Category: Breakfast Eats

Breakfast foods you can have any time!

Flat & Flaky Nancy Silverton’s Biscuits

Flat & Flaky Nancy Silverton’s Biscuits

I haven’t posted in more than just a few days.  It’s not because I have been busy and have pushed my blog to the back burner, nope.  I just haven’t been all that enthused about the recipes I have tried lately.  Then I thought, I should be posting the good, the bad, and the meh.

I found a couple of recipes that fall into what I call my “Quest for the Holy Grail” list.  Dishes that I have pretty darn good recipes for already but if I find a new recipe that sounds yummylicious, I’d try it.   Such is the case for Nancy Silverton’s Flaky Buttermilk Biscuits and 2 recipes for banana bread.  One from the Violet Bakery Cookbook and another from America’s Test Kitchen Essentials Cookbook.

So about those biscuits…I came across a cool website Panna Cooking that features a lot of heavyweight chefs in videos making their favorites.  Think of it as a video food magazine.  Their Facebook page has some of their videos or you can subscribe to their site.  I watched Nancy Silverton’s video for making her biscuits and immediately ran to my kitchen to make them.  Much like croissant dough, it calls for folding the dough and rolling it seven times.   This creates the flaky layers.  Mine had layers but the biscuits weren’t as tall as the ones in her video.   The biscuits  were tasty but not quite as light as I would have liked.  I did tweet Nancy Silverton asking if she had any tips..stay tuned, hope I get a response.

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On to banana bread.  I love my recipe for banana bread, its moist, light, cake like and versatile but I have grown tired of making it.  Along comes this beautiful cookbook, the Violet Bakery Cookbook with this absolutely lovely looking banana bread.   Unlike many of the recipes for banana bread it contains double the amount of bananas.  Six bananas for 1 loaf of bread!  Zowie.  The bread came out a little heavy and gummy perhaps from insufficient baking time.  Disappointing  but I may try it again, I am thinking baker error (me, me, me) I have tasted it made by friends and it is filled with flavor and quite good.   The recipe can be found on the blog Local Milk.  Maybe you’ll have better luck.  While paging through ATK Essentials cookbook, I came across their Ultimate banana bread recipe which also called for 6 bananas but with an additional step of extracting the liquid from the bananas, reducing it, and adding the now banana syrup back to the recipe.  It also called for slices of bananas and nuts on top and sprinkling it with sugar.  The bread was definitely less gummy,  pretty dense but packed with banana flavor. The addition of the sliced bananas  and chopped pecans on top adds a nice carmelized finish.  Is it better then my original recipe?  I don’t think so.  The next time you have 12 or so very ripe bananas on your counter, give these recipes a try.  Let me know which one you like!

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Quest for the Holy Biscuit

Quest for the Holy Biscuit

I might have mentioned my obsessive tendencies when it comes to food.  For the most part I can control it but there are certain dishes that stay on the brain and whenever the opportunity arises, i.e. a restaurant that features it or I find a new recipe…I AM COMPELLED TO TRY IT.  This is true for cookies like shortbread and lemon bars but it is especially true for biscuits.  Having kids in the South has added fuel to the fire.  As soon as I know I am going to the South, I scour the internet looking for the best biscuits.  My current favorite in Nashville is Biscuit Love, (their Bonuts, fusion of biscuits and donuts served with fresh fruit and lemon curd, kill me now good).  A trip to North Carolina began and ended with biscuits.  No sooner had we arrived at the Raleigh-Durham Airport we made a beeline for Sunrise Biscuit Kitchen in Chapel Hill, a drive-thru that closes at 2 pm. We made it just in the nick of time for their fried chicken biscuit sandwiches, freakin delicious. Heading to the airport to fly home we took the circuitous route so we could stop at Rise Biscuits & Donuts in Durham for our last biscuit fix…delicious ending!  I have found yummy biscuits in Portland, Oregon at The Tin Shed and Pine State Biscuits and right here in California at The Nickel Diner in LA and Brenda’s French Soul Food in SF.  I love biscuits, it’s my crack.

