Place the chocolate in a bowl. Heat the cream to almost boiling, then pour over the chocolate and let it stand for 10-15 minutes until soft. Whisk gently until smooth and leave to come to room temperature.
Stir in the nut butter and dried cranberries, then cling wrap and refrigerate for a couple of hours or overnight until firm enough to shape into balls.
Roll into walnut-sized balls, and place in the freezer while you make the melted chocolate dip.
Place the chocolate over a double boiler and stir until melted. Whisk in the olive oil.
Immediately dip the truffles into the melted chocolate and stand to set. Drizzle over with more melted chocolate.
Walnut Butter
250g walnuts
Pinch sea salt
2 tbsp jaggery powder
Preheat the oven to 180C.
Bake the walnuts at 180C for 10-12 minutes until fragrant. Make sure they don't get over-brown, or else the walnut butter will get bitter.
Place in blender and process in short pulses until the walnuts get pasty, then begin releasing oil.
Add a pinch of salt and the jaggery powder.
Transfer to a glass bottle and store in the fridge.
Chef Prasad exploits the meaty and robust quality of aubergines in this striking vegetarian recipe, using the vegetable to wrap up a gently spiced and aromatic quinoa, paneer and crunchy vegetable filling. A perfect mix of textures and flavours, this recipe could easily be multiplied to feed a crowd.
This recipe is perfect for a summertime dinner party. Star anise and fennel seeds are widely available, while chaat masala can be bought from Indian grocery stores and online. This dessert requires overnight freezing so make sure you start it in plenty of time.
Vancouver and the Lower Mainland have so many diverse options and international cuisines to choose from – we are extremely lucky in our foodie quests in British Columbia. Here’s a list of some of Vancouver’s newest, award-winning restaurants that are definitely worth a visit. Your palate will thank you afterwards, as you’ll be blown away – bon appétit!