Homemade granola, at last - with homemade applesauce
Posted by admin
on
The resultant breakfast in a bowl is very high in fibre from the whole grains and wheat germ, the sesame seeds are rich in calcium, iron, vitamin B1 and zinc. The taste is absolutely superlative with subtle sweetness from natural sugars in jaggery, honey, apple and the spicy sweetness of cinnamon. Try this once and I guarantee you will never buy the cardboard shards sold in the name of Muesli in supermarkets here.
Pressure cooker if making applesauce at home (preferable for quickly stewing apples)
Two large baking trays atleast 9X9
500 g Rolled oats ( I used Saffola brand)
2 cups unsweetened corn flakes or wheat flakes
1 cup wheat bran ( I used Baggrey's )
100 g sesame seeds (or roughly 1/3rd cup)-lightly toasted in a wok for 1 minute
1/2 cup - mixture of almonds, sunflower seeds, walnuts, cashews - chopped in bits
2 tbsp honey
2 tbsp sunflower or any neutral oil
1 cup applesauce or make your own from 2-3 apples (Recipe below)
1 tsp cinnamon powder
1 tsp dried ginger powder
1 tsp salt
- Preheat the oven at 200 C.
- In the largest bowl you have, mix the oats, wheatflakes, nuts, toasted sesame seeds.
- In a medium bowl, mix the jaggery water, honey, oil, applesauce, ground ginger and cinnamon and salt.
- Pour the wet ingredients over the dry ingredients in the large bowl and mix with two serving spoons or with your hands, until the spices and liquids have thoroughly coated all of the cereals and nuts.
- Line the baking trays with aluminium foil.
- Distribute the granola mix between the two trays, pressing down well.
- Bake each tray for around 30 minutes at 200 C - keeping a watch that the granola is not burning. If it is browning too fast, turn the tray and reduce the temperature to 175 and bake till quite crisp.
- Once cool, break into bits or crumble, mix up the dried fruit and store in airtight container.
2 handfuls of granola or 1/2 cup with a cup of milk and some fresh fruit if you like
How to make applesauce
- Wash, peel and core 2-3 good apples.
- Chop into medium pieces and pressure cook with 1/2 cup water, either directly in the cooker or in a bowl for 5-7 minutes. ie. After three whistles, keep on sim for 5-7 minutes.
- After a few minutes, open cooker, remove the stewed apples and mash with a back of a ladle or in food processor.
- This will yield over a cup of applesauce.
- If you dont have a pressure cooker, follow the process in a saucepan with a fitting lid. Simmer for 20-30 minutes till apples are totally soft and then mash.
Tagged as: Breakfast, Dried fruits, Fresh from the oven, Fruits, healthy baking, Nutrition : Fibre rich

Write admin description here..
Get Updates
Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter to receive updates.
Share This Post
Related posts
- The healthiest cookies I have ever baked
- Lentils, Pumpkin & Sweet Potato stew : One pot dinner
- Making a healthier Idli using Foxtail Millet
- The secret to making fully loaded Nachos
- Hot breakfast in 5 minutes - I'm not kidding!
- Healthy Pumpkin Quinoa Cookies
- Apple Pie Pancakes: Kid in the kitchen
- South Western Style Eggs Benedict with Creamy Avocado Hollandaise
- Quick Bite : Indian Bruschetta
- Three Birthdays, One Tart : Recipe for Baked Yogurt Berry Tart
- Fruit Cake for Christmas - Two versions (With eggs and Eggless)
- Homemade granola, at last - with homemade applesauce
- Apple Fig and Poppyseed Muffins
- Going down memory lane with icecream and recipe for Fig and Vanilla Icecream
- Healthy Baking : Savoury Rosemary Coconut Cookies
- Lemon Blueberry Muffins - with the kid in the kitchen
- Easy Eggless Choco-Vanilla Cookies
- My experiments with baking a basic whole wheat bread (Recipe inside)
- Breaking Bread with Pesto Pull Apart Loaf
- A Jammy Weekend: Recipes for Strawberry-Balsamic & Fig-Vanilla-Black Pepper Jam