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‘Snack Yourself Silly’ Category

  1. “Sticky Toffee” Bites

    October 24, 2012 by Cas

    OK, folks… these need a bit of an intro and explanation. And before I go any further, start dusting off your prayer books, because a few of these and you’ll feel guilty as original sin.

    This is my gourmet take on going ghetto. Park Avenue meets Trailer Park.

    And I say this because the roots of these sweets — part confection, part cookie, completely indulgent — are to be found in the realm of no-bake simplicity that is the hallmark of the sort of kitchen crafting upon which foodies tend to look down.

    Fuck that.

    What a true foodie — a TRUE culinary maestro — should know above all else is that food is value, calculated the same way we value any other material good. If price (in this case not just monetary, but also in terms of time investment) is justified by quality of the goods, then it is valuable. And these treats, my friend, are worth a King’s ransom.

    These came into my world as a no-bake no-brainer, but I’ve found that a quick stint in the oven helps the whole thing set up so much better, plus it makes the flavors harmonize like they just wouldn’t in a traditional no-bake cake or cookie bar. These are highly adaptable, and this is just the first of my now begged-for creations along the line of the basic Mother Recipe. In addition to penning Mama below, I’m sharing the details for her first born — Bacon, Chocolate and Sea Salt — and will post my further prunings of the family tree as I go (let’s just say that kid sibling, White Chocolate Chili, literally had friends’ eyes rolling back into their heads when I introduced them at a birthday party in a gay bar in Hell’s Kitchen; proudly, it’s the first time I’ve elicited that reaction in such a venue with my fly still up).

    I’ve named these “Sticky Toffee Bites” for the following reasons: these share a close kinship with “beggar’s toffee”, which is an old confectionery staple that utilized a combination of saltine or soda crackers, sugar, and butter. Those are generally baked to the point of a more brittle bite, and since these provide more of a finger-licking gooey finish, “sticky” applies here the same way it does to buns and baked puddings.

    I have adapted the single-bowl method through which I developed these to the more  modern (and simple) single-food-processor-session preparation you’ll see below. It is not essential that you go New School with these, as they’re still easy as hell to throw together the old fashioned way. Enjoy, and let me know what you think.

    Mother Recipe:

    INGREDIENTS

    3 Sleeves Ritz Crackers (or similar)
    1 Can (14 oz.) Sweetened Condensed Milk

    In bowl of food processor, pulse crackers to coarse crumbs. IF DOING A VARIATION WITH NUTS OR CANDY ADDITIONS, add these now and pulse a few times to chop them a bit.

    Pour sweetened condensed milk into the cracker mix. Pulse several times to mix completely.

    Bacon, Chocolate and Sea Salt Bites

    1 Batch Sticky Toffee Mother Recipe (see above)
    6-8 Slices bacon (fried, drained, and crumbled to equal about 3/4 C.) or equivalent, divided
    1 Bag (11.5 or 12 oz., depending on variety) chocolate morsels of choice (I use Nestles or Ghirardelli semi-sweet), divided
    1 tsp. Coarse sea salt

    Preheat oven to 350°. Line an 8″ x 8″ baking pan with waxed paper or parchment, leaving at least an inch of overhang to help lift out finished bars (if using flexible silicone bakeware, lining isn’t necessary).

    Begin with preparation of Mother recipe; reserve 1 Tbsp. of the crumbled bacon, and add the rest of the bacon  and roughly 2/3 the bag of chocolate morsels to the processor bowl, pulsing several times to chop along with the crackers. Add the sweetened condensed milk, and pulse several times to mix completely.

    At this point, you have a choice: the larger crumb as it is will provide a very nice, more cake-like bite to your toffee bars. Further processing until it resembles more of a coarse cookie dough (a few more pulses or a brief steady run on “low”) gives a more dense, soft-cookie finish. Sadly, I cannot recommend one over the other, because happily, I’ve done both and enjoy them equally. So like “salt and pepper to taste” in any recipe, I’ll say this “pulse for consistency to taste.”

    Dump the contents of the processor bowl into the baking dish. Press the dough evenly into bottom of pan, then wet a kitchen tablespoon and smooth the top with the back of the spoon to get it to as even a thickness as possible.

    Bake for 8 minutes. Open oven, sprinkle remaining 1/3 bag of morsels equally over top of baked toffee, and return to the oven for 2 minutes more.

