I recently read an article in the Wall Street Journal which talked about the growing cultural divide among classes in America. The author mentioned different levels of income, living in different locations, the likely presence or absence of religion, whether children in each group are likely to grow up with married parents or not. It was very interesting. The premise of the article was that this cultural divide is very problematic for the future of our country, but it will take grassroots efforts, not top-down legislation to bridge the gap and keep us United.
Care to guess the difference between the two groups which stuck out to me more than any other?
Statistics about single parenthood, unemployment, or crime?
‘Course not.
I was completely distracted by the comment that one group eats cereal and milk is not at all likely to eat yogurt and muesli for breakfast.
I was distracted because we eat yogurt and muesli for breakfast, and I hadn’t considered the fact that it’s kind of posh. I guess my foreign hubs has a bit of poshness about him, though I’d more accurately chalk it up to the cultural differences.
Among those differences is his preference, which I’ve inherited (although I still do oatmeal with peanut butter and honey some mornings) — for yogurt and muesli or granola en la mañana. I digress to ‘splain that the muesli we more commonly ate in the UK and SA differs from the granola we eat here because muesli generally consists of rolled oats that haven’t been cooked (they’ve been soaked usually), whereas the granola oats have spent some time in the oven.
Anywho.
This could bring us back to the not-so-posh side of posh, but I’ve been considering making my own granola since Apple became a publicly traded company. Okay, maybe just since before Tiger Tank could crawl.
Similar to the bread issue that kicked off my affinity for baking our bread myself, this adventure was birthed out of a desire to find a cost-effective and healthy alternative to the expensive granola on the shelves at the grocery store.
So I did some research, dragged my feet, went back and reread the recipes I’d already looked at, and dove in.
Here’s the scoop on how you can too. {Make the granola, not drag your feet, that is.}
Start with this team of champions:
Old Fashioned Oats, Unsweetened Applesauce, Brown Sugar, Cinnamon, Nutmeg, Chopped Pecans, Sliced Almonds, Sea Salt, Honey, Vegetable Oil and Raisins.
Turns out making granola with applesauce is a much healthier choice than the traditional method that calls for lots of oil. Applesauce is so magical.
Preheat your oven to 325F/160C.
In a small saucepan, combine 1 cup applesauce,
2 TBSP honey,
and 2 TBSP vegetable oil. This picture might still be honey. I can’t remember.
Oh wait, there’s the oil.
Warm gently over a low heat with an occasional stir. If you want to talk to the food while you’re at it, that’s up to you. I’m not here to judge.
Meanwhile, stir together 5 cups old fashioned oats,
1/2 cup of slivered almonds and 1 cup chopped pecans…
Why, yes I always measure my nuts into pretty dishes when I’m cooking. It had nothing to do with the Hubs taking pictures.
1/2 cup brown sugar…
{dump}
1/2 tsp of sea salt…
2 tsp. cinnamon and 1/2 tsp nutmeg.
{I’d like to note here that if you’re not a big fan of the taste of nutmeg you might want to scale it back to 1/4 tsp or skip it all together. Because we eat our granola with yogurt, it mellows it out to perfection for me.}
Stir to nicely combine.
And then pour in the applesauce mixture which should be nice and warm by now.
Stir till all the oats and pecans feel like they’ve had a chance to warm up in the mushy goodness.
{Did I mention that if you haven’t moved into your aunt’s old home and inherited a smiley face spoon, you haven’t lived? Truth.}
Now evenly distribute the glorious contents of your mixing bowl into two 9 x 13 dishes.
Turn the oven down to 300F/150C and bung them into the oven (that’s how my mother-in-love says it) for about an hour, stirring every 10 minutes, until the granola is a deep brown. (I just think the hot preheat seems to help with my browning. I might just have a lazy oven.)
When you think it looks good, remove it to cool and boo-yow! The breakfast of my champions! It will get a little crunchier as it cools, but if you like yours good ‘n crunchay let it go a little longer. I keep mine on the softer side for the sake of the little teeth that also like to munch it.
Once it has cooled, stir in 2/3 cup of raisins.
