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Banana Oatmeal Muffins: A Recipe of Odds and Ends

Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition
Today on Serious Eats: Whole Wheat Irish Soda Bread. A quick, idiot-proof brown bread just in time for St. Patty’s Day.

When you really start cooking for yourself, the best part (beyond the actual eating) is amassing a collection of foods you never thought you’d try, much less learn to love. My kitchen is filled with flavor right now, ranging from vinegars, spices, herbs, and oils to starches, baking supplies, and preserves. I couldn’t have imagined this in college, when my pantry consisted of ketchup and five boxes of Kix.

However, there is a dark side to the glorious assembly.

Filling the nooks and crannies of my shelves, between the grand boxes of lasagna noodles and flasks of sesame oil, are a billion little bags of atypical, mostly-used edibles. Currently, they consist of:

  • 1/2 cup Arborio rice
  • 1/3 cup dried cranberries
  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 3/4 vanilla bean
  • 7 vials of food coloring (3 primary, 4 neon)
  • 3 half-full jars of honey
  • 8 pistachios
  • 12 unshelled peanuts
  • 1 small jar chocolate sauce (from 2008)
  • 1 frozen bag yellow tomato slices
  • 6 coffee samples
  • 1/2 box superfine sugar
  • 2/3 huge bag masa harina
  • 4 to 6 drops peppermint extract
  • 1 cup evaporated milk
  • 1/2 cup fat free sour cream (I can never tell when it goes bad.)
  • Red curry paste from before I was born (or thereabouts)
  • 1 jar organic tahini, minus 2 tablespoons
  • 1 canister Crystal Lite pink lemonade
  • More tea than any 15 people need (Note: I don’t drink tea.)
  • So many capers. SO. MANY. CAPERS.

The capers, tahini, evaporated milk, and various odds and ends will eventually be turned into a recipe. Other items (and I’m looking at you, chocolate sauce from the beginning of time) will probably suck up space until we move.

Consequently, I love dishes that can eliminate two or three strange elements. Banana Oatmeal Muffins is just such a recipe. Sure, it’s easy, delicious, and makes for an excellent on-the-go breakfast, but you can also throw in just about anything to jazz it up. (Note: except the capers. That would be bad.)

Have a half a bag of oat flour? It goes in here. Two about-to-go-bad bananas? Gone. A few Craisins? Plop ‘em in the bowl. Pistachios, peanuts, honey – even that jar of chocolate sauce wouldn’t be out of place. (Er, maybe.) Your taste buds are your only limits.

So, to end this post, a toast: Here’s to all those little weird things clogging up your cabinets. May they fill your muffins as much as your heart. (Or something.)

~~~
If you like this recipe, you might also dig:

~~~

Banana Oatmeal Muffins
Makes 12 muffins.
Adapted from Half-Baked Baker.

1 1/4 cup rolled oats (I used Quaker Old-Fashioned – Kris)
1/2 cup fat-free sour cream
1/2 cup skim milk
1 1/2 cups oat flour
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 cup brown sugar, lightly packed
1/3 cup vegetable oil
2 large ripe bananas, mashed
1 large egg, lightly beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 cup raisins
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour

NOTE: If you do not have oat flour on hand (which I don’t), simply whirl 2 cups rolled oats in a food processor until they reach a flour-like consistency. This will create about 1 1/2 cups oat flour.

1) Preheat oven to 400°F.

2) In a large bowl, stir oats, sour cream, and milk together until combined. Set aside for 10 minutes.

3) In a medium bowl, whisk together oat flour, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, baking powder, and baking soda. Set aside.

4) In a small bowl, mix raisins and all-purpose flour. Set aside.

5) To the oat/sour cream mixture, add brown sugar, vegetable oil, bananas, egg, and vanilla extract. Stir to combine. Add oat flour mixture. Stir until just moistened. Add raisins. Stir until incorporated.

6) Spray a 12-cup muffin pan with cooking spray (or use muffin cups). Evenly distribute batter among cups. Bake 18-20 minutes, until muffins are golden brown and they pass the toothpick test. Remove from oven and cool in pan for 5 minutes. Flip muffins out of pan. Enjoy warm or let cool completely.