In my mind, there are 2 kinds of biscuits, soft tender almost cake-like biscuits, and buttery FLAKY biscuits.  My current quest is for the latter, biscuits so flaky you can peel & eat them in layers.  I came across a recipe from Dishes and Dust Bunnies that I wanted to have a go at.  My first batch accompanied me to Mom’s Monday morning coffee where they were gobbled up.  Flaky, buttery, slightly salty, tender, I inch ever closer to the perfect biscuit.

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I made a few changes to the recipe….somewhere along the way I learned the addition of baking soda to biscuits made with buttermilk reduces the tangy flavor.  Despite being a native San Franciscan I am not fond of sour flavored food.  Sourdough bread, I’ll take a pass (blasphemous I know).  I used unsalted butter and reduced the salt to 1 teaspoon.  Remember the golden rules for making biscuits, keep the ingredients cold, and don’t over mix. After chilling the dough, I rolled the dough into a 1/2 inch rectangle and folded the dough like an envelope (thirds) rolled again into a 1/2 inch thick rectangle.  Repeat twice.  For taller biscuits roll dough to 1 inch thick on the final time.  Expect biscuits to about double in height when baked.

Flaky Buttermilk Biscuits

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup buttermilk
  • 2 cups all purpose flour plus more on the side for dusting
  • tsp baking powder
  • 1/4 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • ¾ cup cold unsalted butter 1½ sticks, cut up into 1/2 inch piecs

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 400°F.
  • Combine dry ingredients bowl of food processor, pulse 2-3 times to mix
  • Place butter on top of dry ingredients and pulse until mixture resembles coarse meal. It is ok if there are some pea sized pieces of butter left.
  • Pour mixture into shallow bowl. Make a well in the middle of the flour and add the buttermilk to the mixture
  • Combine with your hands or a dough scraper gently mixing to blend. The dough is supposed to be crumbly so don't over mix.
  • After the dough has come together, chill in the fridge for about 10 - 15 minutes.
  • Take the dough from the fridge and drop it onto a floured surface. Sprinkle a little flour over the dough.
  • Roll the dough out into the shape of a rectangle about ½" thick. Sprinkle with a little flour.
  • Fold the dough in thirds and roll it out to about ½" thick again.
  • Fold over 2 more times and roll out to 3/4 - 1" inch thick. Sprinkle with a little flour.
  • Use a circular cookie cutter (2" cutter), cut out the biscuits and place them onto a parchment paper lined baking sheet. Do not twist cutter when cutting out biscuits, press straight down.
  • Alternative use a pizza cutter and cut cut dough into squares.
  • Leave at least 1" of space around each one.
  • Bake for 11 - 12 minutes until tops are golden.
  • Optional - Brush melted butter over the tops of the biscuits once they come out of the oven.
  • Serve with jam or butter
Blueberry Buckwheat Scones-Manresa

Blueberry Buckwheat Scones-Manresa

I don’t think I will be baking any cookies for a while.  Twelve recipes seemed doable but amid the whirlwind of the holidays, shopping, friends and family visiting, it turned into a daunting task.  But I completed my cookie mission, finishing on New Year’s Eve… and now I NEED a BREAK!

But I do need to make something yummy today.  Something that will go well with APPOINTMENT TV, that is, Downton Abbey.  Yep, I admit I am a fan and tonight I will be glued to the telly watching the final season premiere.  Jamie and I will be settled on the couch with a cup of tea and a treat with a British twist.

Recently, on my way home from the boathouse, I stopped at Manresa Bread in town.  On the drive there,  I had somehow convinced myself that I had worked out enough to enjoy a Kouign Amann-a flaky, buttery, caramelized puff pastry delight.  Totally calorie worthy and boy-o-boy is it a lot of calories.  Right next to the Kouign Amann, a plate of scones caught my eye.  Made with buckwheat flour and fresh blueberries, they had a lovely dark bluish tinge and golden brown edge.  Intrigued, I had to get one (don’t think for a minute I passed on the Kouign Amann).  I promised myself I would spend some extra time in the gym the next day.  Really.

