Carrot Cake Breakfast Cookies

RememberCarrot Cake Breakfast Cookie | Life Healthfully Lived those cookies I made for my cream cheese frosting?  Well, you can stop wondering about them.

I know this is the time of year that pumpkin flavored everything is everywhere.  Coffee, cookies, bread, muffins, oatmeal, stew, candles, air fresheners…. You get the idea.  Don’t get me wrong, pumpkin is awesome.  I have a whole shelf in my closet dedicated to my stock of pumpkin.  But it isn’t the only fall produce that deserves some love.

Carrots are a really versatile vegetable.  Kind of like pumpkin, they do well in sweet and savory dishes.  While I do love a good carrot soup or stew, carrot cake is where it’s at for me. Carrot Cake Breakfast Cookie | Life Healthfully Lived

These carrot cake cookies are more of a breakfast type cookie because they aren’t super sweet.  You can make it a little more decadent by turning it into a cream cheese frosting and carrot cake cookie sandwich.  Believe me, it’s delicious.

Leave the frosting off and you have a healthy breakfast cookie that’s lightly sweetened with raisins and a little maple syrup.  A cookie for breakfast?  Now that’s the dream!

Carrot Cake Breakfast CookieCarrot Cake Breakfast Cookie | Life Healthfully Lived

  • 1 cup regular oats, not instant
  • 1/2 cup coconut flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 tbsp flax
  • 3 tbsp water
  • 1/4 cup raisins
  • 1/3 cup coconut oil
  • 2 tbsp maple syrup
  • 1 cup shredded carrots
  1. Preheat the oven to 350 and line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a Silpat.  Mix the flax seed and water together and set aside.
  2. Combine all the dry ingredients in a bowl and set aside.
  3. In a food processor or blender, combine the raisins and coconut oil until you have a smooth paste.  Add the shredded carrots and pulse a few more times.
  4. Add the dry ingredients to the carrot mixture and pulse until everything is mixed together.
  5. Scoop out about a tablespoon or so and slightly flatten them into discs and place on the baking sheet.
  6. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes until the cookies are slightly brown around the edges.  Let them cool on the sheet for 5 minutes and then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

That’s it!  Keep them in an airtight container and they should last about a week, longer if you put them in the fridge. Carrot Cake Breakfast Cookie | Life Healthfully Lived

Do you have any fun plans for this weekend?  Adam and I are headed to Brazil (Indiana, not the country) to spend some time with his folks at the covered bridge festival.  It will be nice to spend time with family and just relax!

DIY Wednesday: Cream Cheese Frosting

MyDIY Wednesday: Cream Cheese Frosting | Life Healthfully Lived birthday is on Halloween.  I think because I was born right in the middle of fall, the love of all things fall is sort of woven into my genes.  Usually for my birthday, my mom would make spice cake or carrot cake and one year I think she made a hummingbird cake…. but I could be wrong about that one.  Anyway, the cakes that she made would beg for cream cheese frosting and that was just fine with me.

I love cream cheese frosting.  Most other frostings are WAY too sweet and I can only take a few bites before I start to get nauseated.  But cream cheese frosting? Skip the cake and get me a spoon.  It’s a little sweet, a little tangy, and all delicious. DIY Wednesday: Cream Cheese Frosting | Life Healthfully Lived

I haven’t had cream cheese frosting in years because it’s basically cream cheese, butter, and sugar.  Since I don’t do dairy or refined sugar anymore, cream cheese frosting isn’t really at the top of my list of things to eat.  With fall baking underway, I thought it would be a good time to try recreating this frosting without any dairy or refined sugar.  Lucky for me, it wasn’t that hard to do!  Just a few ingredients, a little planning ahead, and you have a delicious cream cheese frosting that is ready to top carrot cake or any other fall favorite.DIY Wednesday: Cream Cheese Frosting | Life Healthfully Lived

Oh, and if you think it’s easier to just grab a tub of cream cheese frosting at the store?  Think again.  Not only is it full of chemicals, sugar, and preservatives, but it doesn’t actually contain any cream cheese…. Explain that one to me!  Do yourself a favor and make this simple, dairy-free frosting without the high price and chemicals.

