crisp baked oatmeal |
This experiment was originally inspired by this recipe by Quirky Cooking. Jo is a fellow Thermomixer and I love her blog for it’s quirky offerings with a
mindset similar to my own.
Taking the coconut butter (homemade of course) and its superfood add-ins I simply wanted to go
that bit further and add oats…voila, a no-bake granola. I had hoped that this would break off in
large chunks (just the way I like it best) in its raw state, however it was more of
a traditional flaky granola style…that was until I baked it!
Ok, so baking it of course means the granola is no longer
raw but I can live with that, it gave a lovely contrast to the raw version- 1
recipe 2 ways. When it was first baked I
wasn’t sure quite sure what I thought…hmmmm, it just didn’t quite have the
pizazz. But once cooled properly it
really came into its own with an amazing crisp bite, courtesy of the coconut
butter.
I will say that is not a low calorie granola with it
lashings of coconut butter, but it is full of good-for-you foods and healthy
fats so it still ticks the boxes in my book and would be great as a crisp topping, a little goes a long way. Of course you can also vary the add-ins
as much as you like to meet your own personal taste.
no-bake soft oatmeal clusters |
Recipe: Coconut granola
Makes one baking sheet full
Ingredients
150g coconut butter (not
coconut oil)
20g cacao nibs
100g oats
¼ tsp stevia
3 tbs agave
20g each flaked almonds/chia
seeds/dried cranberries/dried blueberries/sun flower seeds (or other
combinations)
Method
Melt the coconut butter gently
until runny. Mix through all remaining ingredients until fully coated in
coconut butter.
Press into a large shallow
baking pan to form a layer approx1cm thick. Allow to set in the fridgeand use
as a raw granola crumble or bake for approx. 10-15 mins until slightly golden.
Allow to cool fully before breaking into chunks.
This raw granola actually tasted so good with some soy milk and a dusting of cinnamon |
baked is my favourite! |
For further guidance on making gluten free choices please see this post.
For tips and info on recipe measurement conversions, ingredients, substitutions and the methods behind how I do things.... check out my 'baking tips' tab at the top of the page.
Yum! I've been making my own muesli/granola for the last several months. Sooo much tastier and cheaper than the bought stuff.
ReplyDeleteShould I bake this at 180oC?
Thanks for the recipe. :)
Hi Nina, Ooops I left that out, yes 180C will be fine just watch for toasty edges! i'll update the post.
Deleteoo well this definitely looks awesome! I need to get my hands on some coconut butter immediately..
ReplyDeleteOr even better make your own coconut butter!! :-)
Delete