Granola Bar Bites

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On Friday, I received a package of yogurts from Chobani, and the my brain started churning about what I could make to go with the yogurt to have this week.

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I love granola, but usually like it homemade so I know how it’s made, and have tried many variations.

This time I decided to create a sticky, crumby granola that was more crunchy than crispy, but still filled with fruits and nuts. How’s that for adjectives to describe it?

I sort of combined some different recipes, flavors, and baking techniques to create Granola Bar Bites.

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Granola Bar Bites

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 C old fashioned oats
  • 1 C puffed cereal
  • 3/4 C almonds (mixed whole and slivered)
  • 2 T flax meal
  • 1/4 C shredded coconut
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 3/4 tsp salt
  • 1/3 C dried cranberries
  • 1/3 C raisins
  • 1/4 C crumbled banana chips
  • 1 T chia seeds
  • 1/4 C sunflower seeds
  • 1/4 C brown rice syrup
  • 2 T applesauce
  • 2 T creamy peanut butter
  • 1/3 C brown sugar

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Instructions:

  • In a medium sized bowl combine all dry ingredients and dried fruit.
  • In a small microwave safe bowl, combine wet ingredients (brown rice syrup, applesauce, peanut butter, brown sugar) and microwave for 20-30 seconds until softer and easier to stir.
  • Add wet ingredients to dry and stir to mix well.

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  • Line a small brownie square baking tin (9×9) with parchment paper and pour mixture on.
  • Press down and smooth out well.
  • Bake at 300* for 25-30 minutes or until the top starts to brown.

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  • Remove and place in refrigerator for a few hours before cutting.
  • Remove from refrigerator and lift the parchment paper out of the baking tin.
  • Slice into squares or crumble into pieces.
  • Store in airtight container.
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What I liked about this granola compared to the others was it was really a mix of a crumbly granola and a bar. That’s why it’s called a bite. It did not cut nicely into bars, but didn’t completely crumble either.

I love the cranberries and raisins as they pop in your mouth, but also love the subtle hint of peanut butter and the stickiness from the syrup.

It’s not overly sweet, and is very dense in lots of nuts, seeds, and natural sugars.

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Ingredient Challenge Monday:

This week, the ingredient for the challenge I am participating in is tofu. I didn’t make tofu this weekend (it’s more of a weeknight food for me since I am the only one that eats it), so here is a look at some previous tofu recipes. Tofu is a great source of soy protein and very versatile and easy to cook with. I have only tried firm tofu, but another variety is silken or soft tofu.

 

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This Weekend…

This weekend was busy with fun stuff.

I attended part of the Texas Yoga Conference to write a story. I did a yoga class called “Asanas and Yogi Moves” led by MC Yogi, an instructor and hip hop singer from California.

Story here.

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I got a sample pack of 12 Chobani flavors including a few new ones.

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Our fridge is packed with yogurts! Jeffrey even tried one. Stay tuned for a giveaway soon. Not of these yogurts, new ones for you.
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I made this. It’s not guacamole. It’s Jeffrey approved, but I didn’t tell him one of the ingredients in it. It’s not tofu. Recipe to come soon.

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And I made this as a snack for all the yogurt. Granola bites recipe to come this week.

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We also went to the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo Chili Cookoff.
And ate Mexican food and Hibachi Japanese food.
Well-rounded eaters we are!

Week in Review

Woohoo it’s the weekend! The weather is great, and I have some fun activities. I am going to part of the Texas Yoga Conference here in Houston to attend a class and write about it for CultureMap. It’s also the beginning of the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, which is a huge fundraiser and fun event during the month of March.

I also need to think of some fun things to cook that go with yogurt because I got 12 sample flavors of Chobani! I love Cho yogurt and eat it often and they sent me a pack to try so I can write about it and host a giveaway. Check back soon for the official giveaway so you can win a sample pack too! 12 flavors! I am going to turn into Greek yogurt.