    Immediately remove the pan from the oven and, using an offset spatula or the same big spoon you used a few minutes ago, spread the melting chips around to evenly frost the top of the toffee. While the chocolate is still soft, sprinkle evenly with the reserved 1 Tbsp. of bacon bits and the sea salt, pressing any runaway bits into place.

    Allow the bars to cool in the pan (placing pan on a cooling rack will help) at least an hour. This lets the chocolate top set up, but a time-out in the freezer will help to totally harden it after the base is cool.

    I’m lying to you and myself if I say this is necessary. If you’re packing it and giving it away, yes: you want to cool it completely so the chocolate is solid, cut it into neat little 1″ squares (and YES, I use a ruler and a mezzaluna to accomplish this because — hello, are you new?).

    But these are really totally ready to eat warm out of the oven if you so fancy. And that could mean anything from popping it out of the baking pan, cutting it into bars, and serving with a dollop of whipped cream or ice cream, to standing over the sink in your underwear and eating it straight out of the pan with a spoon. Or your fingers. But then you’d be scraping chocolate out from under your fingernails with your teeth, and that’s a great way to fuck up both a manicure and a pricey set of veneers in one fell swoop, and personally I don’t want to be liable for any such personal tragedies.

    So cool them completely, cut them into nice, bite-size pieces, and share with people you love.

    Or with people you hate and tell them they’re only a point a piece on Weight Watchers and watch them get really really fat because they’re so stupid they believed you.


  2. Pop Goes the Caramel!

    February 19, 2012 by Cas

    So. “Caramel Corn.”

    Like myself, I feel as if this stuff has been around for-fucking-ever.

    And also like myself, I feel it’s misunderstood, often taken for granted, and in large part falls on the unfortunate scale of “I hate it” to “I really don’t mind it but prefer not to be bothered.”

    Welcome to my life, Caramel Corn.

    If you grew up, as I did and I wager each and every one of you over the age of 30 did as well, with the ubiquitous box of Cracker Jack being the benchmark (or only mark) of caramel corn, then you’ll be happy to know that there’s been a resurgence in its popularity thanks to a resurgence in the R&D department at Caramel Corn HQ.

    Having deconstructed the bagged-and-shelved crap we’ve all been conditioned with, home chefs and snack companies and retail specialists and gourmet shops and all manner of foodie entrepreneurs have gone back to the basics and the science and the recipes of yore, and updated the staunch, stalwart circus-and-ball-game staple, elevating it to true “Treat” status by today’s more discerning and varied tastes.

    I’ve been doing this for years now, mostly because years before I moved back into Manhattan, a boyfriend and I discovered an amazing artisan popcorn store in the theater district. The shop suffered the same fate as our relationship: as soon as we fell in love, we fell apart. He went back to Europe, and the popcorn store became a high-rent cosmetics store. I live less than a three-block walk from where it used to be, and every time I pass its floor-to-ceiling windows and spy, not Sweet Cheddar Kettle Corn but Day-Glo Eye Shimmer, I weep a bit inside, and feel the need to rush home and pull out my stove-top hand-cranked popper.

    Recently, I did just that.

    Note that, in my midtown studio apartment, one might be hard-pressed to find a packet of Equal or a saucepan small enough to heat up just a pack of Ramen noodles. But in my universe, mother-of-pearl caviar spoons, a half-dozen hookahs, almost as many fondue pots, and enough mini-muffin tins to fill (literally) eight ovens simultaneously, are almost as essential as the two paella pots large enough to hide the evidence of a double homicide.

    So one must simply choose one’s priorities when scaling-to-fit on move-in day.

    And the Pennsylvania Dutch hand-cranked popcorn popper is among those priorities. And truth be told, I keep an apothecary jar of Splenda for guests who need an artificial sweetener when the five different natural ones I have to offer won’t fit the bill.

    So when facing, just the other day, the need to provide snack fare to a few different post-op friends to aid in their respective recuperations, as well as “Break a Leg” notions for the cast and crew of a favorite production company’s latest revue (admittedly a cheaper way of extending best wishes than with several dozen roses which would be dead soon anyway), I decided to pull Ma (that’s what I call my popcorn kettle… wait for it…) off the shelf and put her to work.

    There will be more recipes to follow; I’ve created to great reception flavors ranging from Strawberry Shortcake to Peaches and Cream to Green Chai Latte Biscotti.

