Gluten-free Vegan Oatmeal Cacao Nib Cookies

image Oh yeah, AND raisins!

These are so ridiculously awesome. The cacao nibs give them a dark chocolate flavor you can smell from the oven all while being gluten-free and low sugar! A quick word on cacao nibs/cacao bean: coming from the Theobroma cacao tree,  sometimes wrongly labeled cocoa nibs/cocoa bean, which from my understanding refers only to the extracted butter or powdered stuff. The mayan word is: kakaw, they might be on to something, I mean, they’ve only been using the stuff for ever. Just sayin’

Gosh, you have no idea, but just writing about those cookies makes my mouth water, and of course they are already gone… (I see some more baking coming up in this girl’s future) They are chewy and fragrant and yes, the texture is somewhat different than regular oatmeal cookies, after all there are mostly oats in there (and they are made without gluten flour).

imageDark cacao nibs (essentially pieces of cacao bean) 

If you are cultivating your sweet tooth, please feel free to use more ‘sweet stuff’. The cookies here are getting some of their sweetness from the raisins, but they would be a perfect treat for my Dad, who doesn’t really like sweets. I am a big believer in flavor over just plain sweet, or salty for that matter; and these cookies fit the bill perfectly.

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Ingredients

  • 2 cups rolled oats
  • 1/2 cup millet flour*
  • 1/4 cup golden raisins
  • 1/2 cup cacao nibs
  • 1/4 cup flax meal
  • 2 tbsp chia seeds
  • 3/4 cup water
  • 1/4 cup almond or other nut butter
  • 1/4 cup agave nectar, maple syrup or honey**

* I used millet because of its sweet, nutty flavor, but you could most likely use other gluten-free flours

**if using honey, the cookies are no longer vegan

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Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 350ºF
  2. In a large bowl, combine first four ingredients (oats through cacao nibs)
  3. In a separate bowl, mix flax meal and chia seeds with the water, set aside and let rest for 10 minutes.Then stir in the agave nectar and almond butter
  4. Stir the flax mix into the bowl with the oats, add up to another 1/4 cup of water if dough looks too dry.
  5. Drop cookies by the rounded tablespoon onto a prepared baking sheet, and bake until golden brown on the bottom and just starting to turn golden on top, about 8 to 11 minutes.

Makes about 30

imageCopyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved

Apple Raisin Granola

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I am back after taking a mini vacation up to a beautiful Bed & Breakfast in New Hampshire. Right on Lake Winnisquam. Sometimes you just need to get away from it all… Ahhh! It’s just the best to have someone make a lavish breakfast for you, and there were always freshly baked cookies. It’s like visiting your favorite Grandma, without having to help out in the kitchen 🙂 More on that soon! But before leaving, I had to make a few things that I could bring, for snacks and since I really did not know about the whole cookie thing they had going until we got there… And besides we were going to be on the road for six or seven hours. So I decided on another granola. Thanks to Heidi over at LightlyCrunchy who made this fantastic Apple Cranberry Granola, I was inspired to add the apple rings to my granola instead of just indiscriminately munching on them. I had never thought of using up my dried apple rings in a granola, what an ingenious idea!  

imagebefore adding milk or yogurt, can’t decide which I like best…

I go through phases, I find something, love it eat a whole bunch and then, not sure, but forget about it for a while? or get kind of tired of the taste? Anyhow I found myself with a good size bag of dried apple rings living in my cupboard, so now it can find its way into my breakfast and snacks 🙂 Delicious! The only thing I will work on for next time? Portability. Try eating granola while in the car… Not easy!

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Ingredients

  • 2 cups rolled oats
  • 1/2 cup quinoa flakes
  • 1/2 cup dried apple rings, chopped
  • 1/4 cup sesame seeds
  • 1/4 cup golden raisins
  • 1/2 cup sunflower seeds
  • 1/2 cup brown rice flour
  • 1/4 cup brown rice syrup
  • (1/4 cup agave nectar or honey, optional*)
  • 3 tbsp coconut oil, melted
  • 4 tbsp flax meal/ground flax seeds mixed with 6 tbsp water, let rest 5 minutes

* If you are making this for the first time, use the additional sweetener (the honey or agave syrup) especially if you are trying to transition kids or the ‘I don’t have a sweet tooth’ husbands to a lower sugar diet, then over time gradually reduce the amount of sweetener added

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 275º F
  2. Mix all the flakes, flour and seeds with the raisins and the apple pieces
  3. In a separate bowl, mix the wet ingredients: rice syrup, honey/agave, coconut oil and the flax meal mixed with the water.
  4. Add the wet ingredients to the oat mixture, stir well until evenly distributed, spread on a lined baking sheet and bake for 20 minutes. Stir, bake 10 minutes, stir again and bake for an additional 10 minutes.

