I mentioned that I had this as part of my very lovely solstice evening, and someone asked for the recipe. I’m writing down how my genius friend Miriam showed me to make it. She adapted it from somewhere else. Despite the picky tone of my instructions below, it’s really easy and took about 15 minutes at most. You can substitute non-organic stuff and a different brand of chips if you want; it might not be quite as virtuous, but it will still be incredibly tasty. Fool your non-vegan friends — it’s that good.
Vegan Chocolate Mousse
1 package organic silken tofu — the very softest kind. Press some of the water gently out of it by putting it in either cheesecloth or a thick paper towel (or a couple layers), placing the bundle in a colander, and putting a bowl or something on top of it. It’s not like pressing hard tofu; you don’t need much weight. Leave it for a few minutes. If you forget to do this ahead, you can squeeze it over the sink like Miriam did. Be gentle.
1 10-oz package Guittard or other non-dairy dark (= “semi-sweet”) chocolate chips. Melt these on low or medium heat in the microwave. I use the defrost setting. Put it in for a couple of minutes at a time and stir frequently. If you don’t like radiation you can also melt chocolate in a double-boiler but I have no idea what that even is.
Meanwhile, move the tofu into your mousse bowl and mash it up a bit. Add a few shakes of organic vanilla and mix. We’re not talking a few drops here, two to four liberal shakes of the bottle should do it. Taste the tofu to make sure you’ve added enough vanilla to get rid of the (normal) slightly bitter aftertaste that all tofu has.
Are you remembering to stir your chocolate as you keep melting it?
Now get your electric eggbeater or immersion blender or mixer or whatever ready to go. AS SOON AS the chocolate is all melted, pour it in a steady stream into the bowl while mixing with the mixer. If you have a sous-chef, have him or her pour the chocolate while you mix and hold the bowl.
(If you dilly-dally, or if you try hand-mixing, you will cause your mousse to be lumpy since the chocolate will quickly harden into little bits as it cools. It will still be yummy, but more like creamy pudding goodness with little chocolate flakes in it, rather than a mousse. If you don’t have any of these devices and are considering investing in one, and/or have a last-minute Santa sugar daddy waiting in the wings, an immersion blender would be my choice. It’s a vegan’s best friend and you can also use it for smoothies, soups, etc. It has a sleek and sexy form. And it’s easy to clean up which is important so you can spend more time eating your mousse and less time cleaning up after it.)
When the tofu and chocolate are nicely combined and very smooth, put the bowl in the refrigerator for 10 minutes or so. Occupy yourself by licking the bowl if you like.
Voila! Mousse. You can top it with real or fake whipped cream, or not.
I think it is important to have chocolate on the longest night of the year.