    But herewith, a launching point, and the first three from the latest crop, freshly unearthed from my snacking files of yore.

    Sweet Potato Pie
    White Chocolate Cappuccino
    Peanut Butter & Jelly Sandwich

    You will find the basic recipes at each of these links, as well as the link to the prep method.

    As always, I encourage tweaking and additions, and hope to hear from you when you engage in such wanton abandon.

    Note that the amounts given for popcorn are what’s produced from fresh-popped, using 1/2 Cup of kernels in a conventional pan or air popper. You can do the whole bagged microwave thing as well (which produces just shy of the yield of a fresh batch) or use the unbuttered and unflavored plain old already popped version you’ll find in a huge bag at the supermarket.

    Also note that if you use salted butter, as I’ve stated countless times, you may want to reduce the salt called for in any given recipe.

    Happy Popping!

    With love and respect,
    The Food Daddy


  3. Sweet Potato Pie Caramel Corn

    February 19, 2012 by Cas

    If you’re like me, you’ll convince yourself that you can eat as much of this as you want because it’s a vegetable.

    The starchy addition of actual yam requires a bit more sugar to keep the finish more glossy than it wants to be, and provides a nice smooth outer texture.

    INGREDIENTS:

    1/2 Cup brown sugar
    1 Cup white sugar
    1/2 Cup canned prepared yams, mashed
    1/2 Cup dark corn syrup
    1/2 tsp. salt
    2 Tbsp. butter
    1/2 tsp. each ginger, nutmeg, and ground clove (or to taste)
    1 tsp. cinnamon

    1 tsp. baking soda

    1 batch (roughly 14 cups) popped corn

    MIX-INS:

    4 Whole graham crackers (or gluten-free substitute)
    1 Cup mini marshmallows

    ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS:

    Break up the graham crackers into large crumbs, and ADD WITH THE POPCORN when tossing with the hot syrup.

    Add the mini marshmallows AFTER TWO STIRS (halfway through the baking/drying). When the finished corn is removed from the oven, stretch apart clumps as you toss and cool it.

    Click HERE for the PREPARATION METHOD.


  4. White Chocolate Cappuccino Caramel Corn

    February 19, 2012 by Cas

    OK, everyone is nuts for this. It’s like someone dropped a handful of salty-sweet popcorn into your hot beverage.

    And nobody’s complaining…

    Use decaf if there are sensitivity or kid issues.

    INGREDIENTS:

    1 Cup white sugar
    3 Tbsp. instant coffee granules
    1/4 Cup nonfat dry milk powder
    2 Tbsp. butter
    1/2 Cup water
    1/4 Cup corn syrup (light or dark)
    1/2 tsp. salt
    2 tsp. cinnamon

    1 tsp. baking soda

    1 batch (roughly 14 cups) popped corn

    MIX-INS:

    3/4 Cup white chocolate baking morsels
    1 Tbsp. additional butter
    1/3 Cup powdered sugar

    ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS:

    Allow mixture to boil for an additional minute (6 minutes total).

    Add WHITE CHOCOLATE and additional BUTTER for the FINAL 15 MINUTE BAKE TIME, tossing to begin melting and coating before returning to oven.

    Add POWDERED SUGAR while tossing finished corn, AFTER IT HAS HAD TIME TO COOL to the touch for several minutes.

    Click HERE for the PREPARATION METHOD.


  5. Peanut Butter & Jelly Sandwich Caramel Corn

    February 19, 2012 by Cas

    This recipe will provide a double batch, for two very good reasons:

    First, while you’re going to the trouble of making it, you might as well make double. Each of these half-batches is by recipe standards a full batch unto itself, anyway.

    Second (and of course, more importantly), this will disappear quickly, and more will be requested, and who the hell wants to start this all over again? Not me.

    The two are delicious separately, but just like their sandwich inspirations, the whole is better than the sum of its parts.

