Tag Archives: breakfast

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Granola Chocolate Chip Waffles

DSC06988

These waffles are an homage to the Grananola Chocolate Chip Waffles at the Southside Walnut Cafe.  I can’t recommend my waffle recipe though because they were a little tough.  I subbed in some whole wheat flour, but I don’t blame that.  I think I just need to continue my quest for the perfect waffle recipe.

What I do recommend is adding granola and chocolate chips to your fave waffle recipe and then serving it up with some more granola, chocolate chips and sliced bananas on top.  (I poured some batter into the waffle maker, added a handful of granola and then put some more batter on top.  I didn’t want to mix it into the batter because I didn’t want the granola to get too soft.)  I  did not put any banana in the waffles like they do at the Southside because, yuck.

My homemade granola is a work in progress, first it was too sweet, then not sweet enough.  I may now have the perfect recipe. At first I thought it might still be not sweet enough, but I’ve been finding it to be a nice cereal topping, delicious with yogurt and berries from my garden.   Maybe you should make it and let me know?

The original recipe that started all this is from cooking light.  I just found that it had so much orange juice that it took forever to cook.  Like – double or triple the time on the recipe.  So I started messing around with it and this is what I have.  This makes two cookie sheets worth, because why bother making less?

Granola:

6 cups old fashioned oats
3/4 cup sliced almonds
6 teaspoons cinnamon – yeah that’s a weird amount.
2 tablespoons ground flaxseed
1/2 cup orange juice
3/4 cup honey
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
3 teaspoons vanilla

Preheat oven to 300 F

Line two cookie sheets with parchment or spray with nonstick spray.  Mix the dry ingredients in a huge bowl.  In a small sauce pan, heat the orange juice, honey, brown sugar.  Stir until the honey and brown sugar is dissolved.  Add the vanilla.  Pour the wet ingredients over the dry ingredients and stir.  Spread the mixture in an even layer over the two cookie sheets.  Bake at 300 for 20 minutes, stirring after 10 minutes.  You may need to add time to get the granola to your level of doneness.  I like it to be brown and pretty crunchy.

Let it cool on the cookie sheets and then store in a tightly sealed container.

DSC06985

 

 

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Bagel Supremes

DSC06982The Bagel Supreme is my dad’s specialty, so I stole his idea for last week’s FBF.  I agonized over this First-Day-of-Summer-Fancy-Breakfast-Friday because on the one hand, I had all the time in the world to make breakfast.  On the other hand, I wanted to sleep in and be lazy.  I bought a random assortment of ingredients thinking I could go with breakfast tacos or bagel supremes. In the end I went the Bagel Supreme route – breakfast tacos had already been done.

My dad’s recipe is a toasted bagel with scrambled egg, bacon and cheese.  You can’t go wrong with that, but what if you don’t want to deal with making bacon?  My answer to that problem was to buy pre-c00ked breakfast sausage and serve it both on the side and in the sandwich.  (I didn’t have any because, yuck.)

The best part though was the grilled bagels.  If you have ever camped or stayed in a ski condo with our friend Tony, you have probably had his fried bagels.  When you are without a toaster, or unable to find the toaster in your ski chalet, his solution is to fry bagels in butter.  The first time I had one, I thought it was the most amazing thing ever.  The best part is, after he fries the bagels, he offers you cream cheese to have with your bagel.  So decadent.  Of course, I think the last time I had a ski vacation with Tony, it was 1999/200o and I had the metabolism of a someone in my “mid” 20s.  Once I tried to get Dave to make them on a camping trip and he didn’t understand how much butter you really need.  I was sad.  Fried bagels have  been in the back of my mind for a while.  I don’t think I used a Tony amount of butter, but they were still good.  Technically, I made grilled bagels.

For the bagel supreme, I brushed some melted butter on the bagels and then cooked them on our cast iron griddle.  After I flipped them over, I smashed them a little with a pan.

DSC06981Once the bagels were ready, I scrambled the eggs, and melted cheddar on top.  Added some sausage and served with a little fruit salad.  Delicious.

DSC06983

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Blueberry Cornmeal Muffins

IMG_1192This recipe all started last week when I was being stingy with the vanilla glaze for the donut holes.  I didn’t want to throw the leftover glaze away, but eating it with a spoon also seemed like a bad idea. The only solution was to bake a cake to use as a glaze receptacle.

