2.25.2013

Jeff & Jeff's Granola.

Perfect.
I mentioned to a friend recently that Jeff and I make our own granola. Her response was "Wow...you must reeeally have a lot of time on your hands." While she is correct (I do) the process really only takes a few minutes, and the result is well worth the effort. Store-bought granola is expensive and overly sweet in my opinion. Plus, I can never choose because there is never one type that has everything I want in my bowl.

The greatest thing about making granola at home is that you can experiment, adjust the sweetness, go crazy, try different grains, and customize each batch to suit your perverted cereal desires. Here is my basic recipe. It makes about 5 cups or so. I typically double the recipe each time I make it, because it keeps for days in an airtight container. And, do you know what makes a fabulous gift for someone you love? A bag of your homemade granola, that's what! (Put a prize in the bottom of the bag for extra brownie points. You're welcome.)

You will need:

3 cups old-fashioned rolled oats (not instant)
1 cup coarsely chopped or whole raw nuts (if using roasted ones, add them after cooking the granola)
1/2 cup unsweetened shredded coconut*
2 Tablespoons packed brown sugar
3/4 teaspoon ground cinammon
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon kosher or sea salt
1/3 cup honey
2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
1 cup dried fruit

Preheat oven to 300° and line a rimmed baking pan with parchment paper (not necessary, but well worth the investment...add it to your grocery list if you don't have it!). Mix the first 7 ingredients in a large bowl. Heat honey and oil and stir until smooth and thinned. You may do this on a stove top or in a glass measuring cup in the microwave. Drizzle the honey mixture over the dry ingredients and toss to combine. Spread the granola on the baking pan. Bake until golden brown, stirring every 10 minutes for even cooking, for about 40 minutes. Remove from oven, stir one more time, and let cool completely. Mix in the fruit and store in an airtight container at room temperature.

*Any health food store should have unsweetened coconut. It not, you may use the sweetened kind. Just make sure to reduce the amount of brown sugar to half.

Ideas:
-Try sliced almonds, whole cashews, walnuts, pecans, peanuts, or whatever nuts you are nuts for.
- Add more or less coconut depending on what you like. I can't get enough.
-Try adding in 1/4 cup chia seeds, sesame seeds, wheat germ, or oat bran before baking.
-For variety, toss in a cup of bran flakes, corn flakes, or any ready to eat cereal after baking. 
-Yes, this recipe can be made with less sugar, no sugar, more sugar, white sugar, no oil, etc.
-Try substituting a mixture of molasses and honey, or agave syrup, or maple syrup.
-Get creative with spices. Add more or less. Try things like pumpkin pie spice, or a spoonful of vanilla extract in the honey.
-Yes, you can eliminate the salt all together.
-Try raisins, dried cranberries or cherries, banana chips, dried pineapple, dried blueberries, chopped dried mango, candied ginger, chopped dried apricots, prunes, dried figs...whatever you like!
-For sugar free granola, adjust the recipe according to your needs, and add your own sweetener before eating.
-When finished baking, fold up your parchment paper, put it away, and use it again for your next batch.
-For gifts, package your granola in coffee bags and make your own labels!


Enjoy!



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