Vegan Yule log recipe (2024)

It’s not Christmas without tucking into a delicious and indulgent yule log, is it?

The ‘Yule Log’ is a traditional Christmas dessert, especially popular in France, Switzerland, UK, Canada, and Belgium. It’s a rectangular sponge rolled into a log with a filling, coated in chocolate ganache or buttercream. I’m sure everyone can agree, it’s a tradition we never want to end!

Vegan Yule log recipe (1)

Vegan Yule log recipe (2)

A rich and indulgent chocolate sponge with a creamy vanilla buttercream swirl, coated in rich chocolate ganache, topped with edible cookie hedgehogs- how adorable are they?!

This dessert is 100% vegan and 100% in flavour, texture and overall Christmassy vibes.

This woodland inspired yule log is the perfect centerpiece at any Christmas party/gathering and everyone will absolutely love it!

This yule log is:

  • Easy to roll
  • Scrumptious
  • Fun to make
  • Full of chocolaty flavour
  • The perfect addition to any Christmas dinner table
  • Extremely rich and decadent

The hedgehogs were inspired by my lovely friend and fellow baker- Kim Joy, who starred on ‘The Great British Bake Off’ show. She recently released a Christmas cookbook and inside were her ‘German Hedgehog cookies’, I knew I had to make/replicate them!

Her recipe wasn’t vegan so I decided to take my vegan3 ingredient cookie recipe and mold it into the hedgehog shapes coat them in dairy-free dark chocolate and roughly chopped pecans, for a spikey effect.

I love how they turned out and really bring this yule log to life.

Looking for more Christmas desserts? Look no further:

Vegan Yule log recipe (3)

Vegan Yule log recipe (4)

Vegan Yule log recipe (5)

Preparation: 1 hour

Baking time: 18-20 minutes

Serves: 8-10

Level: Medium

____________________________________________________________

Ingredients for the sponge

  • 250ml of dairy-free milk
  • 2 teaspoons of apple cider vinegar
  • 250g of self-raising flour
  • 20g of cocoa powder
  • 60g of caster sugar
  • 1 teaspoon of baking powder
  • 50g of dairy-free butter/margarine

Ingredients for the vanilla buttercream (filling)

  • 100g of dairy-free butter/margarine
  • 190g of icing sugar
  • 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract or 1 vanilla pod (seeds only)

Ingredients for the chocolate buttercream (coating)

  • 100g of dairy-free butter /margarine
  • 115g of icing sugar
  • 40g of cocoa powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon of vanilla extract
  • 50g of dairy-free chocolate

Ingredients for the hedgehog cookies

  • 100g of plain flour
  • 50g of coconut oil (melted)
  • 3 tablespoons of maple syrup
  • 100g of dairy-free dark chocolate
  • 30g of pecan nuts (roughly chopped)

____________________________________________________________

Method (sponge)

1.Preheat oven to 180 degrees c (fan oven) and line a25 x 38 x 2.5 cmbaking tray with greaseproof paper.

2. Whisk the dairy-free milk and vinegar together and set aside for 10 minutes to curdle. This creates a vegan buttermilk.

3. In a medium-sized mixing bowl, combine the flour, cocoa powder, sugar and baking powder.

4. Add the butter into a small saucepan, place onto the hob over low heat and allow to melt.

Once melted, pour into the buttermilk and whisk to combine.

5. Add the wet into the dry and fold together until fully combined.

6. Pour the batter into the lined tin. Level out with an off-set spatula or spoon, you want it to be as level as possible.

7. Place into the oven and allow to bake for 18-20 minutes or until a skewer inserted comes out clean.

Allow to cool in the tin for 5 minutes.

8. Lay a large piece of baking paper on your work surface, sprinkle over some cacao powder and invert the sponge onto the paper, peel way the original baking paper.

9. Trim the edges of the sponge with a sharp knife.

10. Roll up (from the longer edge) using the paper, rolling it up with the paper inside. Set aside to cool.

Rolling it up with the paper inside helps the cake not to stick to itself.