Cream Cheese FrostingDIY Wednesday: Cream Cheese Frosting | Life Healthfully Lived

  • 1 cup raw cashews, soaked overnight
  • 2 tbsp lemon juice, 1 more if you like a tangier frosting
  • 1 tbsp maple syrup
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 3 tbsp coconut butter NOT coconut oil
  1. Drain and rinse the soaked cashews and place in a blender or food processor.  Add the lemon juice, maple syrup, and vanilla extract.  Pulse a few times until the cashews are broken up into little pieces.
  2. Add the water and blend the cashews until you have a smooth cream.  Add the coconut butter and blend to combine everything.  Taste and see if you need to add more sweet or more tang.
  3. You can use the frosting right away or store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to a week.  If you do store it in the fridge, take it out 20 minutes before you want to use it to let it warm up a bit.

To test out the frosting, I made some carrot cake cookies.  Because if you have frosting you have to have cookies right?  I just threw some things together and the cookies actually turned out pretty good.  I’m going to tweak them a bit and then put them on the blog so you can enjoy your homemade frosting! DIY Wednesday: Cream Cheese Frosting | Life Healthfully Lived

I’ll have a new recipe for you on Friday and then Monday I hope to do a recap of the awesome wedding weekend!  It was a great time and I am so happy for the new Mr. and Mrs. Meyers!

DIY Wednesday: Squash Apple Butter

IDIY Wednesday: Squash Apple Butter | Life Healthfully Lived certainly did not invent apple butter, although that would be pretty awesome if I did.  I’m also certainly not the first to put a recipe for apple butter on their blog.  But I’m putting a little spin on the typical apple butter today for your DIY post of the week.

I actually had never really tried apple butter until I met Adam.  His grandma sent us home from a visit once with some apple butter and it was delicious.  It was smoother and creamier than applesauce and that was what I loved about it.  It’s funny that Adam was technically the one to introduce me to apple butter since the man doesn’t like cooked apples!  I know, he’s weird.DIY Wednesday: Squash Apple Butter | Life Healthfully Lived

Anyway, most apple butter is made with a TON of sugar.   Besides adding sweetness, it helps preserve the apple butter.  That’s fine for some, but since I don’t do refined or much added sugar, I wanted to try an apple butter that didn’t use sugar.  To me, cooked apples are already fairly sweet.  Plus if you add in spices like cinnamon it ups the sweet factor.  I also wanted to do something to make my apple butter even smoother.  Pureed squash is really smooth and creamy plus it tends to lean toward the sweet side.  And squash is just awesome in general so I thought why not add it into my apple butter.

Luckily it worked out and I ended up with a fall hybrid butter that is perfect on toast, in oatmeal, on pancakes, or on a peanut butter sandwich.  It is so easy to make your own apple butter and it will cost a lot less than buying it from the apple orchard or specialty shops.  So if you have a plethora of apples hanging around and want to try something a little different than your typical apple butter, give this squash apple butter a try!

Squash Apple ButterDIY Wednesday: Squash Apple Butter | Life Healthfully Lived

  • 5 to 6 large apples of different varieties, I used a mix of sweet and tart like granny smith and gala.
  • 2 cups diced butternut squash, you could also try pumpkin or delicata
  • 2 tsp lemon juice
  • 2 to 3 cinnamon sticks, optional
  • 2 tsp freshly grated nutmeg, optional
  • 1 tsp ground cloves, optional
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon, optional
  1. Place sliced apples, cubed squash, and cinnamon sticks if you are using them into a slow cooker.  You want to make sure you fill the cooker almost to the top leaving just a little space.
  2. Cook on high for 4 hours.  If your apples and squash start sticking, you can use a little water.  Don’t use too much because you don’t want a watery butter.
  3. After 4 hours, the apples and squash should be fairly soft.  Remove the cinnamon sticks and smash everything else with a potato masher or fork and transfer the whole thing to a blender.  You could also use an immersion blender.  Puree the apples and squash until super smooth.  This is important to make sure you have a smooth and creamy butter.
  4. Return the puree to the slow cooker and cook on high for another hour.  At the end stir in the lemon juice and any spices you want.
  5. Allow the whole mixture to cool before you transfer to jars or other airtight containers.  Store in the fridge.DIY Wednesday: Squash Apple Butter | Life Healthfully Lived

I have really liked swirling this into my oatmeal in the morning.  The whole thing just reminds me of fall and that makes me happy!