    PREPARE EACH BATCH SEPARATELY — then MIX THEM TOGETHER for maximum Munch Effect. The individual ingredients and stirring instructions are as follows:

    INGREDIENTS:

    For the JELLY batch
    1 Cup white sugar
    3/4 Cup jelly or jam (the flavor of your choice if not plain old grape, or a combo)
    1/4 Cup water
    2 Tbsp. butter
    1/2 tsp. salt

    1 tsp. baking soda

    1 Batch (roughly 14 cups) popped corn

    For the Peanut Butter batch
    1 Cup white sugar
    3/4 Cup creamy peanut butter
    1/4 Cup light corn syrup
    1/4 Cup water
    2 Tbsp. butter
    1 tsp. salt

    1 tsp. baking soda

    1 Batch (roughly 14 cups) popped corn

    ADDITIONAL STIRRING INSTRUCTIONS:

    For the Jelly batch, a wire whisk works very well. Stir frequently as it boils.

    For the Peanut Butter batch, when it comes to a boil, reduce the heat to medium. The bottom of the pan will scorch and stick, so DO NOT STIR FREQUENTLY. Being careful not to scrape the bottom at all, stir with a wooden spoon only two or three times throughout the boiling time, otherwise caramelized bits will loosen and fleck the syrup.

    Click HERE for the PREPARATION METHOD.


  6. Daddy’s Spicy-Sweet Nuts!

    October 7, 2011 by Cas

    Deck the Halls!

    As the holiday season approaches, I start thinking about homemade treats — both for serving and for gift-giving.

    Seriously, folks: nothing says “from my home to yours” more than something that was actually MADE in your home. That’s why I’ve always encouraged crafting and ornament-making with my kids and party guests — when you unwrap a sweet or a savory that you know was carefully prepared with your enjoyment in mind, it just makes you smile a deeper smile than  you’d get from the tissue paper wrap and logo-emblazoned sticker sealing up a store-bought gift that sometimes can say, unwittingly, “I’m Thinking of You… But Only While I’m Standing at the Cash Register.”

    Here is a recipe for nuts that definitely have a holiday — or at least Autumn — taste to them. I decided to shake things up a bit with an egg-white based coating which will require a bit of baking off in the oven, as you’ll see, versus my stove-top versions which I will share in the coming weeks as well. The benefit of using egg to act as glue versus honey, caramelized sugar or corn syrup is twofold:  you can use less sugar than normal, plus you can create purely savory coatings that don’t have any sweetness to them at all.


    These are lovely as a gift: they’re pretty and festive and versatile. In a nice, shiny confection bag (available in sizes from lollipop cover to Groom’s Cake take-home favor at virtually every craft or culinary store) or a gathered square of wrapping cellophane — each tied with a bit of colored ribbon or natural raffia or twine — these say “I worked hard to make something special just for you.” In a glass container — think a fish bowl, or mason or apothecary jar — even a fluted champagne or a martini glass, covered with a round remnant of plain or colored fabric secured with a bit of double-faced tape and decorative string — these become a lovely hostess gift or part of a basket of holiday-inspired homemade treats.

    If you’re paying a visit at Thanksgiving, mix these with some Reeses’ Pieces or just the brown, yellow and orange guys from a bag of M&Ms. The blue and white Hershey’s Almond Joy Pieces, or silver-wrapped Kisses, can be tossed in for the Happy Hanukkah Host. And Lord knows there are enough red, green and gold candies, wrapped and unwrapped, chocolaty and otherwise, that can provide some visual Christmas stimulation.

    Or just pack them up plain, alongside a sharp, tart cheese, some gourmet crackers and a bottle of your favorite wine.

    I love to keep these in display jars in different flavor varieties pretty much all year long. When someone drops in for a cup of tea these are a nice sweet note or addition to a plate of cookies or biscuits; and with bread sticks, dried meats and sliced cheese, olives and fresh or dried fruits, these nuts can really pull together an impromptu Tapas. They’re so simple to make that there’s very little excuse for me to answer “no, sorry,” whenever a guest in my house asks for them, out of Pavlovian expectation.

    It seems I’ve trained my foodie friends well, and irreversibly.

    No doubt, you will do likewise with your crew.

    Enjoy.

    INGREDIENTS:
    1 lb. Pecans

    1 Egg white
    1 Tbsp. cold water
    1 tsp. Vanilla

    1 Cup white sugar
    1/2 tsp. Salt
    1 tsp. Cinnamon
    1/2 tsp. Ground clove
    1/2 tsp. Nutmeg
    1/4 tsp. Cayenne pepper (optional, but just do it — it makes such a difference!)

    Preheat oven to 225°. Line two baking sheets with parchment or wax paper, or lightly grease the sheets.