Set aside to cool fully.

Method (vanilla buttercream filling)

1. Cream the dairy-free butter/margarine in a bowl, on high speed until creamy. You can use a hand whisk or stand mixer fitted with a balloon whisk attachment.

2. Add in the icing sugar, vanilla extract.Whip together until fluffy & fully combined.

Add a bit more butter if the buttercream is too thick or more icing sugar if its too wet. You want it to be creamy.

3. Once the sponge has fully cooled, unroll and spread a thin layer of the filling then re-roll tightly without the paper inside.

Pop into the fridge while you make the chocolate buttercream (coating).

Method (chocolate buttercream coating)

1. Melt the dairy-free chocolate either in a microwave or on the hob using a bain-marie, then set aside to cool.

2. Cream the dairy-free butter/margarine in a bowl, on high speed until creamy.

You can use a hand whisk or stand mixer fitted with a balloon whisk attachment.

3.Add in the icing sugar, cacao powder, vanilla extract & melted chocolate.Whizz together until fluffy & fully combined.

Add more dairy-free butter if too thick.

4. Transfer the yule log to a serving plate or tray and using an off-set spatula or knife, spread the ganache all over the yule log.

Use a spatula to create bark texture by creating lines. It looks really realistic and effective.

Serve with a dusting of icing sugar, winter berries or a drizzle of dairy-free cream/icecream.

Go all out and decorate it with some homemade hedgehog cookies.

Method (Hedgehog cookies)

1. Pre-heat oven to 180 degrees c (fan oven)and line a baking tray with greaseproof paper.

2. In a mixing bowl, combine the flour, melted coconut oil and maple syrup.

Bring together with your hands until a dough forms.

Add more flour if too wet or coconut oil if too dry. You want it to be a smooth dough.

3. Roll a tablespoon amount of cookie dough into your hands and shape into ateardrop-shaped. Flatten the pointed side of each cookie to form the ‘face’. Arrange cookies on baking sheets. These cookies will not spread.

4. Bake for10-15 minutes until golden in colour.

5. Once baked, carefully place them onto a cooling rack and allow them to cool fully before decorating.

6. Pulse the pecan nuts in a food processor/blender until roughly chopped. Place into a bowl.

7.Using a bain-marie, fill a saucepan ¾ full with water and place a heatproof bowl on

top. Add in the chocolate and melt.

8.Dip the top of each cookie in the melted chocolate, spreading to fully coat the ‘body’ of each hedgehog. While the chocolate is still wet, sprinkle over the chopped pecan nutsforming the ‘spikes’. Arrange the hedgehogs onto some greaseproof paper and allow to set, about 30 minutes in the fridge.

9. Transfer the remaining melted chocolate to a piping bag with a corner snipped off or a really small round tip nozzle. Pipe chocolate onto the pointed end of each cookie for eyes and a nose.

Decorate with Holly leaves, berries (for decoration purposes only, do not eat).

If you want the red berries to be edible, use red fondant icing.

Store this yule log in a sealed container in the fridge and best eaten within a few days.

Store the hedgehog cookies separately in or out of the fridge.

Vegan Yule log recipe (6)

Looking for more Chocolate desserts? I have you covered:

Make sure you follow me on my social media

Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/thelittleblogofvegan/

Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/littleblogofvegan/

Pinterest- https://www.pinterest.co.uk/blogofvegan/

Twitter- https://twitter.com/BlogofVegan

Vegan Yule log recipe (8)

Vegan Yule log recipe (9)

The Little Blog Of VeganⓒAll Rights Reserved. 2020

Follow:

You may also enjoy:

  • Vegan Strawberry Marble Loaf Cake

  • Vegan Gingerbread Cake

  • Vegan Cream Buns

  • Vegan Orange Loaf Cake

Vegan Yule log recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the Yule log cake ritual? ›

Yule log cake, or bûche de Noël, is a Christmas cake with a ritualistic past. Cleverly shaped and decorated to look like a 3-D log, the cake represents a melding of ancient midwinter traditions: one that celebrated the end of winter, and another honoring the Norse god Thor.

