Call it the summer blahs, call it the back-to-school blues—whatever
the cause, I have not been in my regular writing routine the past two weeks. It’s
mildly distressing. Here I am, wasting away my youth by, like, relaxing and shit and not working hard
on my bestselling novels and eloquent, wildly popular blog posts! A tragedy!
I’ve been tempted to just straight-up put out a couple of
photos and a recipe with no introduction. Or maybe some pithy statement like “This
recipe needs no introduction,” followed by—wait for it—no introduction. It would
be super hilarious right? You’re laughing already, aren’t you?
June...no... source |
But anyway. I wouldn’t do that to you.
As a matter of fact, I am going to take the opportunity to
blame all of this writer’s block (more accurately, writer’s lack-of-motivation)
on the back-to-school blues. And I hate
saying that, because it makes me feel like I’m eight years old and nervous
about heading into third grade, where I hear
you have to learn how to write in cursive and you get ten hours of homework
every night! No, it’s just...
I've never seen a more accurate, relatable gif. source |
It’s just, as you end your high school career, classes get
harder, you know? And it takes, like, time
and effort and work? And you can’t spend your days making layer cakes and listening to music and
writing silly little stories and reading Cracked articles,
because you have this little thing called homework and not to mention
after-school sports and clubs and—
Excuse me, I’m getting a little emotional.
I hate to complain, but—fuck it I’m gonna complain. I may or
may not have a little anxiety over the fact that I’m taking my first AP course
this year. It’s biology. Biology is my jam, yeah. Whenever biology comes on the
radio, I’m like, turn that shit up, woot
woot! But AP bio is notorious for being...thorough. Which will be interesting. And hopefully I won’t regret
my decision to take on the challenge by, say, Christmastime. That’ll be a good
barometer.
I may also be a little bitter over the fact that my parents
didn’t give me the okay to drop out and become a hobo. Apparently
the astute reasoning of Pink Floyd—We don’t
need no education / We don’t need no thought control—didn’t ring true
enough for them.
Ah, shut up with your filthy prescriptivist blather! source |
And this goes out to all the high school / university / generic
school-going peeps out there. Wishing you all the best of luck too.
Apparently so. source |
And for peeps who have jobs / lives to attend to that don’t
involve being formally educated. I don’t want to discriminate.
In the meantime, let’s take a peek at today’s recipe.
Hmm. Very interesting. |
This is another super easy breakfast recipe perfect for not
only lazy weekends but busy weekdays as well (school days, anyone?). The recipe
serves about four, depending on how hungry you are, but it can easily be
doubled to produce leftovers for subsequent days. Just stick a bowl of the
stuff in the microwave, drizzle with milk, and boom—breakfast.
And unlike typical microwave-and-serve oatmeal, this baked
oatmeal is very rich and delicious, with the chewy texture of an oatmeal cookie
and all the sweetness of one of those instant packets we all used to eat when
we were kids. Not joking. In Seriously
Delish, where I got the recipe, the author talks about basing her baked
oatmeal on the flavor of those little flavored packets with all the sugar and
preservatives. Further proof that with food, nostalgia is everything and what we ate as children is of utmost importance.
I mean, it’s not like my brother still eats those things,
anyway. Come on. He’s waaaay too old
for that.
I will, however, admit that I used to love chomping down
that instant oatmeal with the little dried fruit chunks and powdered sugar
granules as a kid; and yes, the flavor is spot-on with this baked oatmeal. You
could easily lessen the brown sugar in here by at least a quarter cup, if not
more, and it would still be perfectly edible. But that would defeat the
purpose, wouldn’t it?
But it’s not all sugar and empty calories. The coconut oil,
the protein-rich tofu (no you can’t taste
it okay, it’s just there as an egg substitute), and the fresh,
antioxidant-rich, not to mention delicious raspberries take this oatmeal to
another level. And of course, you could easily substitute your favorite berry
in here. I just used raspberries because, well, they’re awesome.
Can't argue with that flawless logic. |
Anyway. Here’s the recipe.
___________
Raspberry baked oatmeal
Adapted
from Seriously Delish by Jessica
Merchant
Serves
about 4
Ingredients
240 grams • rolled
oats • 3 cups
165 grams • light
brown sugar • ¾ cup
8 grams • baking
powder • 2 teaspoons
2 grams • cinnamon •
1 teaspoon
3 grams • salt •
½ teaspoon
244 grams • light
coconut milk • 1 cup
122 grams • applesauce •
½ cup
28 grams • coconut
oil, melted • 2 tablespoons
110 grams • silken
tofu • ½ cup
8 grams • vanilla
extract • 2 teaspoons
164 grams • raspberries
• 1 1/3 cups
Direction
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease a
10-inch square baking dish and set aside.
In a large bowl, whisk together oats, brown
sugar, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt.
Place milk, applesauce, coconut oil, tofu, and
vanilla in a blender. Blend until smooth. Pour into bowl with oat mixture and
stir to combine. Gently fold in raspberries.
Pour batter into baking dish and spread out
into an even layer. If desired, press a few raspberries on top for decoration.
Bake for about 25 to 30 minutes, until the oatmeal is set and lightly browned
on the top. The longer you bake the oatmeal, the drier it will get; so you may
want to adjust baking time according to your tastes. Let cool for about 2
minutes before serving with a drizzle of coconut milk.
_______
I was tempted to arrange the raspberries into a hammer and sickle, but then I remembered I'm not a communist. |
For more fabulous recipes along this line,
check out these links.
Leftover pumpkin pie baked oatmeal. You may need to
make pumpkin pie for the express purpose of making this.
Oatmeal peanut butter chocolate chip scones. Like
eating a giant oatmeal cookie for breakfast.
Vanilla mug cake with raspberry and chocolate. Who
says mug cakes aren’t a good breakfast?
Raspberry curd. Would be great on toast.
Love those gifs! The recipe looks delicious! I'll try it with some creme fraiche and macerated berries. I need to get on the blogging also. I'M WASTING TIME!!!
ReplyDeleteOooh that sounds like a great idea, the more berries the merrier! Glad you like the recipe :)
DeleteBaked oatmeal is the one kind of oatmeal I am obsessed with... can't wait to try your version!!
ReplyDeleteThanks! I hope you do try this, it's really good :)
DeleteYUm! I love baked oatmeals! Can't wait to try yours! I Raspberries sound perfect!
ReplyDeleteThanks Marcela! I agree, I really ought to make baked oatmeal like this more often :)
DeleteThis looks so delicious - love the combination of raspberry and cinnamon! I've got a verging on unhealthy obsession with oatmeal yet have never tried baking it so will inevitably be trying this out ASAP...
ReplyDeleteOh do try this, you will not regret it :) Glad you like the recipe!
Delete