Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles (giveaway!)

Yeah. I’m still riding the waffle train pretty hard around here. But what else is new?

Are you curious why this sweet potato waffle looks like I waffled orange spaghetti?

Well, it’s because I kind of did.

Fact. You can spiralize a sweet potato and then WAFFLE IT.

Game changer.

I get really excited when I learn about new things I can put in my waffle iron. Is that weird?

This genius recipe was created by the very talented, Ali Maffucci. She is the mastermind behind the blog, Inspiralized and now the brand new cookbook! Ever since I received this book in the mail I’ve had my spiralizer out constantly. Actually, Chris was the first one to make a recipe from Ali’s book! He made the Sweet Potato Carbonara (subbing sun-dried tomatoes instead of pancetta) which was outstanding.

Ali’s cookbook recipes are incredibly creative and the simple and bright photography suits them perfectly. They’re the type of photos that make you want to whip up every single recipe immediately. The recipes are straightforward and easy to follow, with tons of tips along the way. I’ve already had success with a handful of recipes, my favorite being the “Everything Bagel” Breakfast Bun. Oh my gosh. We are obsessed with them.

Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com
Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com

In this cookbook you’ll find all the nitty gritty details about what fruits and vegetables work best for spiralizing and tons of tips on how to go about it. Ali has an easy dietary labeling system for each recipe and also shares the nutrition information.

I was truly blown away by so many of Ali’s creations. 

Here are a few recipes I cannot wait to try:

  • Huevos Rancheros (the “buns” are made with spiralized plantains!)
  • Spicy Jicama Strings (I buy jicama and never know what to do with it beyond a salad topping.)
  • Vegetarian Carrot Enchilada Bake
  • Vegan Chipotle Carrot Mac and Cheese
  • Sesame Almond Butter Kohlrabi Bowl
  • Double Chocolate Pecan Sweet Potato Dessert Pancakes

And the list goes on…

Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com
Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com

And in honor of Leslie Knopp and the last episode of Parks + Rec (which was so painful—snooze—to watch), I obviously had to make waffles.

Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com
Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com

If you own a spiralizer and aren't’ sure what to do with it beyond making zucchini noodles, you must check out Ali’s cookbook!

And if you don’t own a spiralizer, you’re in luck! Ali kindly offered to give away 1 spiralizer and I’ll be giving away a copy of her book! Ali literally created and designed a brand new spiralizer that looks so much easier to use and way more thought out than the one I’ve been using. I cannot wait to check out her new model! How cool is that?? She designed a real-life kitchen tool!

So whoever wins will be SET for making some kick ass, healthy, spiralized recipes.

Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com
Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com

I know this recipe serves two, but I most definitely ate both.

Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com
Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com

Print Recipe!

Recipe printed with permission from Potter and Ali Maffucci

Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles

gluten-free // yields 2 waffles

  • 1 medium sweet potato, peeled, spiralized with blade C (the one that makes spaghetti-like noodles)
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • cooking spray
  • 1 medium egg, lightly beaten
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup fresh blueberries
  • 1 tablespoon maple syrup or to taste

Preheat a waffle iron. Place the sweet potato noodles in a bowl and toss with the cinnamon. Place a large skillet over medium heat and coat with cooking spray. When water flicked onto the skillet sizzles, add the seasoned sweet potato noodles and cover. Cook for 5 to 7 minutes or until the noodles have completely softened.

Transfer the noodles to a large bowl and add the egg, vanilla, and blueberries. Toss gently to combine until the noodles are coated, taking care not to break them.

Coat the waffle iron with cooking spray and carefully pour in half of the noodle misture, taking care to fill all the cavities with the noodles. Cook the waffle following manufacturer’s instructions. When the waffle is done, transfer to a plate and keep warm while you make the second waffle. Drizzle a bit of maple syrup over each and serve.

Ashley’s Notes:

  • I had to cook my noodles for about 10 minutes until fully soft. All spiralizers will have different noodle thicknesses.
  • I used my waffle iron at med-high heat for a little crispy edge.
  • 1 large egg worked fine instead of medium (all I had on hand).
  • I used avocado oil cooking spray.
Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com
Blueberry Sweet Potato Waffles | edibleperspective.com

Giveaway details:

1 winner will receive:

  • 1 spiralizer (provided by Ali!)
  • 1 copy of Inspirazlied (provided by me!)

To enter:

  • Leave a comment below about all things spiralizing! Have you tried it before? Do you have a spiralizer? Favorite recipe? etc.

Giveaway ends:

  • 3/2/15 9pm EST

Happy Friday and a big congrats to Ali on her beautiful new cookbook!

Ashley

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel

Guess what time it is!! Or should I say, guess what week it is!!??

It’s DOUGHNUT weeeeek!

How did you not know about doughnut week before today? Well, because I made it up. Friday is National Doughnut Day but I thought we needed more than 1 day to celebrate these tasty treats! And to help celebrate doughnut week, my publisher is offering 35% off my book, Baked Doughnuts For Everyone, ALL week long! [Check the end of the post for details!]

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com

First up on the list for Doughnut Week are SAMOA doughnuts. Sorry for the shouting, but…

SAMOA DOUGHNUTS. Favorite Girl Scout cookie of all time. I’m a huge sucker for caramel and those crisp, shortbread-like cookies. And the toasted coconut!! And the chocolate!

I’m aware you know of the components that make up a Samoa cookie, but I just can’t help my excitement. How this recipe wasn’t included on my list of 101 doughnuts in my book is beyond me.