What is the significance of the yule log? ›

The lighting of the Yule log was used to symbolize the birth of Jesus by some while others claimed it symbolized Jesus's triumph over sin. Today the burning of the Yule log is seen more as a secular holiday tradition though it is still performed by those of Christian and pagan beliefs alike during the holidays.

What is a yule log that you eat? ›

A Yule log cake, a.k.a. a bûche de Noël, is a traditional holiday dessert that is meant to resemble an actual log. A sponge cake is baked in a Swiss roll pan, filled, rolled into a cylinder, then frosted again.

How do you roll a Yule log cake? ›

As soon as the cake is just cool enough for you to touch (and it cools quickly), place a clean kitchen towel on top of it and roll the cake, as tightly as possible, around the kitchen towel, until it ends up seam side down in a tight roll, exactly like a roulade (except a roulade where the filling is a kitchen towel).

What is the superstition about the Yule log? ›

A Log of Symbolism and Belief

Celts believed that as the sun seemingly stood still during the twelve days at the end of December, keeping the Yule log aflame would persuade the sun to move again, lengthening the days and heralding the return of spring.

What is the Nordic Yule log tradition? ›

The tale of the Christmas Yule log was born in the faraway lands of Norway. Deriving from the Norse word, “Hweol,” meaning wheel, the Norse people would use the Yule log to celebrate the sun's return during the winter solstice.

What is the difference between a Yule log and a Swiss roll? ›

Is this the same as a swiss roll? The main difference between the two cakes is the way the cakes are decorated. The Yule log cake, or buche de noel, is made to look like the logs burned on Christmas eve, whereas the exterior of a swiss roll is decorated much more simply, such as with whipped cream and fresh fruit.

Is the Yule log a pagan tradition? ›

The idea of burning a yule log during the winter solstice is believed to date all the way back to early Germanic or Scandinavian paganism. The log was burned on the winter solstice, the shortest and darkest day the year, when ancient peoples would worry that the light may cease to exist.

What are some interesting facts about the Yule log? ›

Interestingly, the Yule log was originally an entire tree! Families would bring the trunk of the Yule tree inside and stick the big end of it into the fireplace. The log would feed the fire through the 12 Days of Christmas (from Christmas Day through the evening of the 5th of January—known as Twelfth Night).

What is the difference between Yule log and bûche de Noël? ›

The name bûche de Noël originally referred to the Yule log itself, and was transferred to the dessert after that custom had fallen out of popular use. References to it as bûche de Noël or, in English, Yule Log, can be found from at least the Edwardian era (for example, F. Vine, Saleable Shop Goods (1898 and later).

What is another name for a Yule log? ›

The term "Yule log" is not the only term used to refer to the custom. It was commonly called a "Yule Clog" in north-east England, and it was also called the "Yule Block" in the Midlands and West Country and "Gule Block" in Lincolnshire. In Cornwall, the term "Stock of the Mock" was found.

What is the French tradition of the Yule log? ›

Many of us have heard of celebrating with Yule logs during the Christmas season, and French families enjoy the tradition in the form of a delicious bûche de Noël. Traditionally, a bûche de Noël, which literally means “Christmas log” in French, is a sponge cake and buttercream roulade that is modeled after the Yule log.

Why did my Yule log cake crack? ›

If you overbeat the batter or bake the cake too long, it could become dense, gummy, or dry — and thus more likely to crack. Our yule log recipe has 1/4 cup (25g) oil in it, which provided some helpful moisture.

Can you make a yule log the day before? ›

Santa's elves may be able to work all day and night to get Christmas ready, but that doesn't mean you need to do the same. The beauty of festive layer cakes, chocolate-coated yule logs, and yes, even the traditional fruit cake, is that they can all be made ahead and decorated or wrapped up whenever you're ready.