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Copyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved

Nüssli Salat (lambs lettuce, Mâche or Corn Salad) with Eggs and Orange

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A filling lunch salad for a warm day. When I was  kid, my Mom made this a lot after Easter, it’s a good way to use up all the pretty Easter eggs. I am sure she still makes it, I am just not there to enjoy it that often 🙁  Over time, I have changed things around a bit, so for one I do not always use her creamy dressing, here I just made a simple vinaigrette  but it would sure would be awesome with Sour Cream Chive Dressing or Greek Feta Dressing! I also started adding part of an orange, to pep it up a bit, and really like it. Add a bit of the orange juice from peeling and cutting the orange to your dressing.

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In my parents garden, we used to grow our own Nüssli Salat. In the early spring, and when we were going to get snow or a hard frost, my Dad would cover it with burlap bags. Wait, I am thinking, not totally sure on this, but I think, he grew the stuff  covered with bags all winter long… Hmm will have to check on that next time I talk to ‘Switzerland’, it might be that I was just a kid making winter looooonger than it needed to be in my Mom’s eyes. (My Mom did not really appreciate winter as much as I did)

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Per person you will need:

Ingredients

  • a good plate full of Nüssli Salat, Mâche (Corn salad or Lambs lettuce)*
  • 2 hard boiled eggs
  • 1/2 orange, peeled pitted and sliced crosswise into rounds
  • 2-4 tablespoons of your favorite dressing (vinaigrette shown here)

* If you can’t find this delicious lettuce, it’s usually available in the winter and early in the spring, anything with some substance could be substituted

Directions

Arrange on platter and off you go!

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Copyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved

Sour Cream Chive Dressing

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Quick Dressing to throw together when you’re in a hurry. I love when one recipe leads to another, as the Guilt Fee Yogurt Chive Sauce inspired this dressing one evening, turning leftovers into something new. I liked it so much that it became its own recipe. It now has a permanent home, you know, instead of leftover land tent city 😉

It makes a wonderful creamy dressing without adding the calories of mayo. Use it on any salad or as a light refreshing dip for veggies.

You need

  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • 1/2 cup pickle juice or vinegar
  • 1/2 cup chopped chives
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp ground black pepper
  • a very small clove of garlic, minced (optional)
  • 2 tbsp olive oil

Directions

  1. Mix everything in a bowl or shaker cup until well combined

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Copyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved

Pumpkin & Flax Seed Granola with Almonds

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There are many, many versions of granola, and I have made countless of them in the past, but no matter how much I would tinker and change the recipe, I found that they would never get quite like the ones you buy in a box. Lately I was re-inspired to give it another try by seeing such yummilicious recipes as LightlyCrunchy’s chocolate granola (doesn’t that sound super delish?) and I am just intrigued by Leanne’s idea of using sprouted lentils for her granola recipe, on my list to try…

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So back to my granola story. In the past they either got REALLY crunchy (and I know there are some at the store you better add to the milk or yogurt a good while before you plan on eating it, tried them too) or they are just flavored roasted rolled oats, yummy, oh yes, but what I am looking for are those clumps or clusters that are crunchy, yet you don’t lose a tooth biting into them if you decide to just grab a handful at random. So crunchy clusters that crunch apart when you bite them, if that makes sense. But I have never been able to replicate that, no matter how much I doctored the recipes, that is, at least not until now! (Maestro, drum roll please!) 

imageSee? Got the clusters I wanted!

Yes, I could just go on and buy some every once in a while (which is what I have been doing), when the urge overcomes me, but you see, besides being quite expensive, in my opinion, there are several problems with most granola. They either contain soy (I am staying away from soy, almost all of it in the US is gmo and besides, unfermented soy contains phytoestrogens, which I try to avoid. Phytoestrogens are plant based estrogen like compounds, and a lot of cancers are hormone fueled…) or soybean oil (or vegetable oil, same difference in the end), gluten, (which normally I have no issue with, but for allergy season, I mostly cut it out of my diet, and what do you know? My accupuncturist was right! Shhhht, but I have been with hardly any seasonal allergy symptoms this year!!!! Yes, I am going and knocking on some wood right now… ) So even though I generally am perfectly capable of eating gluten and have no (visible) symptoms or reactions to it, I know a lot of my readers have to watch it.

And lastly the sugar content upsets my apple-cart, (in the spirit of full disclosure, I admittedly have only a vague idea of what an apple-cart looks like… I am gonna have to google that one) I often wonder, why so awfully sweet? But the answer probably lies in the general over use of sugar and the resulting ‘taste immunity’ to the sweetness of it, so they keep having to add more to all the processed food so people buy theirs over the competition. Once you start moving towards eating cleaner, for starters, less stuff in boxes, less sugar (or better no sugar), you will start to notice the natural sweetness in say carrots or red bell peppers again.

