For Christmas my parents gave everyone in the family a bag or tub (depending on family size) of homemade granola. They used the same recipe my Mom worked with when I was growing up. I remember eating Mom’s granola from cereal-boxed shaped Tupperware containers alternately atop a bowlful of yogurt or served with milk. Having received my granola in a bag, I decided I needed such a container for ours too. I didn’t go as far as to have a Tupperware party, but one of the first things I did after returning home from Christmas was to purchase a Sistema cereal box from the Container Store to house my granola. Since then I’ve been enjoying breakfasts of granola with homemade yogurt (thanks to Tom). Yesterday I noticed we were almost out of granola, so I called home for the recipe and decided to dive in and learn to make it myself.

With only a minor variation or two, the recipe comes from The More with Less Cookbook by Doris Janzen Longacre (1976). The book is (still!) available and is described (on Amazon.com) as a gathering of:
500 recipes from Mennonite kitchens that tell us how to eat better and consume less of the world’s limited food resources. All recipes have been tested by professional home economists. This cookbook is written for those who care about their own health and the food needs of others in the world.
The recipe makes about 2—3 quarts of granola. The recipe is very basic (measure, mix, bake), but I’m going to have to train my nose to sense the granola’s doneness. The batch I put together today has the right taste and texture, but there’s a little burn in there too. The hardest part for some, depending on your access to high-quality bulk foods, may be sourcing the ingredients. Unsweetened coconut, if not available at your standard supermarket, can be found in health food stores. Wheat germ will be in the refrigerated section if it’s available in your grocery’s bulk foods and can otherwise be found sold by Bob’s Red Mill or jarred in the cereal or baking section. (The Wedge was out of bulk wheat germ, so I went with a bag from Bob’s Red Mill which I am now storing in a Ball jar in the fridge. I plan to start secretly adding it to everything.) Be sure to look for raw nuts and seeds in all cases.
Set the oven to 325º

Mix in Large bowl:
- 1/2 to 1 cup shredded, unsweetened coconut
- 4 cups old fashioned oatmeal (ideally not quickoats)
- 1 cup hulled, raw sunflower seeds
- 1 cup wheat germ
- 1/4 to 1/2 cup sesame seeds
- 1 cup slivered almonds
- 1 Tablespoon cinnamon
Bring to a boil:
- 1 cup honey
- 1/2 cup canola oil
Pour honey mixture over dry ingredients and mix thoroughly.
Grease two cookie sheets and, dividing the mixture in half, spread the granola evenly across the sheets. Jelly roll pans will work best as you’ll avoid spilling any of the grains when stirring the mixture in the oven.
Bake for a total of 30 minutes, stirring every 10 minutes and watching carefully in the last 10 minutes to avoid any burning (as I said I may have caused a bit of burning today, but no matter!).
6 comments
| Cereal, Cinnamon, Coconut, Grains, Granola, Homemade, Honey, Nuts, Oats, Slivered Almonds, Sunflower Seeds, Wheat Germ
By Martha // Posted December 25, 2009 in: Bread, Travel

Every Christmas my father prepares buñuelos for the family on the mornings of the 24, 25, and 26 so that all can have their share–no matter their arrival time. A round Colombian cheese bread, buñuelos are made from corn starch, shredded queso campesino, milk, and a little salt and sugar (we first mentioned them here). They are made from a very wet dough, as you’ll see below, and fried to perfection. The dough-balls turn naturally in the hot (but not too hot) oil, and can be helped along with the tap of a chopstick or the end of a wooden spoon. They’ll be firm to the touch when ready to be removed from the oil, and are best eaten warm. As kids we’d sometimes have them with peanut butter and milk. As a lover of sausage biscuits, this year another idea occurred to me…

Enjoyed for the first time today, “Buñuelo Sliders” proved to be a very repetible experiment.
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- Shredded cheese
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- Early stages of the dough
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- Mixing
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- Masa, ready to be made into balls
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- dough balls, ready to be fried
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- Frying
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- Buñuelos, fresh from the hot oil.
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- Sausage & Buñuelo Sandwich
Update: For the recipe, see comments below.
8 comments
| Bread, Buñuelos, Burgers, Cheese, Cheese Bread, Christmas, Colombia, Colombian Food, Holidays, Tradition, Traditional
By Martha // Posted December 18, 2009 in: Art + Craft

My cousin Toño is an amazing paper folding artist. Here’s just one example of his work. To see more, check out his origami photo set.
Image: The Squirrel Family, Toño Garcés.
2 comments
Seven local designers, two great calendars. See below for details on how to get yours.

happify
For the fourth year running, happify brings a 2010 calendar in the form of 12 postcards, offset printed in a rich chocolate brown on an extra-thick (110#) recycled cream 5″x7″ cardstock. On the reverse side there’s space for writing a note and sending them off as postcards to friends and family. These may be oversized according to USPS standards, but they’re well worth the 44¢ stamp. Calendars are shipping now at happify.etsy.com.
$12, plus shipping ($2 in the U.S., $3 to Canada, and $5 to anywhere else). Free shipping when ordering 2 or more calendars.
Through December 31, 2009, Martha and Tom readers will receive complimentary shipping on all happify orders (by including M-AND-T in the space labeled Message to the seller, optional) and get $2 off additional calendars when ordering more than one calendar. Please note that the discount may not be reflected immediately. Happify will refund any shipping charges through paypal.

redblackbrown
Redblackbrown‘s second annual calendar is the work of six Minneapolis designers. Each month is based on a different fortune cookie fortune from local Asian restaurants. The redblackbrown calendar is screenprinted on cover weight kraft paper in white and brown cut to 4.65″x5.4″ sheets. See all twelve months here.
$20, plus shipping ($4 in the U.S.).
Order soon: redblackbrown printed this year’s calendar in a limited run of 100. Find your calendar at redblackbrown’s Big Cartel shop.
Note that Minneapolis locals can place orders for pickup by emailing hello (at) redblackbrown (dot) com.
Images :: happify and redblackbrown
3 comments
| 2010 Calendar, Calendar, Calendar Roundup, Happify, Local, Minneapolis, RedBlackBrown
By Tom // Posted December 11, 2009 in: Technique
With the feast of our Lady of Guadalupe right around the corner – tomorrow, in fact – I took the opportunity to become acquainted with one of the most important traditions surrounding this sacred festival: tamales. While I’m an avid tamale consumer, I’ve never actually made them. So when I heard the kitchen at Church of the Ascension would be open last Saturday for anyone wanting to learn the art of corn-filled corn husks, I jumped at the chance.
The bill of fare for the evening included three kinds of tamales: chicken, pork and sweet. The chicken tamales were based on pulled chicken in salsa verde – tomatillos, cilantro, onion, etc. Some of the salsa verde also went into the masa, which otherwise consisted of maseca, lard, chicken broth and seasonings. The ingredients for the pork tamales were similar, except in place of salsa verde there was a salsa roja made from a whole lot of red peppers with garlic and herbs, and in place of the pulled chicken, pulled pork. The sweet tamales had the simplest masa of all, flavored only with a bit of sugar and filled with a prune.
The process for making all of the tamales was essentially the same: place a healthy handful of masa near the top and in the center of a presoaked corn husk, being sure to place the masa on the slightly smoother side (a subtle distinction to this güero’s hands). Stick the appropriate filling in the middle of the masa, then roll the edge of the corn husk over the filling, rotating slighly to form a rough cylinder. Fold up the bottom half of the corn husk and set aside.
Sweet tamales were a little different: before adding the masa, a thin layer of red food coloring is painted on the husk. As the tamales sit and later cook, this coloring soaks through the dough and imbues it with a bright pink hue. In addition to coloring the masa, the food coloring dyed my hands a bright-red. My mentors laughingly told me it would come off with a little bleach.
Watching experienced hands making tamales, I was struck by the differing techniques. Some were very meticulous, carefully spreading masa across the interior of the corn husk, laying the filling in a tight row in the center, then rolling everything so that the meat would be perfectly centered in a row of corn masa. Others took a more industrial approach, quickly plopping down a pile of masa before shoving some filling in the center, rolling, folding and starting another. A few rolled their tamales cigar-style,but others simply folded, ending each one with a firm pat. Regional and family variations abound.
I didn’t stay long enough to see the tamales get cooked, but I heard vastly differing claims as to how long they would need to steam, everywhere from a half an hour to four hours. The deciding factor seemed to be how many tamales one was steaming at once.
Where to get these delicious tamales? The ones I helped make were served at the Basilica of Saint Mary last weekend as part of a cooperative effort between the two parishes. But the official feast day of Our Lady of Guadalupe is December 12th, and if you want to be at Ascension (1723 Bryant Ave N) at 5:30 AM for Las Mañanitas and 7 AM for mass, your reward will be delicious tamales and hot coffee. And if you’re not a morning person, there will be a fiesta starting around 4 PM. But with the skills I picked up in Ascension’s basement last weekend, I might just make some all for myself.
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- Soaked corn husks.
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- The masa for the pork tamales: lard, cumin, maseca.
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- Mixing the masa for the pork tamales. That is lard. Lots and lots of lard. And salsa roja.
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- Mixing together enough masa to make hundreds of pork tamales.
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- Sweet masa.
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- The brush for applying food coloring to the corn husks was made artfully from a corn husk.
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- Food coloring applied to a corn husk, ready for masa and a prune.
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- Loading sweet tamales into the steamer. They are pink from red food coloring.
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- Loading a steamer with chicken tamales.
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- A steamer full of tamales. Gerardo, who was patiently holding this as I took photos, estimated the weight at 40 kilos. He may have been exaggerating.
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- Tamales ready for cooking. A steamer insert and water were at the bottom of the pot. These tamales were then covered with plastic, a towel and the lid to prevent any steam from escaping. This pot, which held fewer tamales than the big steamers, would only take 30 minutes to cook.
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- The finished pork tamales. The masa has turned red from being mixed with salsa roja.
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| Catholic, Chicken, Church, Guadalupe, Mexican, Mexico, Pork, Prunes, Salsa Roja, Salsa Vede, Tamales