    In a cold bowl, whisk egg white until frothy, about two minutes by hand. Add vanilla, whisk again for about a minute, then add water and whisk again. Mix does not have to be peaking, just foamy and gaining some volume.

    Add nuts, stirring to coat completely. Set aside.

    In a separate bowl, mix all remaining dry ingredients thoroughly with a fork until uniformly blended.

    Add half the wet nuts to the sugar and spice mixture. Toss to coat completely, using fork and hands. Holding a colander (not a fine mesh strainer) above the wet nut bowl, transfer the sugared half of the nuts into the colander and then, holding the colander above the dry ingredient bowl, shake to return any loose sugar mixture to that bowl. Transfer prepared nuts to one sheet, and repeat with the remaining nuts and sugar mixture. Transfer to second sheet, and toss nuts on baking sheets to separate as much as possible.

    Bake nuts 30 minutes. Remove from oven and carefully toss and separate them, moving them around on sheets as much as possible. Return to oven, switching each sheet’s prior position from top to bottom rack.

    Bake an additional 30 minutes. Carefully remove nuts on paper from baking sheets to counter top, table, or cooling racks. If using paperless greased sheets, transfer either to clean counter top, paper- or towel-lined surface, or large bowl affording “breathing room” for the finished nuts.

    Toss nuts frequently to cool. Allow to cool completely for 30 minutes to an hour depending on temperature and humidity, then transfer to serving bowl, storage bags or decorative container.


  7. A Food Daddy Two-Fer: “Dream Duo” Granolas

    April 4, 2011 by Cas

    Now understand up front: the “Dream Duo” does not imply that these two snacks — one sweet, and one savory — are best served in combination. Their tastes are  not necessarily complementary, though in contrast to that statement I did indeed, while developing and living with these two recipes, alternate handfuls of each quite to my satisfaction.

    The “Dream” nature of the name itself comes from my involvement with a monthly live show called “Meet the Lady” which, if you follow me on Facebook, you have no doubt seen me pimp on a regular basis. It’s almost impossible to describe this program — a now year-old staple of the entertainment programming at 92Y Tribeca here in New York City — except to call it a Variety Show. But even that label fails it on so many levels because it is at once high brow and illuminating and excruciatingly intelligent, and on the other, downright hilarious and often shocking — with a stable of regulars and a host of guests, known far and wide from the stage and screen and various glittering circles of the pop culture and counter culture. So it’s not unlikely to find a cabaret sensation playing a homeless do-gooder trying to share her radishes with you if you look a bit peckish, sharing the play space with an infamous Hollywood drag queen and a celebrity cook book author. Likewise, the recording artist and Broadway actress may have to yield the spotlight to a burlesque queen in break-away Ms. Pacman garb gyrating cheekily as she pops marshmallows out of her g-string and into her mouth.

    In light of this last one, I’ve avoided marshmallows in these recipes just for mental-image sake…

    And as off the wall and uproariously tangential as this may all seem, “MTL” always has a core theme that is fully served by each of its participants’ contributions, be they pedantic or seemingly puerile.

    My own contribution this month, in the form of talking about these two recipes, was to address the foodie aspects of the night’s topic: Hollywood Dream Sequences.

    Creator/curator/host/chief-cook-and-bottle-washer Tom Blunt — an extraordinary talent and thinker and collector of humanity and the stuff that falls out of humanity’s pockets when you hold it upside down by the ankles and shake it wildly — approached me after the Food Daddy blog started taking off and we discussed the potential for adding a cooking segment to the regular features of this highly irregular show. This was the segment’s first outing.

    And at first I was thinking “I could make just about ANYTHING and affix the word ‘Dream’ to it to keep on-theme.” I figured “Dream” was a culinary catch-all that just made mundane food sound like it might be special, in the same way recipes of yore often used the words “Supreme” and “Surprise”. So I was ready to take this low road, and join the ranks of “Tuna Supreme” and “Meatloaf Surprise” with something like “Rice Pudding Dream” or “Dream Casserole” or “Awesome Dream Toast on a Fucking Fabulous Dream Stick” — just to have something to talk about and offer as a palate-pleaser to the audience.

    And then one morning I awoke in a cold sweat with three transforming words on my tongue: “Dream-inducing foods.”