Approximate Calories, Fat, Fiber, and Price Per Serving
226 calories, 8.3 g fat, 3 g fiber, $0.33

Calculations
NOTE: My oat flour calculations are for food-processed oatmeal, as described in the note above.
1 1/4 cup rolled oats (Quaker Old-Fashioned): 375 calories, 7.5 g fat, 10 g fiber, $0.34
1/2 cup fat-free sour cream: 120 calories, 0 g fat, 0 g fiber, $0.89
1/2 cup skim milk: 45 calories, 0.4 g fat, 0 g fiber, $0.12
1 1/2 cups oat flour: 600 calories, 12 g fat, 16 g fiber, $0.54
1/2 tsp cinnamon: 3 calories, 0 g fat, 0.6 g fiber, $0.01
1/2 tsp nutmeg: 6 calories, 0.4 g fat, 0.2 g fiber, $0.03
1/2 tsp salt: negligible calories, fat, and fiber, $0.01
2 tsp baking powder: 5 calories, 0 g fat, 0 g fiber, $0.07
1 tsp baking soda: negligible calories, fat, and fiber, $0.01
1/2 cup brown sugar, lightly packed: 344 calories, 0 g fat, 0 g fiber, $0.29
1/3 cup vegetable oil: 646 calories, 73.1 g fat, 0 g fiber, $0.48
2 large ripe bananas, mashed: 242 calories, 0.8 g fat, 7.1 g fiber, $0.46
1 large egg, lightly beaten: 74 calories, 5 g fat, 0 g fiber, $0.21
1 teaspoon vanilla extract: 12 calories, 0 g fat, 0 g fiber, $0.05
1/2 cup raisins: 217 calories, 0.4 g fat, 2.7 g fiber, $0.44
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour: 27 calories, 0.1 g fat, 0.2 g fiber, $0.01
TOTAL: 2716 calories, 99.7 g fat, 36.8 g fiber, $3.96
PER SERVING (TOTAL/12): 226 calories, 8.3 g fat, 3 g fiber, $0.33


Sweet

Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition

Sweet potato muffins comin’ up tomorrow! They were super tasty :) Seriously yum… and I promise to have them posted first thing tomorrow!Hope you all had wonderful weekends!!!

The worst dieting advice ever

Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition


Don’t eat when you’re not hungry
Hunger.

Despite living in a time of unparalleled abundance, hunger is still a major contributor to our health woes.

How?

Ever go shopping hungry? What happens? I know in my case my cart’s a lot fuller on the days I shop hungry than the days I don’t, and the choices often differ as well.

Ever stop to think what happens when you sit down to a meal hungry?

You shop.

You shop from your plates, your fridges, your freezers, your cupboards, or worse still, from a menu.

And just like shopping in the supermarket you’re going to choose a great deal more and a great deal differently waiting until you’re hungry to eat than if you’d sat down not hungry.

I’m also betting that my definition of hunger is likely broader than yours. As far as I’m concerned, hunger doesn’t just come from your stomach, it also comes from your brain. Some folks like to call brain hunger, “appetite” and growling in your stomach, “hunger”. I don’t bother with the distinction. The drive to eat is second only to the drive to breathe in terms of importance to our survival. Consequently our body has many mechanisms and backup mechanisms in place to ensure that we do it. Just as there are a myriad of different physiologic pathways to encourage eating, so too are there a myriad of different sensations, emotions and rationalizations built in to encourage us to seek out food, specifically high calorie food.

So aside from stomach growling, brain growling consists of things such as cravings, compulsions, needs for a “taste” of a certain flavour/tartness/saltiness/sweetness, starting something and having difficulty stopping, and overt losses of dietary control and discretion.

When you’re hungry it’s easy to eat a full day’s calories at a single sitting. The good news is, given the world we live in, hunger is entirely preventable and were you to go out of your way with well planned meals and snacks to ensure the hunger hydra doesn’t rear its ugly heads, you can make it through the day in control of your portions, choices and your calories.

While it may feel unnatural to eat when you’re not hungry I can assure you, it’s the wise way to go and it’s very easy to do.