I had been wanting to make the Lemon Cornmeal Cake from breakfast:recipes to wake up for (sic) – but it’s so complicated it wasn’t a contender for FBF.  There’s whisking, then whisking over a double boiler… come on.  I decided there had to be an easier way to make it, so I came up with a plan.  Follow the recipe for Mother’s Day, then remake it in a more straightforward fashion for Fancy Breakfast Friday.

Both methods had mixed results.

For one – I didn’t actually follow the recipe for Mother’s Day – I added blueberries and glaze. It was  OK.  Fine really.  Kind of corn-mealy.  Not worth whisking over a double boiler, and I didn’t even bother to figure out the science of why that would even be necessary.  I made it the day before and it was a nice addition to the breakfast in bed spread.

IMG_1108

On to recipe No. 2.  This time I decided to follow the recipe on the cornmeal box, and increase the sugar, and add lemon and blueberries.  These were also fine.  Pretty good as they came out of the oven.  OK for an afternoon snack.  Incredibly dry the next day.  You can see Jack has a giant glass of milk, and is kind of procrastinating eating this muffin.

IMG_1193

Blueberry Lemon Cornmeal Muffins: *adapted from the kroger brand cornmeal box

1 cup cornmeal
1 cup all purpose flour
1/2 cup sugar (the recipe calls for 2 T)
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 cup of vegetable oil
1 egg
lemon zest from one lemon
juice from half a lemon
3/4 cup frozen blueberries

To make:

Preheat Oven to 450.  Fill 12 muffin tins with liners. Zest the lemon into a bowl with the sugar and rub together until very fragrant.

Squeeze half a lemon into the milk and let it sit while you mix the dry ingredients.  Add the oil and egg to the milk and whisk.  Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients.  Spoon into 12 muffin tins.  Top muffins with 3-5 blueberries each.
Bake at 450 for 15 minutes, until brown on the top.

Eat all of them immediately.

IMG_1191

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Cherry Galette

IMG_1091

 

The trick to serving pie for breakfast is to make it “healthy”.  This recipe calls for 1 3/4 cups flour, so I used 3/4 of whole wheat.  See what I did there?  So much healthier. Also, the whole wheat flour kinds of shores up a crust that has to stand on it’s own instead of relying on a pie pan for shape.

I based my recipe on the galette dough recipe from Rustic Fruit Desserts.  I love that cookbook even though I used to hate fruit in my dessert.  I’m slowly being won over.  But I’ll never be team pie.  #teamcake4evah.

I also used less sugar in the filling, although I wasn’t using a recipe, so I used what I imagined to be less that what a normal person would use.

The other trick about pie for breakfast is to balance it with some protein.  Usually on Fancy Breakfast Friday, this means eggs and bacon, but I have recently spent a lot of time getting caught up on Game of Thrones, and this has forced me to cut back on my sleeping time.  I made this galette the night before, while watching Game of Thrones, and then I slept in on FBF morning.  I didn’t want a repeat of the blueberry muffin incident where the boys were forced to eat steaming hot muffins straight from the oven so they didn’t miss the bus.  Plus, pies and galettes need to cool on the metaphorical windowsill for a bit.  So what did I do for protein?  I have gotten a couple samples of Skoop at my cycling team meetings/parties and I had been saving them for mornings after an orthodontist appointment when Luke can’t chew.  Skoop is a plant based protein powder that you mix with 8-12 ounces of milk or whatever.  As Luke would say at the grocery store as a toddler in the milk section, “We drink cows milk!  Make sure to get cow’s milk.”  I mixed the skoop with a banana and 12 ounces of milk in the blender and split it into two glasses.  I had the vanilla flavor and they  liked it.  I had a taste and thought it was pretty good.

The galette, of course was also delish.

Galette Dough – recipe based on Rustic Fruit Desserts
1 Cup AP flour
3/4 Cup white whole wheat flour
3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
3/4 cup cold unsalted butter
3 tablespoons ice water

Put the drink ingredients in a food processor and pulse to mix them.  Then cut the butter into small pieces and plop them into the top of the food processor and put the whole thing in the freezer for 10 minutes.  After the ingredients are chilled pulse until the butter is evenly distributed and the butter is smaller than pea sized.  Turn on the food processor and pour in the 3T of ice water and let the food processor run a second until the dough almost comes together.  Dump it out onto a big piece of plastic wrap. At this point my dough kind of looked like dippin’ dots.  Put another layer of plastic wrap over the top and roll it out into a 1 inch thick disk.  I fold the sides of the plastic wrap over the so I can roll it into the shape I want.  Wrap the disk and put in in the fridge for 2 hours.

