Tag Archives: seeds

  1. How-To Make Grain-free Granola {Paleo-friendly}

    How-to Make Grain-free Granola

    How-to Make Grain-free Granola

    For my granola loving friends, I am super excited about this how-to and recipe. Most commercial granolas, even when gluten-free, are loaded with gut-upsetting grains, and worse yet – vegetable oils and loads of sugar. After lots of experimenting and playing around, I created the perfect base recipe for this paleo grain-free granola, with two variations. Sweet and Savory.

    Using the formula for the base on this paleo recipe, you can get creative there with your favorite nuts and seeds and then when it comes to flavor combinations, the sky is the limit – so get creative and make it your own.

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  2. How-to Make Homemade Energy Bars

    Tutorial Tuesdays // Tasty YummiesHow-to Make Homemade Energy Bars

    I’m leaving town tomorrow. No, not for good, just for a few days. I am hitting the road to head up to Lake Tahoe for the Wanderlust Festival in Squaw Valley. With an 8+ hour drive ahead of me, I have to plan ahead with snacks and food for both the drive and when I get there. It’s super important for me to know that I have what I need to be nourished and energized, especially when I am away from home and my routines, but also with how active I will be over the 4 days of the festival. Lots of yoga, hiking, maybe some stand-up paddle boarding and definitely some dancing!

    How-to Make Homemade Energy Bars

    One of my favorite things to make are homemade energy bars. They are so simple to make, a great way to energize with healthy fats, proteins and fiber and they are always soo yummy! I have gone from baking my own with oats and nuts, to keeping it super simple with these no-bake, grain-free, date-sweetened bars, reminiscent of the LÄRABAR®.

    The great thing about making these yourself is not only having full control of the quality of the ingredients, but also having fun with various flavor combos. You can get creative with by pairing your favorite flavors or you can simply go nuts with whatever you happen to have on hand in the pantry, that you need to use up. The latter tends to be the case for me.

    Coconut Mango Lime Energy Bars

    For the sake of this tutorial I whipped up two of my favorite flavor combos: Coconut Mango Lime and Berry Cobbler. The Coconut Mango Lime Energy Bars on top of being grain-free and vegan they are also totally nut and seed-free, so they are perfect for those with allergies or intolerances or even someone following the autoimmune protocol. The Berry Cobbler bars, I made bite-sized and those do contain nuts.

    Coconut Mango Lime Energy Bars

    All you have to do is follow my simple base recipe and then you can get creative from there. Trust me when I tell you, these are really hard to screw up. Once you’ve made your base mixture and get creative with your flavors, you can decide if you want to opt for full-sized bars, smaller bites or little balls. If you really wanna get crazy, dip them in some melted chocolate.

    How-to Make Homemade Energy Bars

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  3. How-to Sprout: Seeds, Beans + Grains

    Tutorial Tuesdays // Tasty Yummies

    How-to Sprout: Seeds, Beans and Grains

    Much like making homemade almond milk, which I have done for years now, preparing sprouts at home, has now become a weekly thing for me. I absolutely adore sprouted foods and all of their many benefits. But, I have to be honest when I tell you the sprouts they sell at the store creep me out, a bit. Knowing just how short their shelf life is, it makes it hard for me to believe they are fresh and that their exposure to harmful bacteria has been limited. I would much prefer to make my own at home, where I know how fresh they are and exactly how they were handled. I started doing this late last year and I have become obsessed.

    Sprouting is a way of creating “living plants”, loaded with nutrients and vitamins such as Vitamin C, B E and carotene. Some believe sprouted foods contain up to 15 times as many nutrients as their unsprouted counterparts. Sprouting also helps the absorption of minerals due to their ability to be better digested. Some people refer to sprouted foods as “pre-digested”, for this reason.

    Sprouting takes time, but it’s much more of a waiting game, it doesn’t require a ton of work. Sprouted foods simply requires you to have patience and to be paying attention, tracking their sprouting time and making sure to tend to them, when needed. That’s about it.

     

    Why Sprout?

    As we discussed in both the nut butter and nut milk posts – many nuts, seeds, legumes and grains contain natural chemicals that protect them while growing, both from sprouting prematurely and also from predators. These protectors also act as enzyme inhibitors to us, meaning we get much less of the crucial nutrients from these foods than we should be. Plus, this “armor”, of sorts, makes digesting them much more difficult. Soaking these foods releases these chemicals, helping you to absorb your food’s essential minerals and nutrients. Additionally, by soaking the nuts with the removal of these nutritional inhibitors and toxic substances, the flavor and taste is much more ideal and appealing.(read more in depth about these chemicals and why we soak, here)

    So, we are back to the soaking idea again.  Soaking is not only necessary for sprouting to occur, but we are also unlocking the full nutritional potential of these foods, as we did with the nut butters and nut milks. After soaking, when that natural protective armor has been removed, the sprouting process can then occur. So basically, if soaking is the first step of increasing the nutritional benefits of these foods, then sprouting is the incredible finishing move to creating the perfect nutritional superfood out of something that would otherwise leave us feeling bloated and tired, due to the strain they would typically put on our digestion.