Here’s a basic hunger prevention strategy. Try it – you might be surprised at how well it works (note calorie range to represent minimums for women-men):

  • Breakfast within 30 minutes of waking, at least 350-450 calories with at least 15 grams of protein
  • Eating every 2.5 hours with between meal snacks of at least 100-200 calories a piece with at least 8 grams of protein
  • Lunch of at least 350-450 calories with at least 15 grams of protein
  • Dinner of at least 400-600 calories with at least 15 grams of protein
  • For every hour of sustained exercise add an additional 100-150 calories that are primarily carbohydrate based.
  • Saturday Stories

    Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition


    Dan Gardner (who’s rapidly become one of my favourite columnists) on the changing face of Canadian demographics.

    Marion Nestle explores how the fight against childhood obesity may well involve fighting big corporations.

    In a related story to Marion’s the New York Times discusses how Disney helped force the eviction of the same non-profit that forced Disney to offer Baby Einstein refunds.

    Tooled around my friends and fellow bloggers Travis and Peter’s new digs over at Science Blogs.

    Watched a stunning HD video of the Milky Way by some guy named Charles up on Vimeo.

    Saturday Stories

    Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition


    Dan Gardner (who’s rapidly become one of my favourite columnists) on the changing face of Canadian demographics.

    Marion Nestle explores how the fight against childhood obesity may well involve fighting big corporations.

    In a related story to Marion’s the New York Times discusses how Disney helped force the eviction of the same non-profit that forced Disney to offer Baby Einstein refunds.

    Tooled around my friends and fellow bloggers Travis and Peter’s new digs over at Science Blogs.

    Watched a stunning HD video of the Milky Way by some guy named Charles up on Vimeo.

    Top 10 Links of the Week: 3/5/10 – 3/11/10

    Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition

    Tangent!

    Dunno if y’all have been watching Idol this season, but so far, it exemplifies what I both adore and loathe about the show. I love that the heretofore unheard of Crystal Bowersox is receiving a wider audience, because girl can saaaang. Simon might have discovered a young Bonnie Raitt or Emmylou Harris there.

    On the other hand, with last night’s ouster of Lilly and Katelyn, it seems like the finals will once again be dominated by angel-voiced 16-year-olds who know very little about music. Which? Boh-ring. You’ve heard Aaron warble one schmaltzy country ballad, and you’ve heard his entire bag of tricks. Lilly may have had the weaker vocals, but at least she kept it interesting. I’m curious to see how the next few weeks go. Readers?

    That aside, the links!

    1) What I Weigh Today: 152
    I loved this whole post, in which the author comes to accept her weight, but this line really struck me: “When I think about the hours, years, decades of my life that have been sacrificed to body loathing and dieting, I just don’t want to surrender another second to it.” Word, Joy.

    2) Good Medicine: Health vs. Pork – Congress Debates the Farm Bill
    You knew meat and dairy were subsidized at much higher rates than fruit and vegetables, but seeing it in graphic form is another thing entirely. Thanks to reader Kristen for sending the link.

    3) Videogum: The Videogum Why Don’t You Caption It? Contest – Sandra Lee’s Cocktail Face
    Aunt Sandy made up a drink consisting of vodka, lemon juice, and heavy cream, the thought of which curdles my brain. Someone (god bless ‘em) slow-motioned her reaction after taking a sip. It’s almost performance art.

    4) Lifehacker: The Common Sense Guide to “Organic” and Other Food Labels
    Excellent rundown of food labels worth your attention. Preview: “antibiotic free” means almost nothing, while “certified humane” is mos def a good thing.

    5) Food Politics: Does Fighting Obesity Also Mean Fighting Corporations? So it Seems.
    Corporate interest in money will always supersede corporate interest in well-being. The trick, I think, is making well-being seem profitable.

    6) Casual Kitchen: The “It’s Too Expensive to Eat Healthy Food” Debate
    Love this eloquent rant about the nutrition/cost debate, not just because Dan uses “shibboleth” in the second sentence. It reminds me of that old chestnut about freeing your mind: “If you always do what you have done, you will always get what you have gotten.”

    7) The Simple Dollar: Convenience Foods – What They Really Cost
    Great post reiterating a key concept in keeping grocery bills low: cut up your own food. This CHG piece from August has more.