In other news, my little sister is getting married this weekend ( 😀 😀 😀 😀 ) and I am just a tad busy helping her with that!  While I have plenty of new recipes to share with you, my Friday post will be a round-up of my favorite fall recipes around the blog world.  I hope you have a great Wednesday and see you soon!

Arepas with Chipotle Sausage Crumbles & Cilantro Sauce

TheArepas with Chipotle Sausage Crumbles & Cilantro Sauce | Life Healthfully Lived day is here my friends.  I’m finally putting up the recipe for the delicious arepas that I have been making.  Don’t know what an arepa is?  Think of it as the Colombian version of a sandwich, kind of like a pita.  It’s a bun made out of pre-cooked corn meal and then sliced halfway through and stuffed with tasty fillings.  Arepas are eaten for any meal depending on what you fill them with.  The filling can be as simple as cheese to as elaborate as what I created because I love all the things.

I started obsessing over arepas after I saw them on some Food Network show, I can’t remember which one.  They looked delicious and I was intrigued by how simple it looked to make them.  Then Juli over at PaleOMG started posting pictures of the arepas she would get from a food truck in her city.   They looked amazing and I was so jealous that she could get these delicacies out of a truck.Arepas with Chipotle Sausage Crumbles & Cilantro Sauce | Life Healthfully Lived

Finally after mooning over arepas for months, I decided to see what it would take to actually make them.  There are plenty of recipes for them and they really are easy to make.  You just need the right flour.  It has to be pre-cooked corn flour or these won’t turn out.  If you have a large Latin section at your grocery store or better yet an actual Latin grocery store, you can probably find this flour pretty easy.  If you can’t you can get it from Amazon and it is fairly inexpensive.

For the filling, I decided to make sausage crumbles out of oatmeal.  Hang with me on this one.  I saw this idea on a blog awhile ago and while I was skeptical, I gave it a try.  It totally had the taste and texture of sausage crumbles.  It’s the spices you use that really make a difference.   I used the same method from the blog and just changed up the seasonings.  I also included a cilantro sauce that I made by just switching the basil with cilantro from my dressing recipe.Arepas with Chipotle Sausage Crumbles & Cilantro Sauce | Life Healthfully Lived

It might look like this will take forever to make, but it all comes together pretty easily.  So if you want to get in on the awesomeness that is arepas, try out my version!

For the Arepas: 

  • 2 cups pre-cooked corn meal sometimes called harina de maiz (I used this brand)
  • 2 1/2 cups water
  • 1 tbsp coconut oil
  • 1 tsp salt
  1. Measure out the water and pour into a large bowl with the coconut oil.  Set aside.  Mix together the cornmeal and salt.
  2. Slowly add the cornmeal and salt to the water, using your hand to combine the two and keep lumps from forming.  Once all the cornmeal is in the water, keep using your hands and mix everything together well.  It will seem like you have too much water and that the dough is too runny.  Don’t worry it will thicken up.
  3. Place a damp paper towel over the dough and let it rest for 10 minutes.  Preheat the oven to 350 and line a large baking sheet with parchment paper or Silpat.
  4. After the 10 minutes is up, remove the paper towel and portion out the dough into about 6 to 8 balls.  Roll each portion into a ball and then slightly flatten it out so it roughly resembles a hockey puck.  You don’t want them too small and thick because you will be cutting these and stuffing them.
  5. Heat a large skillet, no oil, over medium heat and cook each side of the arepas for about 2 minutes to seal the dough.  Place them back on the baking sheet after you’re done.  Once you have sealed all the arepas, place them in the oven and bake for 10 to 15 minutes.  They are done when you can tap them and it sounds hollow inside.
  6. Remove from the oven and let cool for about 10 minutes before you slice them.  When you’re ready to fill them, slice only halfway through so it forms a little pocket.  Stuff them and then your face!