Here’s a look back at the week:

Monday: A giveaway and Chocolate Brownie Bites

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Tuesday: Quinoa Pudding and other clean foods

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Wednesday: Guest Post by Lily, Part 5

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Thursday: Easy Weeknight Dinners

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Friday: What’s Inside my Pantry

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What’s inside my pantry

Thanks for participating in the Picky Bars giveaway! The winner is: Lynn of The Actor’s Diet.

Congrats Lynn! I’ll email you for your address.

And remember that you can buy Picky Bars straight from their website.

Welcome to my pantry.

I have shown you my refrigerator and freezer as part of a kitchen organizing series, and now here’s another look at dry food storage.

We have a pretty great pantry with lots of shelves and storage space. I am the family cereal hoarder, and Jeffrey does the same for chips.

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The first picture is the front view of the pantry. The top shelf is chips in a basket. This was a great idea to keep small bags in one place so they aren’t everywhere. To the left is boxed chips and crackers.

Below is a row of cereals in containers. I would like them all to match, but they are different brands because I keep adding. The ones I like best are Oxo with a pop top. They’re the most sleek.

On the bottom shelf is a group of canned foods (soups, pumpkin, beans), along with baking goods like flours, sugars, and boxed mixes.

 

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This is my group of dried fruits and nuts. Instead of keeping things in their packages that are half eaten, I move them all to little containers. These are pint sized with lids and hold a good amount of raisins, apricots, craisins, dates, and a variety of nuts. I also use Ball jars for almonds.

The little shaker that used to be ground cinnamon now holds chia seeds. I thought this was a smart idea! They fit perfectly through the shaker holes and are better than being in a plastic bag.
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On the door is our spice rack. Lots of dry spices and herbs, and also things like soy sauce, vanilla and salts.

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The floor is useful too. We store water and cokes here, and I keep excess to the side like the rest of a box of cereal, extra rice, and newer peanut butter jars of condiment jars not opened yet.

The top of the pantry is also great for storing large serving pieces that don’t get a lot of use, cocktail napkins, plastic cups, etc.

What is one random thing in your pantry?

Easy Weeknight Dinners

First, please remember to enter the giveaway for Picky Bars! Info in this post. Giveaway closes today and the winner is announced on tomorrow’s post.

Also, yesterday I had my first photo posted on FoodGawker! (Picture here)

And, I saw this article “How to make oatmeal…wrong” by Mark Bittman in The New York Times on McDonald’s oatmeal and why it’s still bad. I have been thinking about it for over a day so wanted to share with you.

So many days we wonder “what’s for dinner?” This dinner comes together very quickly and was a major crowd pleaser. It does take a long time to cook and then cool, but the prep time is so short, you can use the cooking time to do other things around the house, like get ready for the next day, walk the dog, empty the dishwasher or watch TV.

Turkey Meatloaf with Roasted Vegetables

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I made this meatloaf once before on the blog, but it made a huge amount that took over two loaf pans. Although it was good, it was way too much for two people. This time, I used the same recipe and cut it in half. And I added some smokey BBQ sauce to the top.

Ingredients:

  • 1 pack ground turkey, I used Jennie O Lean (not Extra Lean)
  • 1/2 C old fashioned Quaker Oats
  • 1/8 C dried parsley (use more if fresh)
  • 1/2 T oregano
  • 1 1/2 T Worchestershire Sauce
  • 1 T soy sauce
  • 1/2 tsp garlic powder
  • 5 oz tomato sauce, divided (see below)
  • 1/8 C Parmesan cheese, grated
  • 1 tsp basil, chopped

(This is not a pretty picture, but meatloaf doesn’t tend to be photogenic while in the loaf pan)

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Instructions:

  • Preheat oven to 400*.
  • Mix everything together in a mixing bowl by hand including 3 oz of the tomato sauce.
  • Transfer to a 9 x 5 loaf pan coated in cooking spray. Press down so it’s in loaf shape.
  • Spoon on top more tomato sauce (about 2 oz) and BBQ sauce of your choice so the top is coated.
  • Bake for 1 hr, 15 minutes. Let stand for 10 minutes covered in foil before slicing.