Bask in the glorious goodness. And pat yourself on the back. Or whatever you do to celebrate.
This recipe makes about 8 cups. I like to store it in a cleaned out applesauce jar.
Posh, no?
You can easily halve this recipe to see whether or not you like it before going all out. I think this lasts about a week around these parts. Feel free to add 1/2 or 1 cup sunflower kernels, or other nuts. I was just wasn’t feeling the kernels this time. Sorry guys, maybe next time.
I created a printable recipe card for you. Because I love you. And have fun with creating things in Pages.
Let me know if you decide to try it, and how it goes! I borrowed heavily from Drea Wood’s Granola and Fake Ginger’s while finding my own thang. They’ll help you halve the ingredients if you don’t want a bunch like I did. But for all that work, why not make a bunch? 🙂
Born up a tree!
xCC
This sounds yum! I think the Kool-Aid smiley face spoon adds a nice touch too… 🙂
Hey C! Just completed my grocery shopping for the week, and decided that this week’s culinary adventure would be making the world famous DIY Granola!!:) I used olive oil instead of vegetable oil, and added just a dash of vanilla to the applesauce mixture. Turned out superb!!! Love
I was thinking of adding some vanilla, too, Erika!!! So glad it went so well! xoxo
Um I have that same smiley spoon and it basically makes me smile that you made granola with it.
I have never made our granola with applesauce instead of oil but you can bet I’m trying now!
Apparently it ups the healthy factor by thirty-seven and a half percent. I kid. But I think it is a good improvement! And a healthy one. Hope you like it!
I also inherited the smiley face spoon when we moved into our first house….
I modified your recipe and it turned out great. I am grain and refined sugar free, plus I don’t cook with vegetable oils because they are not as stable at high temperatures (fyi, it should be fine in your recipe, which doesn’t use excessively high heat, but I never fry with them so I just don’t keep them around). My modifications were as follows:
Substitute unsweetened dried coconut flakes (not shreds) for the oats
Substitute honey for the brown sugar (cutting out the two Tbs of honey)
Use a heat stable oil for the vegetable oil- I was thinking I used melted coconut oil, but I may have used melted butter.
All these measurements were cup for cup.
Because the honey adds more moisture than the sugar, for this size recipe you would have to sprinkle between a 1/4 and 1/2 cup of coconut flour on the mixture and mix it in to get everything to be dry enough. You could try almond flour, but coconut is used to absorb moisture in recipes and it is usually a finer flour.
After baking for the hour, it was fine, but my oven heats low, so I put it in my dehydrator to make it a little crunchier. I only made a half batch, so my oldest son and I kind of ate it all before any of the other kids could try it. It was a hit with us, though!
Smiley spoon is now a new star in this show. I think he deserves his own spot in the side bar or something. I loved your text!
And I love the adaptation — you’re a miracle worker in the kitchen, AB!!!
Thanks! I thought you’d get a kick out of that. Also, I feel like I should clarify that I DO have olive oil and grapeseed oil for making salad dressings. I just don’t cook with those oils, and I don’t think they’d go very well in my granola.
Hi C! Long story but we finally have an oven… yay…so came back to get this recipe! Really struggling to find apple sauce without sugar in SA. A friend suggested using cloudy apple juice. Will let you know how it went. Lots of love from a VERY brrrrrrr cold Cape Town. Nicola
Wow, Nicola! Sounds yummy – let me know how it goes. I recently saw a recipe for crockpot applesauce that looked very easy to make, and I’ve had a lot of luck making it myself so let me know if you’d like me to scrounge up a couple of recipes for you! XOXO (I am missing that cold Cape Town!!)
Making this right now– used coconut oil instead of veg oil… The health benefits of C.O are amazing & adds great flavor — thanks for the great recipe & excellent directions 🙂
Thanks, Sara! I have never tried coconut oil, but I think I would probably enjoy the flavor of it in the granola! I would love to know how it turns out!
The granola was fantastic! The coconut oil is such a mild flavor you almost don’t notice it. I did sprinkle coconut flakes in it & was great! Thx!!