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Thanks to the Santa Cruz Examiner, I have the recipe for Manresa’s Buckwheat Blueberry Scones. Perfect for tonight’s Downton Abbey episode.  The scone is totally delicious. The crumb is much finer, less crumbly.  Like all scones and biscuits, don’t overwork the dough.  I used a pastry blender to cut the butter into the flour and a dough scraper to blend the cream with the flour-butter mixture.  I made a quarter recipe today or my biscuit bowl above would have had considerably more dough.  In addition to the buckwheat flour, the recipe calls for cake flour and all-purpose flour. The buckwheat flour gives it a flavor punch, scones with attitude.

I like recipes where the measurements are given in weights (grams) as in this one. The scale I have is not precise enough for this recipe so I rounded (yep, just like they taught us in elementary school) to the nearest whole number.  Seemed to work fine.  I used regular sea salt which was a bit too salty, use kosher salt next time or reduce the salt in the recipe by half.  I skipped the buckwheat groats since I didn’t have any.  The sprinkling of sugar was a fine finish.  I will definitely be making these again!

Downton Abbey Blueberry Buckwheat Scones via Manresa

  • 125.7 gm buckwheat (0.74 cup)
  • 242.5 gm cake flour (1.77 c, unsifted dipped)
  • 242.5 gm all -purpose flour (1.94 cup)
  • 67.4 gm sugar (0.34 c)
  • 36.6 gm baking powder (2.65 T)
  • 16.2 gm salt (2.7 t)
  • 204.7 gm butter (14.41 T)
  • 420.0 gm cream (1.76 cup)
  • 110.0 gm honey (5.4 T)
  • 143.6 gm berries (~1 cup)
  • Total grams : 1611.2
  1. Make honey cream: warm cream and honey together until honey dissolves. Cool completely, preferably overnight.
  2. Sift all flours, baking powder, sugar and salt together.
  3. Cut butter into 1-inch cubes
  4. Using a stand mixer or your hands rub butter into dry ingredients until butter is pea sized
  5. Pour in cream and mix until soft dough forms/dough comes together. Add more cream if necessary, one tablespoon at a time.
  6. Remove bowl from mixer, scrap paddle. Mix blueberries into the dough, crumbling the dough slightly to incorporate blueberries.
  7. Chill if you plan to bake later. If baking immediately, form dough into 85g loose balls.
  8. Place on baking sheet two inches apart. Egg wash and top with demerara sugar and chopped buckwheat groats. Bake at 350F for 14 to 16 minutes.
Ingredients gms 1/2 recipe 1/4 recipe
buckwheat (0.74 cup) 125.7 62.85 31.425
Cake flour 242.5 121.25 60.625
all-purpose flour (1.94 cup) 242.5 121.25 60.625
sugar (0.34 c) 67.4 33.7 16.85
baking powder (2.65 T) 36.6 18.3 9.15
salt (2.7 t) 16.2 8.1 4.05
butter (14.41 T) 204.7 102.35 51.175
cream (1.76 cup) 420 210 105
honey (5.4 T) 110 55 27.5
berries   (~1 cup) 143.6 71.8 35.9

 

Cream Scones (Dorie is a Goddess)

Cream Scones (Dorie is a Goddess)

I absolutely love Dorie Greenspan, her recipes work, her writing is wonderful and most of all she comes across as a really nice person.  I left a comment regarding a recipe I found on her blog, it wasn’t even her recipe but from Sarabeth’s in New York.  Well the next thing you know, she contacts Sarabeth who in turn calls me to troubleshoot the recipe!  WOW.  That’s what I’m saying..NICE.

Scones are Made for Sharing

A favorite Dorie recipe (aside from World Peace Cookies) is Cream Scones from her Baking From My Home to Yours.  They’re so easy to make, you can whip them up in a jiff.  Today I brought them to our mom’s Monday morning coffee.  I ran 30 minutes late due to my last minute decision to make them but no one complained. After all, I came bearing gifts, warm scones just out of the oven.

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You can put just about anything you want in these scones.  I threw in lemon zest and dried wild blueberries in today’s batch.  Infinite possibilities exist, orange zest and cranberries, raisins, even dried corn and cherries would be a wonderful addition.

Game of Scones: The Rules

To make these I used my biscuit bowl (love it).  Of course, you can use any bowl but I need to justify having a biscuit bowl.  Have all your ingredients well chilled to start.  You could use a food processor but the dough does come together quickly using a pastry blender or your fingers to incorporate the butter into the flour.  Do not over-mix, you will see little lumps of butter in your dough and still have flour showing.