The loaf was very flavorful and dense. The tomato sauce + BBQ sauce was a great combination. You could easily sub ketchup, but that’s not allowed in our house. The amount was also perfect, still with some leftover. A Jeffrey approved recipe! He really liked it.

We also liked that the recipe was very light without an egg, oil or bread crumbs as many turkey loaves have.

(gooey BBQ deliciousness)

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Roasted Brussels Sprouts, Snap Peas and Onion

To go with the loaf, I roasted up some vegetables also at 400*. In a baking pan, I used a pound or so of brussels sprouts (those are for me), and a package of snap peas plus half a yellow onion for Jeffrey. Cooking them all together was no problem, it was like a half half pizza.

For the sprouts, I chopped off the ends but kept them whole. I drizzled 1 T EVOO + 1 T Bragg’s Liquid Aminos (like soy sauce but with less sodium) on top of the sprouts and the same for the other vegetables.

These were baked for 25 minutes at the same temperature sharing an oven. The vegetables still had a bite but were soft on the inside, very important for the sprouts! And the seasoning was perfect–like it was light enough to know something was on it but not overpowering in flavor.

We also had a bag of Alexia Sweet Potato Fries, but these weren’t that special.

Quinoa with Apples and Veggies

This was kind of a clean-out-the-fridge recipe that I just put together to use up vegetables from earlier in the week. It had carrots, celery, red pepper, apple, and leftover Brussels sprouts on the side.

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Ingredients:
  • 3/4 C quinoa
  • 1 1/4 C water
  • 1 Braeburn apple (or any kind you have)
  • 2 stalks celery, diced
  • 3 carrots, peeled and diced
  • 1/2 red bell pepper, diced
  • 2 T apple juice
  • EVOO, salt, pepper
  • 6 pitted dates, diced
Instructions:
  • In a soup pot, cook quinoa as package instructs. Mine was about 1.5 parts water to 1 part quinoa. Once all water is absorbed, fluff with a fork and leave covered.
  • In a separate pan, drizzle 1 T EVOO and let heat up.
  • Add carrots, celery, and red pepper and let cook for about 3 minutes. Add apple and dates and let cook together.
  • Add quinoa to the vegetable mix and toss together.
  • Add apple juice and let cook until juice is absorbed by the vegetables and quinoa.
  • Serve hot, I had mine with leftover Brussels sprouts.
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This was a light choice for dinner, but still filling, especially with added vegetables. I had about 1.5 bowls of this, and Jeffrey ate it as a side dish with leftover meatloaf.

Quinoa, as I’ve written about before, is a great protein that is eaten like a grain. It takes on the flavor of whatever it is cooked with, and in this case, it was an apple flavor.

It also lasts a long time in the fridge for leftovers.

Guest Post by Lily Part 5

First, please remember to enter the giveaway for Picky Bars! Info in this post. Giveaway closes on Thursday and winner is announced on Friday.

If you missed any of the previous posts by Lily, catch up here:

Hello Marci’s blog readers, It is Lily here again. It has been quite a while since I last wrote something for my mom, and I have grown up so much! Let me tell you a little what’s been going on in our house, you know, not related to food.

Since I last wrote, I turned one! That was a big deal, and I even had a party. I got a new birthday cake toy that sings, I ate ice cream (!) and it was amazing. It’s a doggie ice cream called Frosty Paws if you want to ask your mom to buy it for you. It tastes like peanut butter!

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My walks have gotten a little longer, and I really enjoy spending time walking with my dad. Look how studly he looks walking me. We are a cute couple when people see us on the streets.We love to walk together. I like looking at birds, leaves, other dogs, and eating poop. Oh no, I didn’t mean that, that’s what baby dogs do. I don’t do that anymore.

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My mom’s parents have come to visit and I went to Dallas to visit them too. They are really great and give me lots of kisses, take me outside so many times, and give me really good food and treats too. They have salami! roast beef! fresh turkey! I love meat. They really know how to make me a happy girl. I told them I’m allergic to dog food. hehe.

