Checking in really quickly with this olive oil loaf that we haven’t been able to get out of our heads. We knew that we wanted it to be vegan and naturally sweetened, with a pink, plant-based icing, but the rest took a bit of debate. Should it be gluten-free or not? Should we aim to make it golden yellow like traditional olive oil cake? We finally decided on a simple, spelt version (maybe we’ll tackle a gf one later?), sweetened with coconut sugar, and thus darker in color than your average olive oil batter. It is still moist and hearty, and the icing is so easy and very special :)
I love baking with spelt flour, especially sprouted spelt, which I used quite a bit for the baked goods in our new cookbook. The batter here is very simple, and yields a nice, crumbly yet moist dough, perfect for baking projects like this one. I would usually use coconut oil in this batter, but decided to go the traditional route and use olive oil. I love the subtle, earthy flavor that it brings to this loaf.
I discovered that coconut butter makes an excellent base for vegan icing back in my raw food days. It melts well, but maintains shape, which makes it easy to work with. I love hibiscus tea for its color, pleasant, sour flavor, and myriad of health benefits. We used it here to offset the sweetness of the icing with some sour notes, as well as to color it pink. The beet came in because we wanted the icing a bit more electric in color, since hibiscus only colors the icing a dirty pink (which is pretty in its own way). You can completely omit the beet here, or use a fresh beet if you don’t have beet powder. Just grate about a half of a small beet and squeeze it through a cheesecloth to extract some juice. Then add the juice to the icing little by little until you have the color you like.
Hope you’ll give this one a try!
- coconut oil for oiling the loaf pan
- 1½ cups (150 g) sprouted spelt flour or whole spelt flour
- ⅓ cup coconut sugar
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- pinch of sea salt
- 5-7 cardamom pods - green shells removed, ground (optional)
- 1 teaspoon ground ginger (optional)
- 1 cup warm water or strong hibiscus tea
- ⅓ cup olive oil
- ½ tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice or apple cider vinegar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ¼ cup raw coconut butter (not oil)
- ¼ cup strong hibiscus tea
- ½ teaspoon beet powder (for color, optional)
- 2 tablespoons maple syrup
- a splash of vanilla extract
- Preheat oven to 350° F (180° F).
- Thoroughly oil an 8½" loaf pan with coconut oil and line the wide side with parchment paper.
- In a bowl, combine the flour, coconut sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cardamom and ginger, if using. Mix well with a fork. Add the warm water, olive oil, lemon juice/acv, and vanilla extract. Mix to combine and pour the batter into the loaf pan. Carefully lift and drop the pan a couple of times to eliminate air bubbles.
- Bake for 50-55 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean. Let cool before icing.
- While the the loaf is baking, combine all the glaze ingredients in a small saucepan over low heat. Whisk until the coconut butter is melted, and the icing is smooth and creamy. Remove from heat and allow to cool, until thickened to an icing consistency. You can refrigerate the icing to speed up the thickening process, but be very mindful, as it might turn too thick very quickly when refrigerated.
- Once the icing has cooled to a good consistency, glaze the loaf, allowing some of the icing to drip down the sides. You might have a little bit of left-over icing - spread that on top of your loaf slices and enjoy :)
Beata says
It looks beautiful, but beet juice or beet powder are missing from the icing recipe.
Anya says
Hi Beata,
Whoops! Thanks for catching that. Added beet powder to the recipe :)
Amy says
Beautiful. Are those chocolate chips or cocoa nibs sprinkled on the sliced piece? Also, can you give us your source again for organic beet powder? (I know you did before – sorry for losing that!)
Anya says
Thank you! Those are cacao nibs…we sprinkle them on everything :) I’ve been liking this beet powder lately: https://www.oregonswildharvest.com/bulk-beet-root-pwd-organic, but there are also a few good ones on Amazon.
Grace says
What a beautiful recipe! Do you have any alternative ideas for coconut butter?
Anya says
Thank you Grace! Coconut butter is a key ingredient in the icing, so there’s really no sub. But we do have a recipe for a cashew-based beet frosting that you could use instead (just decrease the amounts in the recipe): https://golubkakitchen.com/chocolate-beet-layer-cake-with-pink-frosting-and-chocolate-ganache/
Domenica says
Hi Anya,
Would that work with other type of flour? What would be your suggestions?
Thank you!
Anya says
Hi Domenica,
You can use whole wheat flour or regular wheat flour.
Domenica says
Thank you Anya, I was looking rather for gluten free flours, e.g. buckwheat, oat flour etc. Would that work? Or low gluten flour like rye, but that one has perhaps to strong flavor? Thank you!
Anya says
Hi Domenica,
I have a suspicion that the recipe would need to be modified quite a bit for a gf version, so I can’t recommend a straight up gf flour substitute. You could try rye flour, but I can’t guarantee the results as I haven’t tried it myself. We’ll work on a gf olive loaf version in the meantime :)
Domenica says
:-) Great! Thank you Anya. Do you have any general tips when trying to modify recipes from gluten to gluten free? I’ve read there should be more wet ingridients?
Helen says
Hi Anya!
Felt inspired after seeing Masha last weekend – making this recipe as we speak..
In the instructions – you say to oil the pan with coconut oil for the loaf; but in the recipe ingredients it suggests extra olive oil to oil the pan. What would you recommend for this? Will the olive oil flavor better or the coconut oil?
Thank you so much!
Anya says
Hi Helen,
Thanks for pointing that mistake out! I corrected it in the recipe. Oil the pan with coconut oil if you have it. If not, you can also oil it with olive oil or even butter. Hope you enjoy the loaf :)
cakespy says
I love hibiscus. I love beets. I love pink. I love cake. Well, check-check-check-check, this recipe has everything!
Anya says
Yay! Thank you :)
Pam Willis says
Made this and brought it to work. Everyone loved it. Loaf was very moist and not too sweet. My glaze turned out too dark though and not pink like the photo. So, my of course didn’t look at pretty as yours!! How did you make it a brighter pink color?
Anya says
Hi Pam,
So glad you and your colleagues enjoyed it! Did you add beet powder to the glaze? The color is mostly due to the beet powder, but it doesn’t add much in terms of flavor, so that’s why it’s optional. In the future, if you wanted to make a brighter icing without beet powder, you could grate about a half of a small beet and squeeze it through some cheesecloth. Then add a tiny bit of that juice to the glaze to dye it pink :)
Sam says
Hi there, I haven’t baked with tea before but just wondering if you have a recommendation for hibiscus tea to use and if it’s the loose leaf tea added in as is? I have found some hibiscus tea bags so I could just empty the bags in I assume?
Thank you :)
Anya says
Hello! Sorry for the late reply. This recipe only calls for steeped hibiscus tea (with the leaves strained), so you could use loose leaf or bagged, either one would work. You could also omit the hibiscus tea entirely and use water in place of it in the loaf recipe, and beet powder or a little beet juice to color the icing.