Oh boy am I exited about this one! And the possibilities… can’t wait to play some more with it, I already got some trials running and some definite winners on flavor combinations coming up shortly!

And gosh, it smells so good, you’ll totally want to eat some while it is in the oven, but try and wait, totally worth it 🙂

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Ingredients

  • 2 cups old fashioned rolled oats
  • 1/2 cup sliced almonds
  • 1/2 cup mixed pumpkin, flax and sunflower seeds
  • 1/2 cup brown rice flour
  • 1/4 cup quinoa flakes
  • 2 tbsp coconut oil
  • 1/4 cup rice syrup
  • 2 tbsp honey or agave syrup (you can start with 1/3 cup and transition down to 2 tbsp, if you still like things conventionally sweet)
  • 3 tbsp ground flax seed/flax meal
  • 6 tbsp water
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 275º F
  2. Mix oats through quinoa flakes in a large bowl.
  3. In a separate bowl, gently heat brown rice syrup, honey and coconut oil until liquid.
  4. Meanwhile stir water into flax meal, let sit 5 minutes.
  5. Add vanilla and flax mixture to rice syrup, stir then add to the big bowl with the oat mixture. Stir until evenly moistened.
  6. Spread on a lined cookie sheet and bake at 275º F for 15 minutes, stir, bake another 10 minutes then stir again, and bake another 10 minutes. Cool on the baking sheet
  7. Let cool completely before storing so it has a chance to crisp up.

The only downside to this is it makes me want to eat some every time I look at it…

imageCopyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved

Daifuku

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Glutinous rice cakes or Daifuku are something you can find at Asian markets all over the world, and that’s where I found them first. But if you know me a little, at some point I can’t leave it at that. I gotta know how it’s made.To ease your fears, no, I wasn’t the kid that opened up the belly of my dolls to find out what was inside. But I suspect that one of the reasons as to why not, might have had to do with me understanding that it would destroy them and my mom most certainly would not find willful destruction (no matter how lofty and glorious the reason behind it might have been) a good enough reason to buy another one. Oh yeah, from the days before the entire living room turned into a toy store when folks have children.

So, back to the subject at hand, I am just intrigued by how things are made, and why. You know that show on tv ‘how things are made’? If I had a tv, totally down my ally :). So of course that does not stop at food either and since part of my philosophy is if you can’t make it yourself, don’t eat it, I had to give this one a shot.

I searched the internet and found tons of recipes, some traditional, using a stove top method, some very elaborate on how to decorate, color or shape into flowers. So this recipe is adapted from various internet sources and in the end, I opted for an easy microwave option to make the dough…

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Not quite as pretty and uniform as from the store…

You need to get Mochiko, or glutinous rice flour, which is the main ingredient in these, and something to fill the little cakes with. Traditionally Koshi-an, a sweetened Adzuki (red) bean paste is used, or a, also sweetened, smooth white bean paste, but I have in the past made them using sweetened chestnut puree. Besides sugar, the only other thing you need is potato starch, so the dough doesn’t stick to everything

imageI have a nagging feeling that the translator flunked English class…

imageMake sure the entire work surface is covered in corn, I mean potato starch. Cut off a chunk of dough…

image…place the filling in the center…

imagethen  wrap the dough around it, making a little pillow… And finished!

Ingredients:

  • 3/4 cup Mochiko (sweet rice flour, also called glutinous rice flour)*
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 3/4 cups minus one tablespoon Water
  • 1 tsp pandanus leaf or vanilla extract (optional)
  • about 1 cup Red Bean paste (or other sweet filling)
  • Potato starch or other ‘..starch’ to keep the cakes from sticking to everything

* even though the name suggests it, there is not gluten in rice.

Directions:

  1. Mix the M0chiko, sugar, water and extract (if using) in a bowl, and mix well with a fork
  2. Microwave on high for 2 minutes, carefully remove the bowl (HOT) and stir, then return to microwave and cook another 1 1/2 to 2 minutes (depending on the power of your device). The dough should now be smooth and super hot.
  3. Cover a cutting board (or other work surface) with potato starch (or whatever else they sold you at the Asian market 😉 and leave the dough on it to cool slightly.
  4. When it can be touched, cut a piece of dough off (about egg yolk sized, out of lack for a better comparison), flatten into a disc and place a tablespoon fo filling in the center. Make sure the dough piece and your hands are covered in starch before you start. Note: To start, until you get the hang of it, use a teaspoon of filling, it’s a bit easier.
  5. Cover the filling with the edges of the disc so as to encase the filling completely. Set aside, seam side down, on a potato starch dusted tray or plate, and repeat until all the dough is used up.

imageCopyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved

Kale #2 with Garlic

imagePan roasted garlic lends its flavor to this easy kale side dish.