Filling
2 cups frozen cherries
1/2 cup sugar
3 teaspoons corn starch
half a lemon
Turbinado sugar
1 egg, whisked

Put cherries in a sauce pan and cook on low.  Add sugar and cornstarch.  Squeeze half a lemon into it.  Cook on low stirring occasionally until thick.

Make the Galette
Preheat oven to 400
Take the dough out and roll it out to about a 12 inch diameter.
Put filling on the middle, leaving plenty of room to fold the crust over.
Fold the crust over.
Brush the egg over the crust
Sprinkle the top with a tablespoon of turbinado sugar
Bake for 30 minutes until crust is golden and filling is bubbling.

Enjoy!

IMG_1092

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Blueberry Muffins

DSC06757 (1)

These muffins were delicious.  After my success with the breakfast cookies, I pulled out The Family Kitchen* again, knowing I could find something the make at the last minute with ingredients I had on hand.

The downside to this recipe is that I barely had it out of the oven as the kids were sitting down to breakfast.  I only give myself an hour, because I can’t make myself get up earlier than 6:00 am to make Fancy Breakfast Friday.  If I get up at 6:00 am, I am a fun mom, working on a cool, year long project.  If I get up earlier, I have become a crazy, obsessed mom who seriously needs to go back to work.  These muffins should not have taken a full hour to make, but for some reason they did.

The recipe calls for 2 cups of blueberries, which I thought was too many for 12 muffins.  So I used the “dump blueberries in until it looks right” method.

The main problem here was the crumb topping.  Too much flour, not enough sugar.  And the muffins were so full, I could barely get the tablespoon per muffin to stay on top.  I was left with at least a cup of crumb, so I added some sugar and vanilla and put it in two baggies in the freezer for future muffin projects.

These muffins were served with an egg and some fruit.

DSC06746 (1)

* The link is an affiliate link.

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Breakfast Cookies

DSC06706

Last Thursday night I was flipping through cookbooks looking for easy recipes that listed ingredients I already had in the house.  I found this delicious recipe for breakfast cookies in The Family Kitchen* cookbook.  This is a good cookbook to have because it’s full of useful recipes.  It also breaks things down for cooking with kids – what to have the kids do, what to do yourself.  I don’t find that advice to be super necessary at this point, but it’s useful when they are younger.  (Or for younger moms, I guess.)

This is basically an oatmeal cookie, with less butter than usual, and just egg whites.  It also calls for orange juice, which I didn’t have so I subbed pineapple juice.  Another sub I made was cranberries for raisins.  Now that I am thinking about it, it also called for prune puree, but suggested applesauce as a good substitute.  Who has prune puree?  Well, I didn’t think I had applesauce either, but then I remembered I had a go-go squeeze in the bottom of my baseball bag.  It was apple-banana, everyone’s least favorite flavor, and it was exactly the 1/4 cup I needed.  Turns out, I picked a recipe for which I did not have all the ingredients!

But they turned out to be delicious.  I served the cookies with scrambled eggs, pineapple slices, and sausage.  This plate clearly needs something red or green.

DSC06701

  • This post contains affiliate links.

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Spring Break Breakfast Casserole

DSC06617

This super Fancy Breakfast is actually now 2 weeks old.  Last week was April Fools! and the week before we had spring break.  We share meals with two other families and by a stroke of luck and genius, I was assigned breakfast on Friday.  The caveat was that meals should be vegetarian and gluten free if possible.  I made an egg casserole topped with mushrooms in a red wine reduction.  I decided not to go with a pastry because of my total lack of experience in gluten free baking, and at the last minute, I realized the casserole had flour in it, DUH!  So I made an omelette for the gluten free person.  I did not hand make the tater tots, I hope no one who was there is reading this, because I tried to be ambiguous about whether or not I had the deep fryer out before anyone woke up.

