More fun with Oatmeal
Feb. 12th, 2010 09:12 amI made breakfast for CG this morning.
It was an excise to use the spurtle I picked up for CG while I was buying kilt hose for Ian.
I don't think what I made this morning is the sort of thing to enter in The Golden Spurtle but it wasn't bad.
The usual recipe for, "rich man's porridge" (1 part oats/1 part water/1 part milk/1 part cream: if it's too dry, add a bit more cream/milk/water, as suits your preference, and a bit of sweetening. I used maple syrup, but honey or sugar are just fine).
While stirring that, CG sliced some apples and I put some sugar and water on to boil. When the skillet was bubbling, the apples went in. Let it reduce, add some more water (to cook the apples more) and reduce again to the fine-thread stage of caramel.
Put those in the bottom of the bowl, cover with oatmeal and serve with coffee.
It was an excise to use the spurtle I picked up for CG while I was buying kilt hose for Ian.
I don't think what I made this morning is the sort of thing to enter in The Golden Spurtle but it wasn't bad.
The usual recipe for, "rich man's porridge" (1 part oats/1 part water/1 part milk/1 part cream: if it's too dry, add a bit more cream/milk/water, as suits your preference, and a bit of sweetening. I used maple syrup, but honey or sugar are just fine).
While stirring that, CG sliced some apples and I put some sugar and water on to boil. When the skillet was bubbling, the apples went in. Let it reduce, add some more water (to cook the apples more) and reduce again to the fine-thread stage of caramel.
Put those in the bottom of the bowl, cover with oatmeal and serve with coffee.
no subject
Date: 2010-02-12 05:36 pm (UTC)Alright, quit making me drool.
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Date: 2010-02-12 05:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-12 07:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-12 08:16 pm (UTC)Okay, yes, I'd spring for a bit more if the wood were, say, a nicely-grained rock maple, hornbeam, or some other smooth-surface hardwood -- but not much more, because these tools can be made from scraps so small that they'd go into a woodshop's firewood pile.
You don't mention what kind of oats you used -- the American-style rolled oats make quite a good hot breakfast dish (especially in cold weather), but it's significantly different from steel-cut oat corn (which is best soaked overnight before cooking for a ridiculously long time) and hardly qualifies as oat porridge.
Mind you, for the past decade or so I've done nothing more ambitious along that line than to zap some Quaker Oats & low-fat milk in the microwave, stir in a little honey with an ordinary tablespoon, add some cold milk atop, and devour, and have found that more complex rituals have lost most of their Power.
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Date: 2010-02-13 12:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-13 02:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-13 06:08 am (UTC)But cut oats are what one gets for porridge in Ireland and Scotland.
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Date: 2010-02-13 06:09 am (UTC)I find that coffee makes a splendid drink to go with oatmeal. I like it better than tea for that purpose.
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Date: 2010-02-13 06:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-13 07:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-13 02:52 pm (UTC)Mind you, I'm heretical enough to consider (and plan on doing it Real Soon Now) cooking steel-cut oats in the microwave, where only a few stirrings might be needed to prevent sticking&burning (though I'm not certain about creating the right sticky texture & mouthfeel without nearly-constant stirring) -- I am, to put it bluntly, more than a little impatient (or lacking in assiduousness) early in the mornings.
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Date: 2010-02-13 03:05 pm (UTC)And yes, Terry's phrasing did make the placement of the coffee possibly ambiguous.