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Tag Archives: granola

Grain-free Granola Update

19 Tuesday Apr 2016

Posted by IthacaNancy in Recipes

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grain-free, granola

It’s been over 16 months that I’ve been eating grain-free and I recently found a couple really good grain-free granola recipes I thought I’d share, since my last post was also granola related.   My web designer told me tigernut granola was the best food she had eaten in years.  She is also eating grain-free, so maybe our standards are low, but I think anyone would like these!

The recipes are from the blog, Beyond The Bite, by Gabriella Schneider.

Tigernuts are little tubers that folks say gave us much of our nutrition way back in Paleo days.  They are small, about the size of a marble, so I’m really glad I don’t have to farm them.  They are hard, very fibrous, and a little bit sweet.

Tigernut Fruit Granola (Gabriella’s Feb. 18, 2015 blog post)  is really my favorite. [Although I don’t use banana chips.  I just add more fruits.  One could add some nuts too.]

TIGERNUT GRANOLA
(Makes 4 Cups)
Ingredients

1 cup whole tigernuts (2 cups ground)
1 cup unsweetened banana chips
1/2 cup unsweetened shredded coconut
1/2 cup currants
1/4 cup coconut oil – melted
1/4 cup grade B maple syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp sea salt

Process

Place tigernuts in a bowl, cover with water, and allow to soak anywhere from 6-12 hours.
Preheat oven to 300 degrees and line a large baking sheet with parchment paper.
Once soaked, drain tigernuts and place in a food processor with the banana chips, pulsing until broken up into small pieces.
Transfer tigernut mixture to a large mixing bowl and stir in shredded coconut and sea salt.
Melt coconut oil and pour into the mixing bowl, a long with the vanilla and maple syrup, stirring the mixture together with a spatula until evenly coated.
Scoop tigernut granola mixture onto the lined baking sheet, spread out evenly with the back of your spatula, and place the sheet in the preheated oven to bake for 35-40 minutes, until just beginning to brown around the edges.
Remove the baking sheet from the oven and allow the granola to cool completely before mixing with the currents, and storing in a mason jar either in the pantry or fridge.

 

Sweet Cinnamon Tigernut Granola 

Ingredients

1 cup whole tigernuts
2 cups shredded sweet potato
1/2 cup apple sauce
1/4 cup non-hydrogenated palm shortening
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp sea salt
1/2 cup dried blueberries

Process

Place tigernuts in a small mason jar, cover with cold water, and allow to soak anywhere from 6-48 hours (the longer, the softer and more “plump” they will become – if soaking 48 hrs, change water at 24 hours)
Once the tigernuts have soaked, shred your sweet potato in a food processor, and transfer to a mixing bowl for later use.
Switch the shredder blade to the “s” blade, and pulverize the soaked tigernuts until chopped up.
Add the sweet potato back in and pulse a few times until everything is combined.
Pour the mixture back into the mixing bowl and fold in the cinnamon, sea salt, and blueberries.
Add in the applesauce and melted non-hydrogenated palm shortening, and mix until well combined.
Preheat the oven to 300 degrees.
Transfer the mixture to a parchment lined baking sheet and spread out evenly to all four corners of the sheet.
Place in the preheated oven and bake for 45 minutes, then turn the oven up to 400 degrees, and bake for 7 more minutes until brown and crisp around the edges.
Remove the granola from the oven and allow to cool, then transfer to a mason jar and eat as desired.

Notes:

I used freeze dried sour cherries instead of blueberries, but I’ve also made it with freeze dried pears, strawberries, and apples.  Dates would be good too.

You could substitute coconut oil for the palm shortening – and make sure your palm shortening is certified sustainable if you decide to use it.  The use of palm shortening in processed foods is creating  environmental havoc in some tropical regions.

A couple of warnings – The first time I made this recipe I used tiger nuts from a one pound package and didn’t think about sorting them for quality.   I liked it so much, I bought tiger nuts in bulk.  When it came to making the next batch of granola, I sorting through them carefully to make sure none had any ‘bug damage’.  That took a while, and I did discard a few of the tigernuts – much as when one is cooking potatoes, one has to look for spots in the potatoes to remove.  I don’t know if the first batch was pre-sorted or if I ate those bits that I excluded from the second batch, but both batches tasted fine.

Finally, be advised, if your body isn’t used to difficult to digest ‘resistant’ starch, which is a great pre-biotic food, you might want to build up slowly, if you eat a really big serving, which will be tempting,  you may find that you are clearing the room at inopportune moments! 😉

Hestia’s Granola

30 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by IthacaNancy in Uncategorized

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Tags

granola, low carb

We don’t serve breakfast here, but maybe I should start stocking the cottages with this granola.  It’s so good!

