Vegetables

By Gwen Ashley Walters | MARCH 28, 2010 | UNCATEGORIZED

Like you, I’ve tasted many granolas over the years. Hands down, this is still, by far, the best.

People ask me if it’s healthy. After all, the term granola-head refers to someone who shops at health food markets populated by bins and bins of various granola flavors.

I prefer to answer it is “wholesome” instead of healthy. Why? Because it is loaded with sugar and nuts, albeit mostly natural sugar (brown sugar, maple syrup and honey) and heart healthy fats from three kinds of nuts.

I’ve never had the guts to run it through a calorie counter, though. I prefer just to eat and enjoy it without knowing exactly how many extra calories I’ve added to my low-fat yogurt.

Here’s the original post and the recipe. Make a batch and tell me if you think it’s the best tasting granola you’ve ever tasted.

I know it will be one of the most expensive ones you’ve ever tasted. But you’re worth it.

World’s Most Expensive Granola

26
Mar

A challenge?

By Gwen Ashley Walters | MARCH 26, 2009 | NEWS & NIBBLES

One of the things I love about blogging on WordPress.com is the auto-generated, possibly related links to each post.

I’ve found some interesting things, thanks to this savvy little tool. And people have stumbled onto my site in much the same way, reading someone else’s blog and clicking on a related post that lands them in Pen & Fork land.

One of the possibly related links on my “world’s most expensive granola” post said: “the best granola ever!”

So, natch, I clicked through to see what “the best granola ever!” is all about.

No way, Jose, was my gut reaction. I mean, how could the nutty nutritionist have “the best granola ever?”

I’m not sure the words “nutrition” and “the best granola ever” can peacefully co-exist. I’ve tested more than 20 granola recipes for my cookbooks, and two, make that three, were worth printing. The healthy granolas were in no way the best tasting ones. Not even close. Maybe the nutty nutritionist meant “best” in some other category other than taste.

The world’s most expensive granola might not be the most nutritious granola, but it is wholesome, made with whole grains, healthy nuts, and then coated in a a glycemic train wreck of sugar (albeit honey and brown sugar, with some sugary coconut and some super sweet dried fruit.)

You won’t see me making claims about the nutritional benefits of the world’s most expensive granola. I will, however, stack it up against any other granola recipe out there in a head to head taste competition.

So, dear readers, do you have a recipe that you consider “the best granola ever?”  Bring it on! We’ll have a contest.

By Gwen Ashley Walters | MARCH 24, 2009 | BREAKFAST, BREADS & MUFFINS

Well, it would be, if anyone bothered to package and sell it. It could also carry the moniker, “World’s Best Granola.”

The recipe is in two of my cookbooks, and I’m quite certain that the five tons of granola samples I handed out hocking my books all over the country is the reason I sold so many books.

The original recipe came from Martha McGinnis, a former chef at the world-class Triple Creek Ranch in Montana. I knew it was great granola after the first bite, but there was something about it that bothered me.

You have to roast hazelnuts. Have you ever roasted hazelnuts? What a pain in the ass butt. Papery flecks of skin float all over the place. I’m sure, if you looked hard enough, you could find a piece of hazelnut skin somewhere in my kitchen and I’ve not roasted hazelnuts in 5 years.

So I tweaked Martha’s recipe, replacing the hazelnuts with walnuts. Much easier. I also tweaked the sugar composition. She originally called for honey OR maple syrup. I use both because I love the stickiness from the honey and the flavor of maple syrup. And I use Grade B maple syrup because, as Christopher Kimball so eloquently says, “no self-respecting Vermonter would ever use Grade A.”  I’m not from Vermont but if I was, I wouldn’t use Grade A either. Grade A is for wimps.

I also only use dried blueberries and dried tart cherries, compounding the expensive part. Enough blabbering… here’s my recipe from both The Great Ranch Cookbook and The Cool Mountain Cookbook, with my newest tweaks. Just promise me that you won’t sit down and eat the whole batch at once — a promise that is actually harder than it sounds.

Triple Creek Granola (with a few tweaks)

Makes 18 cups

Ingredients
1 (18 ounce) container of old-fashioned oats (not quick cooking)
1 1/2 cups sliced raw almonds
1 1/2 cups raw pepitas*
1 1/2 cups raw walnut pieces
1 1/2 cups sweetened coconut
1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon light brown sugar
3/4 cup honey
3/4 cup Grade B maple syrup
3/4 cup vegetable oil
1 1/2 cups dried blueberries
1 1/2 cups dried tart cherries

Method
1. Heat the oven to 350°F.

2. Toss the first 7 ingredients (oats through brown sugar) together in a large pot.

3. Heat the honey, maple syrup and oil in a small sauce pan over low heat just until warm. Pour over oats mixture and stir until all ingredients are coated.

4. Spread on two lined baking sheets. Bake for 15 minutes.

5. Remove from oven and stir and return to oven in 5 minute increments, stirring after each 5 minutes. It takes about 20 to 25 minutes in total. Remove from oven and scrape each baking sheet contents into a separate, large roasting pan.

6. Divide the dried fruit evenly between the two pans and stir.  Continue to stir occasionally as the granola cools to break up lumps. Cool completely before storing in an airtight container. You can freeze the granola for up to 3 months (like it’s going to last that long.)

*Pepitas are green pumpkin seeds (actually, they are the inner seed of a pumpkin seed, which is white, and you can find them in health food stores if your grocery store doesn’t carry them.)

By Gwen Ashley Walters | SEPTEMBER 01, 2008 | NEWS & NIBBLES

I’m in a strange kitchen. The only thing I’ve brought from my home base is my chef’s knife. This kitchen is equipped for squatters – temporary occupants that have no interest in real cooking. I feel awkward, like I’m intruding. How will I manage the next few weeks without my beloved pots, pans, tools and machines?

The layout is a one sided galley, with the refrigerator almost out of the room. The stove is an electric smooth top. Quick cleanup is a small consolation. The big picture window is a bonus, opening outward with a crank to welcome in cool mountain air, even if the view is the side of the neighbor’s house.

We bought some granola at a local bakery and of course it doesn’t measure up to my Triple Creek Granola, so I stock up with the ingredients at the Whole Foods at the edge of town. My friends tell me I should sell it, but it would be the world’s most expensive granola, as it costs $20 for the raw ingredients to make a batch.

I scrounge through the drawers looking for measuring cups. The 1/2-cup is missing, so the 1/4-cup does double duty. I find a large stockpot to mix the dry ingredients – oats, three kinds of nuts, coconut, brown sugar and cinnamon, while a small saucepan gently warms oil, honey and maple syrup.

I find a cheap sheet pan in the broiler drawer beneath the oven and spread half the batch to the edges, spilling gooey oats on the counter. Fifteen minutes later the pan buckles when I take it out of the oven and it hits to cold surface of the cook top.

The granola sticks to the bottom, even though there is plenty of fat in the mix. Through the hot pad, my hand burns, as I forget that once side is only a thin veil of fabric, like a one-sided mitt.

A few more minutes, another stir and scrape, and repeat again, until the granola is golden brown and the house smells of warm cinnamon, maple syrup and toasted nuts. Now I stir in dried cherries and blueberries, breaking up the clumps as it cools.

All of a sudden, the kitchen seems right, like someone turned a light on in a dim room. The granola cools on the counter. The house smells like the home of a cook, and the strange kitchen isn’t so strange after all.

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