My favorite kale, hands down is Cavolo Nero or Tuscan kale or Lacinato kale or dinosaur kale (Oh yeah, it has many names). It doesn’t have the frilly edges typical of other varieties, but almost a bubbly appearance. Dark green with a dusty sheen, I find it to be ideal for kale chips, in case you’re looking to make some. If it is young, like from my garden, I eat it raw in salads, it’s that tender! Unfortunately it seems that it is bit harder to get at the store than the curly variety that has become so common, so the picture here is just for recognition sake, and memories until I have more growing in my garden. I made the dish (this time) with the frilly, curly variety. Good either way!

Directions

  • 1 bunch of kale (curly or nero di toscana), cleaned, de-stemmed and chopped
  • 2 cloves of garlic, thinly sliced
  • 1-2 tbsp apple cider vinegar

Directions

  1. Remove stems and wash kale, chop or rip into pieces and spin dry.
  2. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium, add the sliced garlic and cook just until slightly golden (Don’t let it get black, or it will be bitter).
  3. Add the washed kale, toss, then add 1/4 to 1/2 cup water and cover with a lid. (If the kale is young and tender, you need less water/less cooking time)
  4. Cook until the kale is almost done, add the cider vinegar, cover and cook for another 2 minutes, then open the lid and let any excess water evaporate before turning off the heat.

Check these recipes for more kale ideas: Kale #1, Tomato Kale and Cheese Omelette, Kale, mushroom &meatball skilletimage

Copyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved

Mediterranean Lentil Salad

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As it is getting towards the warmer times of year, at least the past Sunday afternoon made us here think that, I tend to shift the focus of my eating and start to crave more fresh and quick recipes that take advantage of all the seasonal produce available. On warmer days salads are a wonderful thing to make but they don’t always have enough staying power to make a full meal, unless you do it right. In come the lentils, from green to brown to orange, they even come in black, and I am not even talking about the Indian varieties that are usually referred to as lentils, but too me, look more like little beans. But no matter what color or shape, they are versatile and easy to prepare, none require pre soaking and all cook quickly. Lentils are great! Filling, low fat, high in fiber and a whole bunch of phosphorus and other minerals pack themselves away in there too!

imageHere I also had some Arugula and Egg salad on the side

This salad is also a great way to use up the rest of a bunch of parsley you bought for a recipe that only needed 2 tablespoons! Parsley contains lots of good things like iron, calcium, potassium and vitamin C to just name a few, but has huge amounts of vitamin K! So you don’t want to waste the precious green 😉

Ingredients

  • 1 cup lentils (preferably French Green)*
  • 3/4 cups tomato sauce
  • 1/2 red bell pepper, diced
  • 1 small (pickling) cucumber (or 1/3 of a big one), any large seeds removed, diced
  • 1/4 cup tomato paste
  • 1/4 cup bulgur wheat
  • 1 1/2 cups chopped parsley

* I’ve made it both with regular brown as well as du Puy lentils (french green), either one works, the French Lentils tend to stay a little firmer, which I prefer for salads.

Directions

  1. Bring 1 1/2 cups of water and 1 tsp salt to a boil, pour over the Bulgur wheat in a bowl, cover and let sit for 10-15 minutes or until Bulgur is softened. It will remain somewhat chewy, that’s what you want. Drain using a fine mesh sieve, gently press on it to extract some more water.
  2. In the meantime, cook the lentils in 1 cup of salted water, until just cooked, (not mushy), drain if there is water left and set aside to cool.
  3. Chop all the vegetables
  4. In a large bowl combine the lentils, bulgur, parsley, cucumber, pepper and tomatoes, stir to combine and let sit for a minimum of 20 minutes for flavors to blend before serving. This also allows the parsley to get a bit softer if, like me, you used curly leaf instead of flat leaf.

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Copyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved

Mango Sweet Pepper Salsa

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Chives and how to get rid of use them… Okay, one more… now I think I used almost a cup of chopped chives! I can feel a little better about using things up, I think. This one’s super easy and super yummy! Serve over or with chive burgers and guilt free chive sauce

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Ingredients

  • 1 mango, peeled and pitted
  • 1/8th of a red bell pepper
  • 2 tablespoons lime juice
  • 3-4 tablespoons chopped chives

Directions

  1. Chop the mango, finely dice the red bell pepper
  2. Toss with 2 tablespoons of fresh lime juice and the chives

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Copyright © 2012 Simple Healthy Homemade. All rights reserved