The casserole, like I said, had flour, 16 eggs, two cups of cottage cheese, some huge amount of mozzarella, dijon, nutmeg, salt, pepper.  What’s the recipe?  Well, there’s a long story behind it, because I need to tell the backstory about the time I rode my bike halfway around Pike’s Peak and Dave rode all the way around.  In the middle we stayed at a bed and breakfast that served this casserole.  The proprietor gave me the recipe, but I had never made it because when is it appropriate to make a casserole with 16 eggs?  And who on earth has a 15×10 pan?  Fortunately there was on in the condo!!  I made a decision not to buy a disposable dish, saving myself $5.00 but risking my ability to pull this off, but we lucked out.  Coming soon – the backstory and the recipe, assuming I brought it home from Crested Butte and put it somewhere.  In the meantime, here is a link to the B&B and I would love to stay there again.  Under different circumstances.

DSC06616

It was so good.  And it was good leftover the next day.  The mushroom topping was optional, but I think if you like mushrooms and red wine, you would like the topping.

DSC06619

Here is our view from the condo.

DSC06612

SPRING BREAK!!! WOOOO!

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Breakfast Pizza

IMG_0742

This is one of those blog posts where I post a picture of something else instead of what I made for breakfast last Friday because the Fancy Breakfast Friday was highly un-photogenic.  But I sure was busy in the kitchen last Friday!  We had a belated pie party for Luke’s birthday and I made a cherry pie and a peach cobbler.  It was also the night of the talent show so I made Madeleines for the bake sale, and since I learned last time that my recipe makes more than 12, I turned the rest of the batter into cupcakes.

Fortunately, Jack only did the art show part of the talent show so we could go straight from baseball to the art opening to our party at home.  He used the sumi e style to paint the tree in the background there.

DSC06545

But what did we have for breakfast?  Well.  As I said in the title, we had breakfast pizza, which was actually delicious.  I was inspired by an old Williams Sonoma pizza cookbook that my roommates bought me in college.  At the time, I thought the recipe looked disgusting because I didn’t like eggs.  #weird.   This is one major fail that I want to keep working on and get it right.  What I took from the cookbook recipe was the idea of making a breakfast pizza, and to cook the dough/cheese/meat first and then add the eggs for the last couple minutes.  I came up with this idea very last minute, and I already had dough in the fridge from an Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a day recipe I had been using.  But here are my lessons learned – I need to make a fresher dough for the crust so it’s bigger and softer.  I need to make a big crust around the edges so the eggs don’t slide off.  I also need to cook this on a pan with sides, certainly not one with holes.

IMG_0741

So how was it?  Delicious.  It’s cheddar, egg, and bacon on a pizza.  What could go wrong?  Aside from the yolks breaking and the eggs sliding entirely off the pizza?

Fancy Breakfast Friday: Oatmeal Soufflé

DSC06507This recipe is from Food and Wine and you can find it here.  It’s funny that I would choose to make a “healthy version of a soufflé when I have never made a soufflé before.  I read that you could do the first two steps and refrigerate overnight, which I love.  But I thought I could skip cooking the oats and just let them soak.  In the morning I still had a bowl of oats and milk, nothing even approaching porridge so I didn’t save myself any time.  Fortunately, there wasn’t a huge rush because Luke had the day off and we let Jack play hooky.  #parenting.

The recipe seemed pretty straight forward, make porridge, whip eggs, etc. Cook for 3o minutes or until puffed and golden.  What it did not address was appropriate level of jiggle.  After 30 minutes, I had a very jiggly soufflé.  I put it back in for 5 minutes.  Same level of jiggle.  Another 5 minutes while I read about how to tell when you soufflé is done.  One source said that Americans like a dry soufflé while Europeans like a moist soufflé.  I’d buy that, because I wasn’t thrilled with the looks of a jiggly soufflé.  After another 5 minutes I woke Dave up to give him some instructions.  “I need to leave in 10 minutes for a mammogram.  There’s a soufflé in the oven, I need you to take it out when it’s done.  Good luck.”

He wasn’t thrilled with this, and fortunately the soufflé finally solidified a little and I took it out.  I photographed it and went to my appointment.  I didn’t witness anyone eating it, but they all said it was really good, tasted like fluffy oatmeal, or maybe even bread pudding.  I ate half of what was left and loved it.  I ate the rest the next day.  It was really good.  But you know what is also delicious? Oatmeal.  And I can make that less than 5  minutes.  So this was an interesting experiment, but I’m not sure I’ll make it again.

And now one of my favorite movie scenes, which was quoted extensively during the making and eating of this oatmeal soufflé.