    Sprouted foods, also known as “activated foods” are incredibly nutrient dense foods, they encourage production of healthy bacteria that aids in our digestion and in turn, boosts our immunity. Sprouts are great on salads, on top of soups or stews, in stir fries, inside of wraps or sandwiches, in smoothies – really they are great in any dish that you want to add a nutritional boost to.

    How-to Sprout: Seeds, Beans and Grains

    What Can you Sprout?

    Most seeds, legumes, grains and some nuts will sprout, but be aware some will not. Because many nuts you find in the stores have been pasteurized or treated with heat in some way, they aren’t technically raw and although soaking can activate and allow us access to their nutrients, sprouting likely won’t happen. Oftentimes, when I am simply looking for traditional sprouts, I will buy premixed ready to sprout blends of organic seeds and legumes exclusively meant for sprouting.  It gives me a nice wide variety and I know that, since everything in the blend is meant for sprouting, it will do just that. See the bottom of this post for pre-made sprouting blends that I recommend. For the step-by-step photos, I used this organic blend, Spicy Salad Mix, which contains lentils, alfalfa, red clover, radish and black mustard seeds.

    Once sprouted, you can also cook grains and legumes, as you normally would. Sprouted quinoa cooked in place of regular quinoa, is one of my favorite things as are sprouted lentils. Once sprouted, grains and legumes not only cook quicker than their dried counterparts, but they are, as you now know, much easier to digest and taste much better, as well.

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  4. Gluten Free Breakfast Bars

    Gluten-free Breakfast Bars

    I am always looking for different easy breakfast options. Since I don’t eat processed and packaged foods, breakfast can be tough sometimes if I don’t feel like eggs, a smoothie or fresh fruit and yogurt. If I don’t plan ahead and have some homemade baked goods or some fresh bread to toast up, my options can be a bit limited since I don’t eat most cereals and I never eat packaged cereal bars or things of that nature. I came across a great post on The Kitchn in January that featured “10 Vegan Breakfast Ideas“, though some of the recipes contain things I can’t eat, the first post was about breakfast bars and it had a link to two different recipes. The one that caught my eye was for Gluten Free Breakfast Bars, another great recipe from Elana’s Pantry. They looked incredible and surprisingly I had every last ingredient on hand in my pantry and I always do. This made me so excited since besides muffins, if these turned out as good as I had imagined they would, I knew this gave me another great breakfast option and additionally another great travel breakfast item.

    Sure enough, these were just as incredible as I had imagined. I changed up the recipe slightly by substituting dried cranberries for the raisins and adding ground cinnamon and fresh ground nutmeg. I couldn’t resist adding the spices and they were just perfect in there. The crunch from the nuts and seeds was so perfect. The original recipe mentions just using the seeds and nuts raw, untoasted since that made it even easier, so that is what I did. They still had a perfect nutty crunch.

    It should be noted that after I let the pan cool for a while and went to cut in, the pieces came out very easily but were a tad bit crumbly. I decided to put plastic wrap over the pan and refrigerate the rest. When I cut the remaining bars the following day, they stayed together much better and were far less crumbly. After spending a little time on Elana’s blog I am learning there are lots of different almond flours available and a lot of people prefer buying online to get the right one, so I am curious if a different almond flour changes the way the bar is held together. I will have to experiment with that. Another note on this recipe is that wherever I can in recipes I buy organic ingredients. Many of the items in these bars are organic, I just thought it may be a bit redundant to continuously post that.

    Gluten Free Breakfast Bars
    adapted from Elana’s Pantry
    Makes 12-16 bars

    1 1/4 cup blanched almond flour
    1/4 teaspoon celtic sea salt
    1/4 teaspoon baking soda
    1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
    1/2 teaspoon fresh ground nutmeg
    1/4 cup grapeseed oil
    1/4 cup agave nectar
    1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    1/2 cup shredded coconut
    1/2 cup pumpkin seeds
    ½ cup sunflower seeds
    ¼ cup almond slivers
    ¼ cup dried cranberries, unsweetened

    Preheat  oven to 350º.

    In a small bowl, combine almond flour, salt, baking soda, cinnamon and nutmeg. In a large bowl, combine grapeseed oil, agave and vanilla.
    Stir dry ingredients into wet. Mix in coconut, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, almond slivers and cranberries.
    Grease an 8×8 baking dish with grapeseed oil. Press the dough into the baking dish, wetting your hands with water to help pat the dough down evenly.
    Bake for 20 minutes.

    Allow to cool completely before cutting. I found they were a bit crumbly even after cooling, so I allowed it to cool overnight in the fridge and then cut the pieces, it held together much better.

    * None of the nuts and seeds in this recipe are toasted.  This keeps it easy and fast, you could certainly toast them if you wish, it’s just an extra step before you start.

     

    Gluten-free Breakfast Bars

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