Pour the mass on the counter and knead a couple of times to bring the dough together.  Shape the dough into 2 5-inch circles and cut each into 6 wedges, (the baking time was closer to 15 minutes). Brush the scones with cream before popping them into the oven.

dough

While they’re baking I make my coffee and 20 minutes later I’m kicking my feet up, enjoying a cup of coffee and warm scones.  How great is that?

Dorie Greenspan's Cream Scones

Dorie's classic cream scones
Course Biscuits and scones
Cuisine American, British
Keyword Cream Scones
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Servings 12 scones

Ingredients

Wet Ingredients

  • 1 large egg
  • 2/3 cup heavy whipping cream

Dry Ingredients

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 Tablespoons granulated white sugar
  • 1 Tablespoon baking powder
  • 1/2 Tsp salt
  • 5 Tablespoons unsalted butter chilled & cut into small pieces

The Add Ins:

  • 3/4 cup currants
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract or sub 1/2 teaspoon almond exrtract optional
  • clotted cream substitute creme fraiche or mascarpone
  • peach jam or preserves
  • Egg wash
  • 2 tbsp heavy cream or egg wash
  • turbinado or sparkling sugar

Instructions

  • Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 400°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment
  • Whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt together in a large bowl.

By Hand

  • Drop in the butter and, using your fingers, toss to coat the pieces of butter with flour. Quickly, working with your fingertips or a pastry blender, cut and rub the butter into the dry ingredients until the mixture is pebbly.
  • Pour the egg, cream and currants over the dry ingredients and stir with a fork just until the dough, which will be wet and sticky, come together. Don't overdo it. Still in the bowl, gently knead the dough by hand, or turn it with a rubber spatula 8 to 10 times.

Food Processor:

  • You can also use a food processor. Place dry ingredients in bowl, pulse 1-2 twice to mix. Add butter and pulse 5-6 times until mixture looks like crumbs. Add egg/cream and pulse to dough just begins to clump. Do not overmix! Take mixture out of processor bowl, fold in peaches and shape dough into circles, proceed as below.

Directions for both by hand or food processor

  • Lightly dust a work surface with flour and turn out the dough. Divide it in half. Working with one piece at a time, pat the dough into a rough circle that's about 5 inches in diameter, cut it into 6 wedges and place it on the baking sheet.
  • Brush scones with heavy cream and sprinkle with sugar
  • Bake the scones for 20 to 22 minutes (start checking at 15 min) or until their tops are golden and firm. Transfer them to a rack and cool for 10 minutes before serving, or wait for them to cool to room temperature.
  • The scones can be frozen on the baking sheet as the cut wedges, then wrapped airtight. Don't defrost before baking- just add about 2 minutes to the baking time.
  • Serve with jam and clotted cream or butter
Do-Nut Pass on these Donut Hole Muffins

Do-Nut Pass on these Donut Hole Muffins

My cooking gadget addiction strikes without warning.  Standing in Michaels one day, supposedly JUST browsing with NO intention of buying anything when BAM!  I became the proud & puzzled owner of a donut hole pan.  Yes, a donut hole pan.  I have 4 or 5 mini-muffin tins that would do the trick, but nooo, in a moment of weakness, I bought one.  I already own donut pans, which in my defense, I justify by saying baked donuts are much better for you than fried ones…  Which would be fine except I RARELY eat donuts much less make them from scratch.

Just another excuse to feed my gadget addiction.

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Opportunity Knocks

The pan stayed in my cabinet, forgotten, until recently.  After Head of the Charles in Boston, we decided to take a side trip to Vermont to see the Fall colors.   Really, we were actually in search of pie.  We stayed at a cute little B&B, the Trumbull House Bed and Breakfast in Hanover.  Each morning, we were served a delicious basket of baked goods. Their Donut Hole Muffin in the basket was a standout, buttery, tender with a nice crunch from the cinnamon sugar coating that covers the ENTIRE muffin.

