Breakfast, Brunch, Nuts, Pecans, Snack

Favorite granola with puffed grains, pecans, maple syrup, and honey, revised

Favorite granola with puffed grains, pecans, maple syrup, and honey on alickofsalt.com

Granola is a staple breakfast at our house and a frequent ice cream topping. This puffed grain granola is my most requested recipe and the recipe I’ve most gifted or made for others. I’ve once again made a few changes since I last posted it on the site. I always make the recipes I post at least twice before I post them, using the second time as a recipe test of sorts. Somehow the moment I post it signals the time for another change because the recipe I end up making time and time again is almost always a slightly revised version of the one I post. This is the latest version of my favorite granola.

My favorite granola started out as crunchy clusters with almond slices, a recipe adapted from Deb Perelman‘s Smitten Kitchen Cookbook. I then added puffed grains and other ingredients from Kashi’s GoLean Honey Almond Flax Crunch cereal. I then replaced the almond slices with pecans and the puffed wheat with kamut and started baking it in porcelain dishes to give me more room to stir the ingredients while the granola was baking. In this latest version, I added puffed millet and took out the flax seeds.

One hack I’ve learned is to “grease” the tablespoon before measuring out the honey. I measure out the first tablespoon of butter or oil, then measure out the honey so it slides right out, then repeat. Of course, you’d need to be able to pour the honey into the tablespoon to be able to measure it out in this way. I wouldn’t want you to contaminate your honey with a dirty tablespoon if you’re planning on scooping the honey out of a jar.

To best beat the heat, I double the recipe and I make it either in the early morning, before my apartment turns into an oven all on its own, or in the evening. That way, I only have to suffer once in the added oven heat for two batches of granola. Still seems to run out quicker than I would hope.

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Berries, Blackberries, Breakfast, Brunch, Fruit, Nuts, Pancakes, Peaches, Pecans, Quick, Raspberries, Vegetarian

Dutch baby with summer fruit, pecans, and Nutella

Dutch baby with summer fruit, pecans, and Nutella

Summer has come and gone and now that our apartment no longer turns into a sauna everyday, I have free rein over the oven again, which means that I can restart my tradition of weekly dutch babies. It has been a little over two years since I posted my first recipe on here and two years later, my dutch baby obsession is still going strong. This one is large enough to share, unlike the first one, which has not served two people since we got our larger cast iron pan.

When we’re feeling fancy, our favorite toppings are summer fruit and Nutella. I sometimes add chopped pecans to the dough, but I’m not always in the mood for them. I have also made a few changes to my technique. I don’t cook the fruit in the oven anymore. Instead, I prepare it while the oven is preheating, put it in little porcelain bowls, and place the bowls on the warm potion of the stovetop until the dutch baby is ready to come out of the oven. This warms the fruit up a little bit. If the fruit is not very ripe, I also sprinkle some powdered sugar on it to sweeten it up a bit. The Nutella goes in a little porcelain bowl as well because my stovetop gets warm enough that it would melt the plastic jar if I tried to heat it up directly. I learned this the hard way, by mutilating our immersion blender.

The dutch baby lessons I’ve learned since my first post is that it’s a pretty failproof recipe as long as I use whole milk, and that it absolutely has to be eaten right away. If you don’t eat it right away, my obsession with this pancake will baffle you, as it baffles me the few times it ends up cooling on me before I can dig in. So if the person you’re sharing it with ends up needing to do their bathroom activities as soon as the dutch baby is ready to come out of the oven — does this happen in other families or just ours? — then turn off the oven and keep the dutch baby in there until they’re back because slightly burnt dutch baby is better than cold dutch baby, trust me.

Also, if you’re feeling lazy and can’t be bothered with the fruit or pecans, it is still delicious served the traditional way, with just the powdered sugar, some drizzles of freshly squeezed lemon juice, and maybe some maple syrup.

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Breakfast, Snack

Favorite granola with puffed grains, pecans, maple syrup, and honey

Favorite granola with puffed grains, pecans, maple syrup, and honey on alickofsalt.com

It’s been a while but here I am again with a recipe for my newly favorite granola. I haven’t strayed too, too far from my previously posted puffed grain granola recipe. The main puffed grain I use now is kamut, which is a bigger grain than wheat and is still a good size after it shrinks, and my nuts of choice are now pecans. I often add wheat germ for added protein and nutritional value.