What's the difference between a yule log and a chocolate roulade? ›

In other houses, it went by the name of yule log, or chocolate sponge roll. If you were being really posh, you might also call it chocolate roulade. Actually a chocolate roulade is not technically the same thing as a sponge roll. It is not a sponge mixture, but instead is a whipped egg and cocoa mixture, with no flour.

What is the tradition of the log cake? ›

As homes grew smaller and fireplaces started to disappear around the 1600s, Yule log burning was replaced with cakes on the table, imitating the wooden log. Thus, the Yule log cake was born. Also known as bûche de Noël, this elaborate pastry was popularized by the French in the 1900s.

What is the story behind the Christmas log cake? ›

Who invented the first yule log cake? There are many stories that make the rounds but according to a article from My Persian Kitchen the inventor of the Yule log could be: The Parisian pastry chef Antoine Charadot from rue de Buci in Paris. In 1879 - created a rolled sponge cake filled with buttercream.

What is the pagan Yule log ritual? ›

Yule Log History

The father or master of the house would sprinkle the log with libations of mead, oil or salt. Once the log was burned in the hearth, the ashes were scattered about the house to protect the family within from hostile spirits.

Is the Yule Log cake pagan? ›

The idea of burning a yule log during the winter solstice is believed to date all the way back to early Germanic or Scandinavian paganism.

References

Top Articles
The Brotherhood | Rotten Tomatoes
Best Soap2Day Alternatives: Free TV + Movie Streaming (2024)
Frederick County Craigslist
Nehemiah 4:1–23
Limp Home Mode Maximum Derate
Overnight Cleaner Jobs
Devotion Showtimes Near Mjr Universal Grand Cinema 16
Www.craigslist Augusta Ga
Mawal Gameroom Download
Ecers-3 Cheat Sheet Free
Weather Annapolis 10 Day
Ap Chem Unit 8 Progress Check Mcq
Studentvue Columbia Heights
The ULTIMATE 2023 Sedona Vortex Guide
Is Grande Internet Down In My Area
Hanger Clinic/Billpay
Energy Healing Conference Utah
Unforeseen Drama: The Tower of Terror’s Mysterious Closure at Walt Disney World
Adt Residential Sales Representative Salary
Aerocareusa Hmebillpay Com
Danielle Ranslow Obituary
How To Tighten Lug Nuts Properly (Torque Specs) | TireGrades
Strange World Showtimes Near Savoy 16
Ficoforum
Cowboy Pozisyon
Hwy 57 Nursery Michie Tn
Rlcraft Toolbelt
Strange World Showtimes Near Regal Edwards West Covina
Gwen Stacy Rule 4
Tendermeetup Login
AP Microeconomics Score Calculator for 2023
R&J Travel And Tours Calendar
Louisville Volleyball Team Leaks
Elgin Il Building Department
Instafeet Login
Los Garroberros Menu
Gun Mayhem Watchdocumentaries
Keir Starmer looks to Italy on how to stop migrant boats
Union Corners Obgyn
Sun Tracker Pontoon Wiring Diagram
Luvsquad-Links
Tunica Inmate Roster Release
Differential Diagnosis
Unveiling Gali_gool Leaks: Discoveries And Insights
Juiced Banned Ad
Trending mods at Kenshi Nexus
Rise Meadville Reviews
The Cutest Photos of Enrique Iglesias and Anna Kournikova with Their Three Kids
Overstock Comenity Login
Who We Are at Curt Landry Ministries
Coors Field Seats In The Shade
32 Easy Recipes That Start with Frozen Berries
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Wyatt Volkman LLD

Last Updated:

Views: 6457

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (46 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Wyatt Volkman LLD

Birthday: 1992-02-16

Address: Suite 851 78549 Lubowitz Well, Wardside, TX 98080-8615

Phone: +67618977178100

Job: Manufacturing Director

Hobby: Running, Mountaineering, Inline skating, Writing, Baton twirling, Computer programming, Stone skipping

Introduction: My name is Wyatt Volkman LLD, I am a handsome, rich, comfortable, lively, zealous, graceful, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.