    8) Money Saving Mom: How to Build a Stockpile
    MSM’s “31 Days to a Better Grocery Budget” series is still going on, and this excellent post pretty much negates any reason for CHG’s existence. In other good news for MSM readers, Crystal is creating a “lite” RSS feed, meaning you get none of the coupon deals (which were pretty tough to wade through), but all the articles. Woo hoo!

    9) Money Talks News: 28 Tasty Ways You Can Save on Food
    I’m a sucker for tip roundups, and this one hits a lot of cheap/healthy bases. Forward it to a friend just beginning their journey.

    10) The Kitchn:
    How Do I Find a High-Quality, Affordable Chef’s Knife?
    Clearing the Pantry? Make a Free-Form Pasta Casserole.
    Ideas for Healthy Snacks That Ship Well?
    Three questions I wonder about nearly every week, once again solved by the masterminds at The Kitchn.

    HONORABLE MENTIONS

    Ars Technica: The New Age of Online Grocery Shopping
    Good run-through of popular online supermarkets. (Thanks to Eat Me Daily for the link.)

    Eat Me Daily: Fruit Kicking Cancer’s Butt
    Tomatoes and papayas FTW!

    Eater: Bagel Store Owner Confirms Plans for Williamsburg Starbucks
    Brooklynites: biggest bummer, ever. French toast bagels, I’ll miss you most of all.

    New York Times: Women Drinkers Gain Less Weight
    Any excuse for a mimosa, you know?

    Serious Eats
    The 5 Commandments of Sautéing Food
    Taste Test – Store-Bought Tofu
    Use the first link to cook your veggies correctly. Use the second one to add the right tofu.

    Slate: Can It – At-home preserving is ridiculously trendy.
    In which the author attributes the canning boom partly to its photogenic nature. Strange arguments herein.

    Tasty Kitchen: The Theme is Homemade Ingredients
    Short-n-sweet compilation for the DIY enthusiast.

    AND ALSO

    The Paper Towel Gang feat. Bounty’s Pool Balls Test
    The bearded Nordic-looking gentleman in this hilarious Bounty ad is my friend Chris. He is a genius.

    Thank you so much for visiting Cheap Healthy Good! (We appreciate it muchly). If you’d like to further support CHG, subscribe to our RSS feed! Or become a Facebook friend! Or check out our Twitter! Or buy something inexpensive, yet fulfilling via that Amazon store (on the left)! Bookmarking sites and links are nice, too. Viva la France!


    Home owner

    Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition

    We buy our house today… GAH!!!!!!!!Yup things have been a bit crazy here at steph chows… will be baking again soon though… wicked promise… like pink swear…ok ready? put out your pinky… and *shake*we’re good right?John says he should be the first to post again since I’m a slacker this week. I told him to bring it on like Donkey Kong… so what say you ladies and gents?? Think John

    My wife’s trying to poison me!

    Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition

    That’s the title of one of this week’s Old Jews Telling Jokes segments which is what’s on today for Funny Friday (remember email subscribers you’ve got to head to the blog to watch).

    Have a great weekend!

    Veggie Might: HOW Old Is That Oatmeal? When to Clean Out the Pantry

    Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition

    Written by the fabulous Leigh, Veggie Might is a weekly Thursday column about all things Vegetarian.

    Last week, I came across an article in Slate, Ignore Expiration Dates, which claims that product dating is arbitrary and can largely be ignored. Since there are no food industry standards for “sell by,” “best by,” and “use by” dates, and because storage conditions will vary wildly, consumers are wise to use their judgment when deciding what to eat and what to toss.

    Ignoring the “best by” date is something I do regularly. I tend to trust my nose and taste buds when deciding when food is past its prime, particularly with leftovers. It may seem reckless, but I seldom buy perishable food with such labels: never meat, occasionally dairy, and rarely eggs. Vegetables are pretty clear about letting you know when they’re done with you.

    But what about the pantry? I have a bag of jasmine rice that’s been in my cupboard for at least a year. Is it time for us to part ways? How about that ancient package of texturized vegetable protein (TVP) nuggets? I can’t remember when I bought it or the last time I used it.

    I mean, after a taste test of 28-year-old rolled oats, Brigham Young researchers determined that, if stored properly (sealed container, cool, dry place), dry goods and canned goods can last for years and years, taste be damned. Good news for emergency stockpilers and promising for my rice situation.