Inspired by The Big Fat Surprise, by Nina Teicholz and Good Calories, Bad Calories, by Gary Taube, by Buzz and I started a low carb eating plan in mid-December – yes, just before the holidays!  A friend has had wonderful results with low carb eating, and we’d like to see if mild inflammatory symptoms change (a a few pounds drop off) by avoiding grains and sweeteners, which seems like it won’t do us any harm.

So this granola is off-limits for us right now.  But we were assigned to provide breakfast for an out-of-town extended-family gathering.  I remembered how much we’ve enjoyed this granola in the past and I decided it would be an easy food to transport.  My granddaughter and I made a couple of batches, leaving us with plenty to give as gifts.  It does have many ingredients, but its the best granola I’ve ever had, and there is plenty of flexibility in the recipe.  I thought you might want to try it too . . .

IMG_0706

Hestia’s Granola

6 cups Rolled Oats

5 cups Grain flakes (anything that can be flaked; I made it with more rolled oats so it would be gluten free)

5 cups Nuts (I used 2 cups pecans, 1 cup cashews, 2 cups walnuts and 1 cup hazelnuts – all roughly chopped)

1 cup Sesame seeds

1 cup Flax seeds

1 cup Sunflower seeds, raw

1 cup Pumpkin seeds

1 cup Coconut shreds or flakes

3 and 1/2 cups Maple syrup or honey (I used equal amounts of both)

2 cups Oil (I used Green Pastures Blue Breeze coconut oil/ghee, but I’ve also used local squash seed oil and grape seed oil and walnut oil)

6 cups Dried fruits (suggested are raisins, apple, cranberries, apricots or currants – but I’ve used dates, dried black currants, freeze dried strawberries and sour cherries)

1 cup Roasted soy nuts (optional – I don’t use them now out of concern for their reputed estrogen mimicking properties, but they are tasty)

Directions:

Preheat oven to 300 degrees F.

Mix all grains, nuts, seeds in an extra large bowl (NOT the fruits – I’ve made that mistake – the fruits don’t need to be toasted!)

Gently heat sweeteners and oils together over low heat.

Pour liquids over grains, nuts and seeds in large bowl and mix well..

Pour mixture out into three 11’x13′ glass dishes in a one inch layer.  Metal trays tend to stick

Toast the granola.  Bake for 20 minutes then stir.  Bake for 10 minutes and stir again. Bake for another 10 minutes and check to see if the granola is toasted to your desired level.  If so, it’s done.  If you’d like it a little darker, continue toasting it in the oven until you reach your ideal – but keep watch – burned granola is nasty!

Cool the granola.  When it is just a tad warm, mix in the dried fruits

Yield: 6 quarts which disappear fast.

Notes:

As mentioned above, this recipe is quite flexible – any grain you can flake (or find flaked) is fine, any fruit you like can work, maybe you’d like to try adding chocolate after the granola has cooled, trying cutting the sweeteners with erythritol and stevia to reduce the absorbed carbohydrates, skip the seeds if you don’t want the reputed extra Omega 6’s but instead increase the nuts, etc.

If any of your ingredients are pre-toasted (sunflower or pumpkin seeds for example), add them with the dried fruits at the end.

This recipe can be increased by 1/2, but doubling it will become completely unwieldy.

This recipe comes from Peasant Dreams Farms owner, Katie Quinn-Jacobs, who lives nearby.

My web designer tells me I must add the keywords best luxury rental B&B lodging cottage in Ithaca!  I’m not sure how to do that, but I imagine eating this granola while looking out at the snow falling (as it is today) or sitting at the stone table outside in warmer weather, might bring all of those keywords to mind! ; )

Inn Photo Gallery

Stone Cottage From Hillside
Stone Cottage From Hillside
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Stone Cottage Fireplace
tone Cottage Stickley Chairs
tone Cottage Stickley Chairs
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Stone Cottage Sink, Jucuzzi and Shower
Stone Cottage Tempurpedic Bed with High Count Cotton Linens
Stone Cottage Tempurpedic Bed with High Count Cotton Linens
Photo of the Tower Apartment with its slate-clad cathedral ceiling and wrought-iron veranda.
The Tower Apartment with its slate-clad cathedral ceiling and wrought-iron veranda.
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The Tower Living Room opens onto a deck in the woodland.
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