See, there was a reason I bought a donut hole pan. LOL.  So without further ado, here is the recipe for Donut Hole Muffins courtesy of the Trumbull House in Hanover Vermont.  These are really easy.  There aren’t any eggs in the recipe if you were wondering.  If you use your donut hole pan (doesn’t everyone have one?) and it has a dark finish, decrease the temperature to 350 degrees.  I baked them for approximately 12-14 minutes.  Test early, 20 minutes might be too long.  You can bake these in mini-muffin tins or in a regular-sized muffin tin.  Increase the baking time for the regular-sized tin to 20-25 minutes.

You’ll love these.

Put them on your muffin or donut bucket list.

Donut Hole Muffins

Delicious BAKED Donut Holes
Course desserts
Cuisine American
Keyword baked donuts, cinnamon sugar, donut holes
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes

Ingredients

Dry Ingredients

  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 3/4 teaspoon ground mace

Wet Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup white sugar
  • 1/4 cup butter melted
  • 1/2 cup milk

Topping

  • 1/4 cup butter melted
  • 1/2 cup white sugar
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C). Grease 24 mini-mu!in cups or DONUT HOLE PAN
  • Mix 1/2 cup sugar, 1/4 cup butter, and mace in a large bowl.
  • Stir in the milk. Stir flour and baking powder together and add to milk mixture. Stir until just combined. Fill the prepared mini muffin cups or DONUT HOLE PAN about half full.
  • Bake in the preheated oven until the tops are lightly golden, 15 to 20 minutes.
  • While muffins are baking, place melted butter in a bowl. In a separate bowl, mix together 1/2 cup of sugar with the cinnamon.
  • Remove muffins from pan while warm, dip each mu!in in the butter and roll in the sugar-cinnamon mixture.
  • Let cool and serve.
Summer: Alfresco Meals & the Bacon Caper

Summer: Alfresco Meals & the Bacon Caper

I love alfresco dining and today was the perfect day to enjoy breakfast outside.  Banana blueberry pancakes made by my daughter, crispy bacon, a big bowl of fresh berries and mangoes (another reason to love summer), and yogurt with homemade granola. Perfect!  We set up outside in the garden, wait, forgot the coffee, back inside, grab the pot.  Back outside….WHAT? Sammy our dog, who has never, ever, ever eaten anything off the counter or table (a point of pride for us);  who will sit in a car surrounded by food including banana bread, egg rolls, fried chicken wings AND not touch any of it; HAS EATEN THE ENTIRE PLATE OF BACON, in a matter of seconds gobbled up 10 slices of bacon and licked the plate clean.  I’m still mad at him…..

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Well, we still have pancakes.  I will share the easiest way to cook perfect bacon despite not having a photo of said bacon, just the dog who ate the bacon.

Oven Cooked Bacon

Ingredients

  • 1 pound of thick cut bacon
  • Variations:
  • 1/4 to 1/3 cup brown sugar
  • 2-3 T maple syrup
  • 1/4 tsp. cayenne
  • 1.4 tsp. black pepper

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Line a rimmed baking sheet with foil and set wire rack on top. Lay bacon slices on rack. Do not overlap slices. Place in oven and bake 15-20 minutes until desired doneness. The bacon cooks perfectly, lays flat and best of all you don't have to stand at the stove watching it fry! Clean up is relatively easy, especially if you line your pan with foil.

Variations:

  • For a sweet bacon, sprinkle bacon with brown sugar and bake as directed, spice it up by adding cayenne to brown sugar and sprinkling on bacon.
  • Brush with maple syrup , bake as directed.
Jule’s Granola

Jule’s Granola

All things southern is the line my daughter uses on her posts from Houston, Texas.  Yes, my Cali girl is now a transplanted Texan, temporarily, hopefully.  She is finishing her 1st year at Rice University and loving it. I now have a vested interest in Texas. This means when I visit her my first question (well after how are you?) is where and what do we eat?!  Houston has great food….very diverse, Tex-Mex, great Pho, fusion, taco trucks, you name it-Houston has it.   Check out the article on the Houston food scene in the Washington Post, Best Food Cities in America.