Did you know I went to Dallas over Christmas by myself? It was so much fun. I got to sleep on their bed between the pillows like a big girl. Soupy (that’s what we call my mom’s mom) carries me around like a baby. It’s nice to not have to walk.

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I also had a slumber party at my dad’s parents house. That was so much fun too! They have never had a doggie on their bed before, but we all got along. Grandma Julie is real nice to me too. They have a rug that is fun to nibble on.

This is where I sleep sometimes at my house. I wish my mom didn’t take so many pictures of me. I’m trying to sleep!

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Also now that I’m one, I get to learn to drive! No, not really. I can’t work the pedals and see out the window so I am just the helper. I help my dad decide when it’s time to stop for a potty break. We are in the car a lot to Austin, Dallas and San Antonio. I really like to go on trips as long as we can drive. I hate planes.

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This is me eating eggs with my dad. We have the same breakfast sometimes. Eggs, bacon. He has a bagel, that’s no good for me. I love my dad.

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This is me eating my Valentine’s Day cookie. Another holiday! It’s a good one. We eat cookies and get presents. Besides my birthday, this one is a good holiday. Hanukkah too. I like that one.

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And this is just another picture of me having a good time.

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That is it for this post. I must get back to napping. Have to rest up to play more later!

Arf arf!

One day, three recipes

First, please remember to enter the giveaway for Picky Bars! Info in this post. Giveaway closes on Thursday and winner is announced on Friday.

Also, I have a new story on CultureMap about making homemade granola. Link here.

Sunday was busy in my kitchen, and no desserts came out. That’s a good thing. I am still hooked on Terry Walters’ book Clean Food and found a recipe for corn chowder that is “cleaner” than traditional chowder. To go with this, I made Kale Chips because I found kale at the grocery store for 99 cents. A gigantic bunch of organic kale for under one dollar. It was so big, it took up a whole shelf in my refrigerator. Don’t say eating green and organic is expensive. 99 cents!

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I also found black quinoa at the grocery (I’m talking about Central Market if you live in Texas) in the bulk bins and wanted to try this recipe for Black Quinoa Pudding with Blueberries that Emily made last week.

Here’s the details about all of the recipes.

Black Quinoa Breakfast Pudding

Emily made this recipe last week that is a spinoff of rice pudding using black quinoa. Quinoa, which I’ve cooked with before, is a grain but very high in protein and very good for you. This dish was packed with protein, sweetness, and a berry flavor. I ate it for breakfast one day, but it is definitely great as a snack or dessert too. Quinoa comes in many colors, but I hadn’t tried black before. It’s very mysterious.

Ingredients:

I cut the original recipe in half because it was just me that was going to try this, and I didn’t want to use a whole pint of blueberries. I also added bananas to the mix.

This would serve 2 for a breakfast, 3 for a snack or dessert probably.

  • 1/2 C dry black quinoa
  • 3/4 C water
  • 1/2 C light coconut milk (I could only find the large containers of Silk so I’ll be drinking coconut milk with cereal and in smoothies this month)
  • 1/2 C your milk on hand or soymilk
  • 1/8 C honey
  • 1/2 C blueberries
  • 1/2 banana, sliced

Instructions:

  • First, black quinoa is cooked the same way as other quinoa, so fill a pot with 3/4 C water and add the 1/2 C quinoa, adjust according to how much you do. Cook and stir until water is dissolved.
  • In a separate soup pot, combine coconut milk and regular milk and honey, stir until honey dissolves and milk starts to simmer.
  • When quinoa is cooked, add to the milk pot and stir for a few minutes so milk can start to thicken.
  • Add blueberries and banana and remove from heat.
  • Pour into a bowl and refrigerate for a few hours. I stirred every so often because the quinoa tends to sink to the bottom.

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I ate a cup of this for breakfast and it was a nice change from traditional breakfast. The coconut milk was new to me too, with its strong naturally sweet coconut flavor. And the quinoa adds a nice nutty and chewy texture. I liked the addition of bananas as well.

