Beetroot Brownies: Taste so much better than they should.

In The Guardian this week, there is an article about bribing children to eat vegetables, they’ve called it ‘Cash for Courgettes’. Just like sneaking vegetables into dishes this is just another way of getting kids to eat up their veggies. So I suppose Beetroot Brownies fits this bill too - not sure I'd have to bribe my boys to eat cake, though.

Using the 'hidden veggies' option means that food such as soup is a really easy way to increase our kid's intake of more healthier foods. As are sauces for bolognese, chilli, or pie fillings. I haven’t tried avocado chocolate mousse yet but I'm assured its delicious. And of course, we’ve all eaten carrot cake and persuaded ourselves it’s the healthy option.

dairy free chocolate brownie recipe with beetroot

Beetroot

Beetroot was a food I craved during my second pregnancy so I have a fondness for it. It is a vegetable that looks amazing and has great health benefits but I'm not always that sure on how to eat it without it just being slices on a plate or soaked in vinegar. I usually end up using it is soups, but in a cake, it's a little different. 

I’m lucky I guess. My boys have always loved vegetables. Not all vegetables right from the start mind you, but I've found that if they see you eat it often enough, they will eventually give it a try – and what do you know, they like it. (I will never make or expect them to eat sprouts, though!)

At Christmas, my youngest proclaimed over Christmas Dinner 'I love these'. Was it the stuffing balls, pigs in blankets or indeed the prizes inside the cheap crackers that he was talking about? No, to our surprise it was parsnips. And he promptly finished off all the leftover ones too.

It always important to include more vegetables in our meals, in any way that we can. But now that they are getting older, I’d rather see my boys growing up knowing what they are eating and becoming a fan of healthy food, if possible, rather than eating vegetables and not actually being aware of them.

Baking with Beetroot

But I’m all for incorporating vegetables into recipes based on what they can add, be it flavour, texture, moisture, or nutritional qualities. Beetroot is a cheap way to make a cake moist and stop it from drying out whilst in the oven or until it is eaten up. 

dairy free chocolate brownie recipe with beetroot


So here is my recipe for Beetroot Cake. Yes, this recipe includes a vegetable, making it slightly better than cake without veg. We also used a dairy free spread instead of butter meaning its a dairy free cake too!

But let’s not forget the fact that it is still cake, The ingredients include fat, flour and sugar so it shouldn’t replace our vegetables! But the greatest thing about this cake is that it tastes amazing! It’s moist, tasty and full of a little goodness too.


Beetroot Brownies


dairy free chocolate brownie recipe with beetroot

Ingredients:

  • 250g cooked beetroot (For ease I use the vacuum-packed plain cooked beetroot)
  • 100g dark chocolate
  • 200g plain flour
  • 200g margarine, melted - I used a dairy-free spread
  • 200g sugar (brown or white or a mixture)
  • 3 large eggs
  • 3tbsp cocoa powder
  • 2tsp baking powder

 Method:


1. Pre-heat the oven to 180°C/Gas Mark 4. 
2. Prepare an 8in cake tin by lining it with greaseproof paper.
3. Grate the beetroot (to avoid staining my fingers I hold the beetroot with a fork).

dairy free chocolate brownie recipe with beetroot

4. Break the chocolate into individual pieces.
5. Sift the flour, cocoa powder and baking powder together.
6. Whisk the melted margarine, sugar and eggs together in a bowl before adding the flour, cocoa powder and baking powder.

dairy free chocolate brownie recipe with beetroot


7. Gently stir in the grated beetroot and pieces of chocolate. 

Beetroot Brownies: Taste so much better than they should.

8. Pour into the prepared cake tin and lightly level out the surface.
9. Bake in the preheated oven for 45-50 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. 
10. Allow the cake to cool for a few minutes in the tin before removing to a cooling rack and sprinkle with icing sugar before serving.

dairy free chocolate brownie recipe with beetroot


Beetroot is virtually fat-free and low in calories with only 38 in 100g of raw beetroot. It is low in fat, a great source of fibre, vitamin B9, manganese, potassium, iron and vitamin C.

Have you tried making or eating Beetroot Brownies?

Deb x

To be kept up to date with events, new openings, recipes, things to do and child-friendly places to take the kids, plus giveaways then follow My Boys Club on FacebookInstagram or Twitter too. 

Or why not pin this post on Pinterest?


4 Comments

  1. I have never tried beetroot brownies...I think I need to. These look and sound very tasty x

    ReplyDelete
  2. These look yummy! Definitely one for me to try with my daughter I think! x

    ReplyDelete
  3. Can I make them without sugar?

    ReplyDelete