I always forget how quick and easy it is to make granola, and I never make it as often as I should, in part because as soon as I make it, the granola monster, otherwise known as my husband, devours it by the handfuls as a snack. When I do have it, it’s my favorite quick breakfast with yogurt and berries. We also take it along on hikes as an alternative to granola bars, which are typically very sweet. I think that it would also make a nice homemade gift.

My regular grocery store doesn’t carry puffed grains, but I’ve found them at health food stores or grocery stores which have a larger selection of health food — whatever that means — like Whole Foods and Sprouts. If you live in the US, you can use the Arrowhead Mills locator to find stores that carry them. Arrowhead Mills isn’t the only brand that carries puffed grains, but it’s the only one I’ve found in West Los Angeles.

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Breakfast, Brunch, Chickpeas, Dinner, Eggs, Lunch, Quick, Vegetarian

Poached Eggs in Tomato Sauce with Chickpeas and Feta (Shakshuka)

Poached Eggs in Tomato Sauce with Chickpeas and Feta (Shakshuka)

This poached egg, tomato, and feta dish is quick and easy to make, tasty, and hearty enough to be breakfast, brunch, lunch, or even dinner. We usually only poach as many eggs as we eat on the day we make it and save the rest to reheat and serve with fried eggs. This shakshuka is slightly spicy. For a bit more spice, I would use either two jalapeños or increase the chili powder to 1/2 teaspoon (2.5 mL). Serve with good bread or warmed pita or tortilla.

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Breakfast, Brunch, Farro, Grains, Lunch, Vegetables, Vegetarian, Zucchini

Zucchini farro fritters with a fried egg

Today marks the two-year anniversary anniversary of the beginning of my partner’s dietary restrictions and of our low-sodium cooking adventures. To celebrate, I’ve returned from my unannounced and unexpectedly long hiatus with a brunch recipe for zucchini farro fritters. Not the most celebratory of dishes, I know, but it will have to do.

We’ve made this recipe a couple of times. More often than not, we top the fritters with a fried egg and serve them with bread on the side. Since it’s just the two of us and this picky eater gets sick of eating the same thing the next day, we’ve also turned the remaining patty mixture into a stir-fry. If you have yet to master the art of patty-making, I very much feel your pain (as this picture, out of which I cropped most of the messiness, may suggest), and would not discourage you from making the patty mixture into a stir-fry right away. The mixture shrinks while it’s cooking. We start out with 4-inch patties which then shrink to a size that still fits a large fried egg. We don’t use any added salt so they turn out slightly sweet. If your diet allows it, instructions for how to incorporate salt into the fritters are included in the tips section.

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Breakfast, Snack

Low-sodium crunchy almond granola

If you’ve never made your own granola, you should try it. I bet you’ll never buy granola again. It’s fairly easy to make. I mix all of the ingredients together while the oven is preheating, wash the dishes during the first part of baking, and then relax for the second part. Or write a blog entry. Whichever.

I don’t think that granola needs salt at all but I am very averse to sweet and salty things. I make this recipe or a variation of it regularly, I’ve never added a lick of salt, and I still think that it is way, way better than any granola I’ve bought. But I’m generally been pretty underwhelmed with store-bough granola. The non-crunchy kind gets very soggy, even in yogurt, while the crunchy kind is too crunchy. This has the perfect amount of crunchiness. It won’t get soggy in your yogurt but it also won’t cut up your gums. If you don’t like it crunchy or if you want to make it vegan, skip the egg whites and choose the olive oil over the butter.

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Berries, Breakfast, Brunch, Fruit, Raspberries

Dutch baby with berries

Dutch baby with berries

A dutch baby, otherwise known as a David Eyre’s pancake, is a cross between a pancake and a crêpe and much, much easier to make than either. I love them so much, I even make them during heat waves, when the inside of our air-conditionerless apartment feels like a car that’s been sitting in the sun, and I never regret it. The other great thing about them is that you can be sloppy with the ingredients and still get a perfect dutch baby every time, unlike with its unbaked sisters.

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