Saturday, January 18, 2020

Breakfast Cookies -- a customizable, grabble, gluten-free, plant-based quick-meal

I don't personally think breakfast is the most important meal of the day. However, I've never been a breakfast person, so there you have my implicit bias. My kid used to love breakfast, and often also second breakfast. He was all about that first meal of the day. Even just the thought of breakfast used to make him happy. These days, I think he's gearing up to be a teenager because he's become much less interested in eating in the morning, and often will just have a small scoop of peanut butter and call it done. Eating is one of those things that's both highly personal, but also shared by everyone, so it's hard not to be affected by other people's opinions about what one should do. As my old voice teacher said "You do you. I'll be over there in the corner sweeping." I've always liked to let my kid direct his own eating as much as possible, schedules not withstanding, because I had always taught him to listen to his body, and take care of it based on what it told him he needed. For some people, breakfast happens when you wake up. For others, the first meal of the day is noon or later.  But I do think, regardless of what time of day you eat any meal, sometimes it needs to be really really fast, or really really easy to take with you.

I wanted to make a breakfast food that was portable, compact, nut-free, and nutrient dense. Oh -- and, of course, delicious. That, along with nutritious, is the other non-negotiable. I am forecasting broad appeal for these breakfast cookies. A combination of gluten-free oat bran and sunflower seed flour provides a wholesome base, and then plenty of tasty mix-ins to jazz it up. The mix-ins are customizable, so you can use whatever suits your fancy.

I say breakfast, but these are a great trail snack for hiking, post workout-refuel, or anytime you need to stoke your engines with nutrient dense, wholesome goodness.

They are sweetened with a little coconut nectar, which is from the flowers of the coconut palm. Coconut nectar is very low on the glycemic index, high in minerals, and has a pleasant fruity sweetness that is neither cloying nor overpowering. There is also just a bit of date sugar in them -- literally ground up dates -- which is also full of minerals, and also fibre. The balance of fats and proteins in these cookies mean that even with a little bit of sweetness, they won't spike your blood sugar, and will definitely satisfy your need for fuel, as well as your hunger for something very tasty.




equipment needed:

measuring spoons
measuring cups
mixing bowls 
mixing spoons
whisk
kettle (for heating water)
2 cookie baking sheets
2 silicone baking mats or baking parchment
oven
pan for toasting coconut and pumpkin seeds on the stove top
4 tbsp cookie dough scoop
rubber/silicone scraper
oven mitts
fork
cup of water
2 cooling racks
metal spatula

ingredients needed:

A)
1/2 cup hot water
1/2 cup coconut butter (or any nut butter if you don't need these to be nut free!! I've used almond butter for these and they were very successful)
1/2 cup coconut nectar 
1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
2 tbsp molasses
1 tsp vanilla extract

B)
1/4 cup date sugar
1 1/2 cups oat bran
1 1/2 cups raw sunflower seeds ground into flour (I ground my raw sunflower seeds in a coffee grinder until they were a fine powder) (You can substitute almond flour if you don't need these to be nut free!)
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp himalayan salt
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cream of tartar
1/2 tsp ground tonka bean (optional)

C)
mix-ins 
2/3 cup desiccated coconut, toasted in a pan on the stove top until nicely light brown
2/3 cup raw pumpkin seeds, toasted in a pan on the stove top
1/3 cup dried cranberries (I use the apple-juice sweetened ones)
1/3 cup seedless raisins
2/3 cup hemp hearts
1 cup fair-trade dark chocolate chips/chunks

... or whatever you like!


directions:

1. preheat the oven to 345
2. line your 2 baking sheets with parchment or silicone. I love silicone mats, and use them almost exclusively. They last forever.
3. In a mixing bowl, combine all the ingredients from A, and set aside
4. In another mixing bowl, combine all the ingredients from B, and mix very well
5. using a whisk, stir the contents first mixing bowl until completely mixed
6. add the ingredients from the second bowl into the first bowl, and mix very well with a spoon
7. once the 2 bowls have been successfully combined, add the mix-ins and stir well
8. scoop the cookie dough using the 4 tbsp scoop, placing 12 scoops per baking sheet, at regular intervals (usually 3x4). You should have 2 sheets of 12 each.
9. using a fork dipped in a cup of water, flatten the cookies into a pleasing thickness and nice round shape
10. bake at 345 for 24 minutes. Swap the top and bottom tray positions with each other half way through, at the 12 minute mark.
11. remove the cookie sheets from the oven, and allow the cookies to cool on the pan for a while
12. When they are cool, you can remove the cookies from the baking sheets using a metal spatula

store in an airtight container
share with friends
enjoy