Tag: apple

Morning Glory Oatmeal

Ingredients Step
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Grease an 8" square dish.
2 c. milk
⅓ c. maple syrup
1 egg
2 T. oil
1.5 t. vanilla
Whisk together the wet ingredients.
2 c. old fashioned oats (must be old fashioned)
1 t. baking powder
¾ t. cinnamon
½ t. salt
Combine dry ingredients in a large bowl (this will be the primary bowl). Pour the wet ingredients on top and stir together.
½ c. raisins
½ c. pecans
2 T. coconut flakes
1 diced apple (~1½ c.)
1-2 shredded carrots (~½ c.)
Add to the wet ingredients. Stir to mix. Then pour into the greased dish.
½ c. pecans
2 T. coconut flakes
¼ t. cinnamon
1 T. brown sugar
pinch of salt
Combine in a small bowl. Top the oatmeal with this mixture.
Bake 40-45 minutes, until the edges are golden and the center is just set.

Source: WaPo

Broccoli Spoon Salad

A lovely salad that works as a side dish for omnivores and an entree for vegetarians. The raw broccoli tenderizes in the vinegar and doesn't eat like raw broccoli.

Consider cutting the honey if it's broccoli season. Leave it at the whole amount if it's late spring/summer and the broccoli isn't at its prime. (More often than not, I've thought the full amount of honey was too sweet overall when attached to sweetened cranberries.)

Do not sub cranberries with pomegranate seeds. The texture doesn't work.

Consider wild rice instead of quinoa. (I haven't tried this yet but it should be delicious and still protein-packed.)

Ingredients Step
1 c. raw quinoa Wash. Boil in well-salted water until plump and tender, about 15 minutes. Drain in sieve, rinse with cool water, and drain well. (Don't treat it like rice with the cloth and lid; it will retain too much heat in the salad.)
zest and juice of 1 lemon
3 T. olive oil
3 T. Dijon mustard
2 T. honey
2 T. apple cider vinegar
Whisk together in a very large bowl. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
2 heads of broccoli (~1½ pounds) Finely chop the broccoli and add to dressing. Let it macerate as you prep the rest.
1 tart green apple
4 oz. sharp cheddar
Finely chop the apple and cheese. Add to broccoli. Toss to combine.
cooked quinoa
¾ c. pecans
½ c. dried cranberries
Add. Toss to combine. Taste. Add more lemon juice, salt, and pepper to taste.

Source: Sohla El-Waylly (NYT)

On Quinoa

I usually buy quinoa from the bulk section at Sprouts, in whatever color(s) I'm feeling.

I wash it first until the water runs clear (well, clear enough), similar to basmati. Some people run water over it in a fine sieve for a few minutes, but my sieve loses a lot of grains. I tend to swirl and rub it in the saucepan before putting heat under it, with 3-4 changes of water. (Yet other people argue you don’t need to wash it at all, but that's dangerous — depending on your quinoa producer and your taste buds, you might end up with a bitter/soapy/ugly flavor rather than a vaguely earthy grain.)

This recipe boils the quinoa like pasta. That makes it easy to taste-test and see when it is done to your preference. The final texture you want is similar to fine couscous. Maybe up to half of the grains will have unfurled little tails as they cook, and all the grains will plump up and no longer be at all crunchy.