    So a bit of research — and I’ll run through this really quickly because I’ve droned on long enough to bore myself already — proved that indeed there is some nutritional science behind dreaming. In a nutshell, dreams are activated, made more vivid and focused, and are more memorable when our brain absorbs the neurotransmitter seratonin. But it has to be presented for uptake in a certain form and dietarily that comes about when tryptophan is modified by vitamin B6. So cutting to the chase, when foods with tons of tryptophan mix with foods with high levels of B6, the results can be — and a week of experimenting with these ingredients proved it to me personally — amazing.

    The highest dietary levels of tryptophan are, surprisingly, not found in turkey (we talk about the effects of the fowl because we OVER-indulge on Thanksgiving, and sure: near-seam-bursting ingestion of ANYTHING can make its nutritional density higher by sheer volume); cheddar cheese is the big winner. Poultry and salmon are also very high, as are eggs, all dairy, white rice, and whole grains and flours.

    Foods rich in Vitamin B6 include bananas and orange (concentrated, as in the frozen juice you need to water down), nuts and beans, again the eggs and the poultry, and carrots and leafy greens.

    So you wanna dream big? Make a cheddar and banana sandwich. Yum!

    Not!

    What I did here to save us all from the kind of food combos that pregnant women have made famous (though pickles aren’t on the list, even if you consider ice cream to be peripherally dairy) is develop two granolas that combine foods high in both Tryptophan and B6, the savory one being more “T-Heavy” and the sweet, more “B-Heavy”.

    Try them both. At the very least they’re off the beaten path of what you normally find in the stale old box of granola on your grocer’s shelf. And they make a great snack, even when served instead of chips or nuts alongside cocktails.

    A note about the actual cooking process: there are two ways to go here, baking your granola forever at nearly undetectably low temperature, or baking it at higher temps requiring a lot of constant checking and stirring. I’m combining both methods here, with a moderate temp and moderate cook time, and you are advised, invited, and even implored to extend the time to make for a crunchier granola or keep it short and enjoy it chewier. Just know that the longer it sits around, the better it gets — but the more moisture you leave in the mix, the more it will benefit from storing in the fridge or freezer because it will, like any fresh-baked product, be more likely to “turn” if left to the atmosphere.

    For ease and searchability, I’m posting each recipe separately.You can find them on the blog as usual, or click here:

    7-Layer Fiesta Burrito Granola

    Orange-Banana Bread Granola

    Cook. Serve. Eat. And most of all…

    Enjoy.


  8. Orange-Banana Bread Granola

    April 4, 2011 by Cas

    A general rule with granola is you want to keep wet ingredients to between a cup, cup-and-a-half per 10 cups of dry ingredients, the bulk of which will be rolled oats.

    Here we push the wet a bit further, so a bit more baking time if you prefer your granola crunchier will be in order — and you will find humidity has a great deal of effect on the outcome as well, so use your instincts and your fingertips and teeth to guide you, ultimately.

    The things we add in here will come in stages: there are some things that go into the mix in the beginning and bake off the entire time. Others, such as raisins, will get too dry or too burnt if added at the outset, so we put those in toward the end.

    Another style choice that’s purely up to you, is chunky versus finer-grain. I prefer my granola bits about the size of popcorn in a sweet recipe (you’ll find this much more difficult without a sugary binder in the savory recipes) so I lay it in the baking pans and leave it alone until the last “check-in” when I add the final mix-ins and then finally toss it around a bit. This also lets the wetter parts get more exposed and dry more evenly.

    This is one of those baked items for which there is no exact science to share, so just stay on your toes (good for the ass muscles, as well) and allow your own brains and tastes to arbitrate.

    PREPARE THE WET INGREDIENTS:
    1 Quart orange juice
    2 Tbsp. lemon juice
    2 Cups sugar
    2 Large eggs
    2 Tbsp. corn starch

    Mix the fruit juices (reserving 1/4 Cup of orange juice) and powdered sugar in a saucepan, and boil to reduce liquid to about half (20 minutes). Remove from heat.

    In a separate bowl, mix the remaining 1/4 Cup of juice with the eggs and cornstarch, beating to combine thoroughly with a fork or whisk.

    Pour about 1/4 cup of the boiled juice mixture into the egg mixture in a steady stream as you continue to whisk; this will keep the eggs from scrambling when you add the mixture to the heated liquid. Now add the tempered egg mixture to the saucepan, return to medium-high heat and stir constantly as it comes to a boil and thickens. Remove from heat.