I did not think that the mixture thickened as much as I expected, and I also let mine sit overnight. I think I expected it to become more like a drippy yogurt but it was still very milky.

The color of mine was more purple so the blueberries definitely influenced that. Emily’s did not look so purple in her photos. You could wait a little longer on the stovetop before adding blueberries. I would try that next time.

Regardless, it was a packed with protein and was a filling dish. Colorful too.

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Other recipes using quinoa:

Corn Chowder

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Ingredients:

  • 1 T EVOO
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 4 stalks celery, chopped
  • 3 carrots, chopped
  • 2 medium potatoes, peeled and chopped
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 4 C frozen corn kernels
  • 5 C milk (I would change this to 3 C milk, 2 C water)
  • more salt and pepper for seasoning
Instructions:

  • In a large pot over medium heat, saute onion in olive oil until soft.
  • Add celery, carrots, potatoes, and salt and saute until vegetables are soft.
  • Add corn and milk/water to cover ingredients. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover and simmer for 20 minutes. (we had to watch ours carefully so it didn’t boil over.
  • Remove from heat and puree in a blender. We pureed about 3/4 of the soup and left the rest to keep some chunky texture.
  • Season with salt and pepper (we used a lot of salt and pepper).
This would serve 4 moderate sized appetites, 3 hungry ones. Or if it was part of a course and not the main course, it would serve more.

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Kale Chips

I have made these once before, but like most things, it takes time to perfect.

This time, I made them right when I wanted to eat them instead of letting them sit for a while. Keeping them hot out of the oven is important. I also tore them into bite sized pieces before cooking, because they are very hard to cut. Tearing the stem off is also important too. Here’s how it works:

Ingredients:

  • Gigantic bunch of kale
  • salt, pepper, garlic powder, paprika

Instructions:

(see this post for some step by step pictures of kale chips)

  • Tear leaves off of the stem and place in bowl of water to clean. Tear into small pieces and dry very well.
  • Lay on a cooking sheet sprayed with cooking spray. You can crowd them on, they’ll shrink up.
  • Season with cooking spray on top, then salt, pepper and garlic powder.
  • Bake at 350* for about 10 minutes, but watch so they don’t burn. They should be crispy but not burnt on the edges.
  • Season with paprika out of the oven and eat once cooled.

These are great as a side dish, in a salad, and since it’s just greens, you can eat a lot. It’s also a dark leafy green, which is the most nutritious kind.

Kale has a kind of bitter taste and can be chewy if you eat a stalk. The seasonings and tearing from the stalk helps this.

Other recipes with kale: Lean Green Salad

It was a busy  Sunday in the kitchen, but that’s my kind of Sunday. It’s great because all of these recipes made more than enough for one day. Cook once, enjoy for days.

What’s your favorite thing to cook on Sundays?

Quick plug: If you like my blog, would you nominate me for the Women’s Healthy Blog Roll? Click here. If you’re a blogger, let me know and I’ll reciprocate too.

Picky Bars Giveaway

Picky Bars Giveaway!

When I was at a press conference for the Houston Marathon at the end of January, one of the female runners gave a plug to Picky Bars. Stephanie Rothstein came in third place at the Houston Marathon with an unbelievable time under 2:30, 10 minutes faster than her marathon PR. I really liked her running story because she was benched from running last year and couldn’t figure out what was wrong with her body. She realized she had Celiac Disease and cut gluten from her diet. In the meantime of not running, she and Lauren Fleshman grew their Bar business into something marketable. I just really like stories like that.

I contacted Picky Bars to see if they’d let me host a giveaway for them, and here we are.

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Picky Bars are the perfect ratio for athletes on the go with the 4:1 Carb to Protein ratio. They are under 200 calories, are gluten and dairy free, and full of “real” ingredients including chocolate chip morsels. Check out their Nutrition page for the details.

There are three flavors right now (two are unnamed and you can name them on their homepage!) and the winner of this giveaway will receive a pack of Picky Bars.