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I started following the blog, The Homesick Texan, a couple of years ago (hmm portent of things to come?).  A transplant to New York City, the author takes us on a culinary tour of her home state.  Great recipes and entertaining writing have led to 2 cookbooks and quite a few followers. She waxed poetically in her blog about her Uncle Austin’s Granola and I was happy to find the same recipe, but in a smaller quantity in her 2nd book.  The intro to the book’s granola recipe describes Uncle Austin’s Granola and how the difference might be the love he puts in it, yadayadayada.  Confused by the different proportions of the ingredients between the 2 recipes I sent an e-mail to her.  Her response was “the proportions are different because they’re different recipes” end of the reply.

Ok, my bad, your intro led me to believe it was the same recipe.  I see she has adopted a “New York attitude”, despite being a Homesick Texan.

Lucky Me I Have a  Go-To Granola Recipe

The granola recipe in her book is ok. The amount of oil and honey creates a very wet mixture. During baking, I lowered the temp to 325 in order to dry the granola without it browning too much. Maybe Uncle Austin’s Granola on her blog is better but I think I will stick to my go-to granola recipe, Jules’s Granola.  Try it, I think you’ll like it.

Granola Tips

The base recipe is old-fashioned oats, brown sugar, maple syrup, oil and vanilla. From there you can vary the add-ins.  I love unsweetened coconut flakes, and any kind of nut works, such as pecans, almonds or pistachios.  Add pepitas and even a bit of sesame seeds as a portion of the nuts (2-3 tablespoons).  Dried fruit such as a mixed berry medley of raisins, dried cranberries, and blueberries or an island-inspired blend of mango, papaya, and pineapple top my list of favorites.  You do you and add whatever you like.

Adding dried milk powder adds a toasty richness and a touch of sweetness.  Though not a whole lot, it does add protein too.  It’s optional but if you have milk powder, by all means, add it.

There are two camps of granola folks, the loose, clump-free one and the clusters camp.  I like clusters or clumps of granola.  The secret is to compress the oats before baking and leaving the pan alone while baking-no stirring!  Place another baking sheet on top of the sheet of oats and…wait for it, step on it. Yep, serious compression.  This will smoosh the oats together and allow them to bake as clusters.  For loose granola, skip this and stir the oats occasionally during baking.

For the holidays, we fill glass jars with our homemade granola to gift to friends and co-workers.  The tags on the jars include a note “Return the jar for a refill next year, xxoo Santa”.  Invariably, the jars all come back.

It’s great sprinkled on top of yogurt and fresh berries or in a bowl with milk.  My favorite way is by itself for the hand-to-mouth toss, but in this world of transparency….gotta tell ya, granola is high in calories, so be judicious…if you’re skipping that burger lunch, have at it, if not, go easy!

Jules's Granola

My favorite granola of old-fashioned oatmeal, maple syrup, brown sugar, and chock full of fruits and nuts!
Course Breakfast, Snack
Cuisine American
Keyword granola, oatmeal
Prep Time 2 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 45 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1/3 cup light brown sugar
  • 1/3 cup maple syrup +1 T honey
  • 4 t vanilla
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil substitute coconut oil or butter for vegetable oil, up to 1/4 cup, max.
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1-2 tbsp powdered milk optional
  • 1/2-1 tsp cinnamon optional
  • 5 cups old fashioned oatmeal yeah, like the one with the Quaker on the box
  • 2 cups nuts I use pecans and/or almonds. pistachios also work well. Pumpkin seeds or pepitas can replace 1/4-1/2 cup of nuts as an option
  • 1/2 cup unsweetened coconut flakes

Add-ins after baking

  • 2 cups mixed dried fruit cut into small pieces cranberries, mango, pineapple, blueberries, raisins, cranberries or my fav, dried blueberries

Instructions

  • Mix first 5 ingredients and powdered milk if using, then add oatmeal, nuts, and coconut flakes and mix well.
    Spread on a lipped baking sheet lined with a silicone mat or parchment paper. Cover with another sheet of parchment or silicon mat and cover with the same sized baking sheet. Press down firmly to compress mixture, this is how you get clumps of granola. My secret, I step on the top pan to smash the granola down-it works! 
    Bake at 325 for 30 minutes. Remove from oven for 10 minutes, bake again for another 12 minutes until golden brown. 
    Let cool in pan. Using a spatula or dough scraper lift granola off the sheet. Break granola into desired-size clumps.
    Add dried fruit.
    Store in an airtight container.