So what’s with this 1-minute maple caramel you ask? No, it’s not the traditional caramel you find on these cookies but it takes just 2 ingredients, a bowl, and a spoon. No boiling sugar or candy thermometers. You’ll need maple syrup and almond butter [the drippy kind] and THAT IS IT!

One day for a pancake topping I tried stirring together almond butter and maple syrup to see what would happen. The next thing I knew I was spooning maple almond butter c-a-r-a-m-e-l into my mouth and I had no pancake topping left.

I couldn’t believe how caramel-like it was in flavor and texture. I knew this had to be used as the topping for these doughnuts, even though it strays from traditional caramel. It was just too easy and too good.

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com

I have been sort of really excited to tell you about that sauce if you couldn’t tell.

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com

I kept the doughnuts pretty basic but I wanted to add just a few things to make them a bit richer and more cookie-like in flavor. Heavy whipping cream was added for richness and just a touch of almond extract for a hint of shortbread/sugar-cookie flavor.

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com

The bottoms of the doughnuts are dipped in chocolate just like the classic cookie.

Then the caramel and toasted coconut are stirred together to make the most insane topping you have ever tasted. You may want to make extra.

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com

The doughnuts are finished with a chocolate drizzle on top, making them look as close to the Samoa cookie as possible.

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com

With my parents in town we wanted to celebrate my mom’s birthday which was just a few weeks ago. Who needs cake when you can have Samoa Doughnuts? They were the perfect birthday treat, eaten right alongside the strawberry vanilla swirl Greek frozen yogurt.

Ohhh yahhh.

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com

Print this!

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel

gluten-free, dairy-free option // yields 8-10 standard doughnuts [in the Wilton doughnut pan]

Doughnuts:

  • 1/2 cup gluten-free oat flour
  • 1/2 cup sweet rice flour
  • 1/3 cup muscovado sugar, or brown sugar/pure cane sugar/coconut sugar
  • 3 tablespoons almond meal
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1/4 cup heavy whipping cream
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened applesauce
  • 2 tablespoons 2% milk
  • 2 tablespoons sunflower oil, or other baking oil
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 1/8 teaspoon almond extract

Toppings:

  • 1/2 cup creamy natural almond butter, oil on top thoroughly stirred in
  • 1/2 cup pure maple syrup
  • 1 cup dark chocolate chips
  • 1 1/4 cups shredded unsweetened coconut
  • 1/2 teaspoon unrefined coconut oil, optional

For the doughnuts:

Preheat your oven to 350* F and thoroughly grease your doughnut pans with softened butter or coconut oil. Let the 1/2 cup maple syrup come to room temp on the counter.

In a large mixing bowl stir together the oat flour, sweet rice flour, sugar, almond meal, baking powder, and salt. In another bowl whisk the eggs then whisk in the cream, applesauce, milk, oil, vanilla, and almond extract until well combined.

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and whisk until just combined [when you no longer see dry flour]. Spoon the batter into the doughnut molds about 1/4-inch from the top and bake for 18-22 minutes until light golden around the edges and a toothpick comes out clean but not bone dry.

Let cool in the pan for 10-15 minutes then loosen with a small, stiff spatula or a butter knife [carefully] and release the doughnuts from the pan. Place on a cooling rack until fully cool. Bake another round if you only have 1 pan. You can also use a muffin tin but bake time will increase.

For the toppings:

While the doughnuts cool stir together the almond butter and maple syrup until fully combined. It will take a minute or so. The mixture will be very thick but pourable and smooth. Set aside.

Preheat oven to 350* F.

Line a large baking sheet with parchment or wax paper. Melt 2/3 cup chocolate chips [30 second increments in the microwave stirring after each, or with a double boiler] and place in a shallow bowl just big enough to dunk the doughnuts. Dunk the bottom of each doughnut and slightly up the sides, letting the excess drip off. Place on the lined baking sheet. Repeat until finished then place pan in the fridge for the chocolate to set. Melt more chocolate if needed.

Spread coconut on a small, rimmed baking sheet and bake, stirring every 2 minutes until evenly golden brown. About 5-8 minutes total. Watch very closely as it goes from golden to burnt very quickly! Remove and let cool.

Melt the remaining chocolate chips with the 1/2 teaspoon of coconut oil [optional but easier to drizzle with the oil] and set aside.

Place 3/4 cup of the toasted coconut in a medium-sized mixing bowl and pour on the maple almond butter caramel. Fold/stir in with a spatula until fully combined. For a thicker consistency add more coconut. I used just over 1 cup for a fairly stiff mixture.The stiffer the mixture the harder it is to spread.

Remove the doughnuts from the fridge and spread the coconut mixture onto the tops of the doughnuts with a butter knife [or small spatula] and your fingers [this gets messy/sticky]. Drizzle the chocolate over each doughnut. Let the chocolate set in the fridge or serve right away.

Doughnuts best stored in a sealed container in the fridge and placed on the counter for about 30 minutes to come to room temp before eating.

Notes: To make dairy free use dairy free chocolate and sub 5 tablespoons unsweetened almond or soy milk instead of the cream and 2% milk. There are no subs for sweet rice flour. It can be found at many health food stores, online, or easily found at Asian grocery stores [aka: glutinous rice flour].

Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel  | edibleperspective.com
Samoa Baked Doughnuts with 1-minute Maple Caramel | edibleperspective.com

As mentioned in the beginning of the post, my publisher is offering35% off my book all week long on their site! It brings the total to $12.99 which is the cheapest you’ll find it anywhere. For more details on the doughnut book head on over to my book page and check it out!

Discount Code: doughnut35 – enter this in the “promotion/coupon code” field after clicking “add to cart”

Be on the lookout for more doughnut goodness all week long!

Ashley