I thought the Picky Bars were really, really delicious. They are a consistency of a Larabar, but thinner and much better tasting. Larabars are so dense and chewy and have very strong nutty flavors and I usually only eat them half at a time. These are a small and mighty bar but would be great when you need fast fuel before or after a workout. And they are perfect for athletes with that ratio all figured out.

You can’t find these in stores, so enter below to try them!

Here’s how to enter:

1. Leave a comment here telling me your favorite way to sweat.

2. Leave a comment on their site suggesting a name for the bars before Wednesday (and leave a separate comment here saying you did so).

3. Friend them on Facebook or follow them on Twitter (and leave a comment here saying you did so).

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This giveaway closes on Thursday and I’ll announce the winner on Friday morning. Good luck!

P.S. The recipe I posted yesterday is a really delicious brownie bite.

Quick plug: If you like my blog, would you nominate me for the Women’s Healthy Blog Roll? Click here. If you’re a blogger, let me know and I’ll reciprocate too.

Chocolate Brownie Bites

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Mission: Find a chocolate cookie that I could eat semi-guilt free.

Background: I really wanted a chocolate cookie in the house, and I stopped buying packaged cookies. I searched my go-to places and read over recipes I have printed and decided to make one of Angela’s from Oh She Glows.

The pictures of the recipe I chose on her site looked more like macaroons, but the ones that came out of my oven looked like cookies and taste like brownies. I’m not sure why hers look incredibly different than mine, but mine are very tasty–fluffy on the inside, with a nice texture of coconut and chocolate chips.

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The only thing I didn’t like about the ingredients, as far as making them a healthy cookie, is the amount of oil. The recipe makes about two dozen cookies and has healthy ingredients except for a large amount of oil, in my opinion. If I made this again, I would maybe attempt to use applesauce for all or part of the oil.

Approved by Jeffrey on taste.

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Chocolate Brownie Bites

Ingredients:

  • 1 C old fashioned oats
  • 1/2 C + 1/3 C whole wheat flour
  • 1/3 C cocoa powder, sifted (I used Hershey’s unsweetened)
  • 1/2 C brown sugar, lightly packed
  • 1/4 tsp baking powder
  • 1/4 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/3 C Almond Milk
  • 2 T maple syrup
  • 1 T ground flax
  • 1/3 C EVOO (this is also where I was confused on using olive oil for sweet baking and not Canola oil)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/4 tsp Almond extract
  • 1/4 C coconut shreds
  • 1/4 C chocolate chips (I used semi-sweet)

Instructions:

  • Preheat oven to 350*.
  • In a large bowl, combine oats, flour, brown sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Sift together flour, cocoa, powders and salt.
  • In a small bowl, whisk together syrup, ground flax, milk, oil, vanillas.
  • Add wet to dry and stir well. This will be very wet, thick and very dark from the cocoa.
  • Stir in the coconut and chocolate chips.
  • Spoon onto baking sheets, I line mine with Silpats, and form into a round shape. It’s a bit messy.
  • Bake for 12-15 minutes.

Again, these brownie bites were very light and I consider it a low-guilt cookie (not no-guilt). There is no butter, white sugar, white flour or eggs. They are actually a vegan brownie, but labeling gives a stigma so let’s not do that.

And my sister requested pictures of the inside of brownies, cookies, and muffins, so here’s the inside.

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Tune back tomorrow for a Picky Bars giveaway!

Quick plug: If you like my blog, would you nominate me for the Women’s Healthy Blog Roll? Click here. If you’re a blogger, let me know and I’ll reciprocate too.

Week in Review

Happy Saturday. The weather is so warm! Everyone loves it, but it’s February! I am not ready for 10 months of summer.

Here’s a look back at the week in posts. I really liked Monday’s post on using recipes from a new book called Clean Food, and Wednesday’s guest post by Jeffrey. It was a fun one.

See you back on Monday for a giveaway of Picky Bars!

Monday: Clean Food

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Tuesday: A Camera Post

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Wednesday: Dinner for Two, Guest Post by Jeffrey

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Thursday: Three Things Thursday, and a second post Wacky Thursday

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Friday: Dude, Sweet Chocolate

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