    PREPARE THE DRY INGREDIENTS:

    10 Cups dry oatmeal, old fashioned or quick
    1 Cup sunflower seeds
    1 Cup chopped walnuts
    5  Cups Rice Krispies cereal
    3 Large bananas, mashed
    1 Cup raisins
    1 Slice (5-6 oz.) pound cake, crumbled
    1 Cup powdered (confectioners) sugar

    Preheat oven to 300°.

    In a large mixing bowl, combine oats, seeds, nuts, and 3 cups of the rice cereal. Add mashed banana and toss together. Finally, pour cooled orange juice and egg mixture over the dry ingredients and toss to coat thoroughly.

    Grease two roasting pans or baking sheets (or line with parchment paper) and transfer granola mix in two equal portions, spreading evenly by hand.

    Bake for 1 hour, alternating top and bottom rack pans half way through. After an hour, remove the granolas and transfer back into clean, large mixing bowl. Add remaining 2 cups of rice cereal, raisins, and crumbled pound cake and toss to incorporate. Transfer back to pans, reduce heat to 250°, and bake an additional hour, checking every 20 minutes to insure the granola is cooking evenly. If it’s darkening and drying unevenly especially around the edges, toss quickly to redistribute and return to the oven.

    Once done to your desired crispness (granola will dry further slightly as it cools) remove from oven. Toss in mixing bowl once again with powdered sugar, and transfer to sheets of wax paper on a flat open surface to cool, tossing occasionally.

    Once cooled, transfer to an airtight container for storage. This is a nice “display piece” so I always keep my fresh granolas in glass canisters with labels noting their varieties.

    You can enjoy this granola as a finger-food snack, or as a cold cereal with milk or yogurt and, if you like, additional fruit or brown sugar.


  9. 7-Layer Fiesta Burrito Granola

    April 4, 2011 by Cas

    Here, a savory sweet swap I think you’ll enjoy.

    Normally when you think of granola you think fruits and berries mixed in with the grains. This one features savory additions like beans and cheese and gets its flavor from savory spices such as cumin and chile.

    This granola is a great snack food, and is also amazing sprinkled on top of soups and salads. I found it most dangerous when just displayed in a glass jar on the butcher block, because every time I passed was occasion enough to grab a handful. The good news in that is if it becomes that regular a habit, it will be gone in no time so you won’t suffer for long.

    1 19-oz. Can black beans
    1 19-oz. Can red kidney beans
    10 Cups dry oatmeal, old fashioned or quick
    1 Cup Minute white rice
    3 Cups crushed tortilla chips
    1 Tbsp. chili powder
    1 Tbsp. paprika
    2 tsps. cumin
    1 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes
    2 tsps. garlic powder
    2 Tbsps. dried chopped onion flakes
    2 Tbsp. dried parsley
    1 Tbsp. dried cilantro
    1 Tbsp. dried oregano
    1 Tbsp. salt
    1 15-oz. Jar queso dip
    1 15-oz. Jar prepared salsa (mild or medium)
    2 Tbsp. corn starch
    1/4 Cup vegetable oil
    8 oz. shredded cheddar cheese
    4 Slices white bread, coarsely shredded or chopped

    Preheat oven to 350°. Grease two baking sheets or roasting pans, or line with parchment paper; set aside.

    Rinse and drain the beans in a colander and pat dry with some paper toweling. Transfer to a big mixing bowl with all but the last six remaining ingredients, and toss to mix.

    Mix salsa with corn starch until smooth. Add Salsa mixture, queso and oil to dry ingredients, and toss to coat thoroughly.

    Transfer granola mix to pans in two equal portions, patting each gently to form almost a bar-cookie, though not as densely packed.

    Bake for 1/2 hour; swap the pans between top and lower racks for more even cooking, and reduce heat to 300°. Return granola to oven for another 1/2 hour.

    Remove granola from oven and transfer back to clean mixing bowl. Add crumbled white bread and shredded cheese, and toss to incorporate.

    Transfer granola back to baking pans, and return to oven. Reduce heat to 250° and bake an additional hour (or longer if desired) checking every 20 minutes for even browning and tossing as necessary.

    When desired level of crispness and browning are reached, remove from oven and transfer to sheets of waxed paper on flat, open surface to cool completely. Once cooled, store in an airtight container.