For the Chipotle Sausage Crumbles: 

  • 1/2 cup steel cut oats
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 tbsp tomato paste
  • 1 to 2 tsp chipotle powder
  • 1/2 tsp onion powder
  • 1/2 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp cumin
  • 1/2 tsp oregano
  • juice of half a lime
  1. Add oats, water, and tomato paste in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil.  Cover the pot, lower to a simmer and cook for 10 minutes.
  2. Uncover the oats and add in all the seasonings and lime juice.  Mix to combine and cook for another 5 minutes.  You want most of the water to cook out so you are left with a very thick mixture that resembles cooked ground meat.
  3. Alternatively, if you want to use ground beef, turkey, or chicken you can cook it as usual and just use the seasonings listed here to flavor it.

For the Cilantro Sauce:

  1. I just used my basil dressing and substituted cilantro in for the basil.

Yes, it looks like a lot for one meal but once you get the hang of it, it gets a lot easier.  You can fill the arepas with whatever you want.  Along with the chipotle sausage crumbles, I spread some guacamole on the arepas and made a corn and tomato salsa.  You can also try shredded pork, refried beans, rice, or sauteed vegetables.  Seriously, give this recipe a try and I promise you won’t regret it!Arepas with Chipotle Sausage Crumbles & Cilantro Sauce | Life Healthfully Lived

Have a great weekend everyone and see you on Monday!

Ever had arepas?  Tell me where and what you filled it with in the comments!

DIY Wednesday: Basil Salad Dressing

FriendsDIY Wednesday: Basil Salad Dressing | Life Healthfully Lived, I’m ready to admit something.

I’m kind of having a love affair with basil.   I know, I know.  It’s just a summer fling, but I can’t get enough of the stuff.  It smells so good, looks so pretty, and tastes phenomenal.  Even better, it makes any food I put in my mouth taste phenomenal.

I got into the fresh basil game a little late this summer because for most of the summer we were gone every weekend and I couldn’t get to the farmer’s market and I was not going to pay over $3 for the tiny little packages at the store.  But this past month we have made it to the market and one stand there sells fresh herbs of all kind and I can get a whole bunch of basil for $2.  Naturally I load up on it and come home and make all the basil things.

Besides the obvious pesto (which I have like 3 jars of right now) I have been making basil and lemon oil, and this dressing.  I have swooned about this dressing a few times over on Instagram so  I thought that I would share it with you guys.DIY Wednesday: Basil Salad Dressing | Life Healthfully Lived

I’ve talked about making your own salad dressing before and I think it’s the best money and health saving switch you can make.  Making your own salad dressing is SO simple and you get to control the ingredients.  Store bought dressing is full of preservatives and you’re paying a lot of money to ingest those things.

So why not make your own?  This literally comes together in the touch of a blender button and BAM, you have a delicious, basil-filled dressing ready to go on salad, over vegetables, or straight into your mouth with a straw.  Which I’ve never done…

Basil Salad DressingDIY Wednesday: Basil Salad Dressing | Life Healthfully Lived

  • 1 cup loosely packed, whole basil leaves
  • 2 tsp roasted garlic or 2 cloves fresh garlic
  • 2 tbsp tahini
  • 1/3 cup full-fat coconut milk (you could also use almond milk)
  • juice of half a lime
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
  1. Ready for this?  Put everything into a blender and blend until smooth.  Taste and adjust seasoning.  Store it in an airtight container in the fridge for up to a week…. if it lasts that long.

I love one step recipes almost as much as I love basil.  See how easy it is to make dressing?  You can even switch up the herbs you do and use parsley, dill, or cilantro.  Whatever your little heart desires! DIY Wednesday: Basil Salad Dressing | Life Healthfully Lived