syruplavender petals2 tbsp sugar1x400ml can coconut cream +same amount in boiling water to rinse the can1 tsp agar agar
Place the blueberries and nata de coco in a bowl, add a few petals of lavender and let it defrost.
Place the coconut cream in a pot, fill the can with the same amount of boiling water to rinse it and add into the pot. Add the sugar a tsp of agar agar and bring to the boil stirring constantly. When it boils add half of the blueberries (but not the nata de coco) and their juice. Fill 4 to 6 glasses and let it set. Then add the rest of the blueberries and nata de coco (it will have changed colour from translucent to purple) and decorate with lavender petals. refrigerate for a few hours before serving.
Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©
Wednesday, November 20, 2019
Two layers Vegan Chocolate Soy Cream Pudding
Saturday, March 16, 2019
Autumn preserves: quince paste, feijoa paste and fig jam
The figs should mush easily while boiling, if you keep stirring them with a wooden spoon, but if you want to keep a few whole remove them from the pot before mashing the rest, and add them back during the last 5-10 minutes. This jam went into jars, it looks great, but I have the feeling that it will also be quite hard (I added some pectine - jam setting mix) and probably next year I will end up making fig paste instead of jam!
Thursday, February 28, 2019
Vegan and gluten free Turmeric spoon dessert - the plant based paradise!
Sunday, January 20, 2019
Marzipan with Amaretto
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| Assorted natural flavours and colours, including green tea, cherry syrup, berry juice, candied citrus, and some stuffed dates too! |
Last Sunday I did a demo about making Marzipan at the Auckland Art Gallery, to celebrate Italian Language week with the Dante Auckland. I have a basic recipe which I always follow (without egg white, thus suitable for Vegans too) and you can find it here. But since almonds don't have much taste in NZ (sorry... need to be said) I always add a few apricot kernels (not too much, they are poisonous!) so follow this recipe carefully! Now, apricots are not in season yet, and I made a little variation, which worked well: I added a little drop of Amaretto.

Marzapane with AmarettoIngredients
200g raw almonds
100g icing sugar
1 tsp Amaretto
Blanch the almonds in boiling water and remove the skins. Keep a few almonds aside for decoration, if you like, and ground the rest into a fine powder, almost like a paste. Add the icing sugar and Amaretto and mix until you get a dough. Shape into your favourite morsels, and colour with berries, green tea powder, spirulina, or anything you like. Some ideas for shapes and colours here.
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| Perfect for presents! Coloured with cocoa, green tea and berries |
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
Vegan chocolate semifreddo, two ingredients only
Tuesday, December 5, 2017
Christmas Fruit Platter with Balsamic
Thursday, July 20, 2017
Italian chestnut fritters
… chestnut fritters! And you only need three ingredients: Italian chestnut flour (which is naturally sweet so you don't need to add sugar), sultana (optional, but traditional!) and oil for frying! These are full of protein, gluten free, and perfect for breakfast, or snack, hot or cold. I love them after a gym workout and the kids like to put them in their lunch boxes. They are very filling, plus they last a few days, if you don't eat them all at once!
Mix the chestnut flour with enough water to make a batter (same consistency as hot cakes), add the sultana.