    So what’s the skinny on pantry shelf life and storage? I jumped into my InterWebShip to see what I could find.

    I was initially shocked at what I didn’t find: the FDA website has no recommendations for dry goods—at least not that I could find. Meat, eggs and dairy, and fruit and vegetables are covered, but grains, nuts, legumes, and spices are sadly neglected.

    Fortunately, the usual culinary suspects (and one newbie) are chock full of great information:

    In a nutshell (4 months; longer if refrigerated), dry good shelf life is less about spoilage that will make you ill and more about maintaining nutritional density and flavor. Following these storage basics will extend the life of your pantry goods and save you money:

    • Cool, dry location: vital. Pantry items should be kept between 60° and 70° F
    • Air-tight containers: important. Storing food in jars and canisters with tight-fitting lids increase the mileage of your goods.
    • Refrigeration/freezing: helpful. The oils in nuts and flours can turn rancid over time. Refrigeration stabilizes the oils and slows the aging process.

    So what about my rice and TVP? Well, according to StillTasty, because I’ve kept my rice sealed and away from heat, it will last indefinitely. TVP lasts about a year in a sealed container, but I’m pretty sure it would sustain the roaches through the nuclear winter. If I don’t use it in a month, it’s getting the heave-ho. There is no room in my pantry for emergency insect food.

    (Photo courtesy of Flickr member Maksis.)

    ~~~

    If you dug this article, you may dig:


    Veggie Might: HOW Old Is That Oatmeal? When to Clean Out the Pantry

    Author: admin  //  Category: Nutrition

    Written by the fabulous Leigh, Veggie Might is a weekly Thursday column about all things Vegetarian.

    Last week, I came across an article in Slate, Ignore Expiration Dates, which claims that product dating is arbitrary and can largely be ignored. Since there are no food industry standards for “sell by,” “best by,” and “use by” dates, and because storage conditions will vary wildly, consumers are wise to use their judgment when deciding what to eat and what to toss.

    Ignoring the “best by” date is something I do regularly. I tend to trust my nose and taste buds when deciding when food is past its prime, particularly with leftovers. It may seem reckless, but I seldom buy perishable food with such labels: never meat, occasionally dairy, and rarely eggs. Vegetables are pretty clear about letting you know when they’re done with you.

    But what about the pantry? I have a bag of jasmine rice that’s been in my cupboard for at least a year. Is it time for us to part ways? How about that ancient package of texturized vegetable protein (TVP) nuggets? I can’t remember when I bought it or the last time I used it.

    I mean, after a taste test of 28-year-old rolled oats, Brigham Young researchers determined that, if stored properly (sealed container, cool, dry place), dry goods and canned goods can last for years and years, taste be damned. Good news for emergency stockpilers and promising for my rice situation.

    So what’s the skinny on pantry shelf life and storage? I jumped into my InterWebShip to see what I could find.

    I was initially shocked at what I didn’t find: the FDA website has no recommendations for dry goods—at least not that I could find. Meat, eggs and dairy, and fruit and vegetables are covered, but grains, nuts, legumes, and spices are sadly neglected.

    Fortunately, the usual culinary suspects (and one newbie) are chock full of great information:

    In a nutshell (4 months; longer if refrigerated), dry good shelf life is less about spoilage that will make you ill and more about maintaining nutritional density and flavor. Following these storage basics will extend the life of your pantry goods and save you money:

    • Cool, dry location: vital. Pantry items should be kept between 60° and 70° F
    • Air-tight containers: important. Storing food in jars and canisters with tight-fitting lids increase the mileage of your goods.
    • Refrigeration/freezing: helpful. The oils in nuts and flours can turn rancid over time. Refrigeration stabilizes the oils and slows the aging process.

    So what about my rice and TVP? Well, according to StillTasty, because I’ve kept my rice sealed and away from heat, it will last indefinitely. TVP lasts about a year in a sealed container, but I’m pretty sure it would sustain the roaches through the nuclear winter. If I don’t use it in a month, it’s getting the heave-ho. There is no room in my pantry for emergency insect food.

    (Photo courtesy of Flickr member Maksis.)

    ~~~

    If you dug this article, you may dig: