Shrek: "Ogres have layers, onions have layers, ogres have layers!"
Donkey: "Oh...you both have layers. Not everybody likes onions...You know what everybody likes? Parfaits. Have you ever met a person, you say, 'Hey lets get some parfaits' and they say 'Hell no, I don't like no parfaits!' Parfaits are delicious...Parfaits may be the most delicious thing on the whole damn planet."
So, I decided to make parfait for my layer challenge. I have always thought parfaits were yogurt, granola, and fruit layered, but Stef pointed out that there is a fattier version involving cream, fruit, and custard. However, I am sticking with my original understanding and here present my "Yogurt Parfait"
First, the yogurt is made. I got a yogurt maker for Christmas and try to use it often. I buy milk from a local dairy (Mauthe's) at our farmer's market, and if they're out we can get the other local dairy, Smith Creamery, at most of the grocery stores around here. So the recipe for yogurt (adapted from the EuroCuisine Yoger Maker Operating Instructions) is as follows:
42 oz. fresh, pasturized milk
6 oz. plain yogurt (starter cultures)
Here are the two kinds of milk I usually use to make yogurt: full-on-fat for Sedge and skim for me. **The type of yogurt you use as starter matters (found out the hard way). Cheap WalMart brand must not have the same levels of active cultures as slightly more expensive brands. You wind up with more liquid-like yogurt if the cultures aren't fresh/good.**
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Step 1: bring the 42 oz. of milk just to a boil (starts to climb the sides of the sauce pan).
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Step 2: Cool the boiled milk down to 'room temperature' (= 37 deg. C/ 95 deg. F). To speed this process up, you can put the sauce pan in a bowl of cool water. I usually have to replace the water 2-3 times (and I put ice cubes in the bottom too).
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Now, on to the granola! This is a recipe I have attempted at least 4 times, each time wasting lots of money because I burn the crap out of it. So, this time I changed a few things and bought a new pan. Unfortunately, they apparently do not sell "jelly roll" pans that don't have some kind of non-stick crap on them (and, irrational though it may be, I do not like to cook with non-stick), so I got a non-sided pan. It made a mess, but I think it might have also contributed to a successful granola-making experience!
This is the granola I grew up eating. Some of my earliest memories are of my mom rushing to the oven to stir the granola! Now I know why!
Ingredients:
4 c of quick oats
1/2 c sesame seeds (raw and hulled)
1/2 c wheat germ (recipe called for raw, but I had roasted and it worked out fine)
1/2 c raw sunflower seeds
1/2 c wheat bran
1/2 c chopped walnuts
3/4 c shredded coconut (I prefer unsweetened)
1 Tbs + 1 tsp honey
1/4 c veg. oil
1 c raisins
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Then, when you've stirred the granola about 4 times, and most of it is looking golden and delicious, you can add the raisins and put it back in the oven for the last 5 minutes (total of 25 minutes).
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Then, I let it cool and put it in a baggie in the fridge. It worked this time!
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Absolutely lovely... and kudos on making your own yogurt! And the granola looks tasty good, if messy... :)
ReplyDeleteI love the tiny Trifle bowls. Some of my early childhood memories revolve around my mother NOT stirring the granola...charred oats and honey mmmmm mmmmmm.
ReplyDeleteI soooo want a yogurt maker now! Beautiful and tasty!
ReplyDeleteNicely done! Emma has grown tired of yogurt, so I am definitely going to try getting her attention with a parfait.
ReplyDelete