River's Breakfast Cookies
- Ready In:
- 35mins
- Ingredients:
- 18
- Yields:
-
25-30 cookies
ingredients
- 1 1⁄4 cups spelt
- 1 1⁄4 cups old-fashioned oatmeal
- 1 1⁄4 cups triticale
- 1 1⁄4 cups rolled barley
- 1 cup whole wheat flour
- 1 cup oat flour
- 1 cup toasted almond, chopped
- 1 -2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1⁄2 teaspoon salt
- 1⁄4 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1 cup dried fruit
- 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
- 1 cup light brown sugar
- 1 cup honey
- 2 eggs
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
directions
- Toast and chop almonds: Preheat oven to 375°F Line a 18x12 rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil, and put the almonds on it in a single layer. Toast for 10 minutes. Take them out, and shake or stir them up a bit, then put them back in for 4 minutes more.
- Chop them coarsely in a blender or food processor, or smash them into coarse bits with a mortar and pestle.
- Mix dry ingredients: The first four ingredients are rolled whole grains, not flours. The oat flour I used is whole oat flour. Put grains, flours, baking powder, salt, spices except vanilla extract, and chopped nuts into a large bowl and stir well until thoroughly combined.
- Mix wet ingredients: Cream butter. Add and mix brown sugar and honey. Add and mix vanilla extract. Add and beat in one egg at a time. This is all best done with a mixer, but can be done by hand.
- Add dry ingredients and mix thoroughly.
- Drop onto parchment-lined baking sheet in generous 2 tablespoons balls, 2 inches apart. Bake at 375 for 15-20 minutes, watching them carefully at the end; you want them a bit undercooked so they stay soft.
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
I live on a pocket farm in the woods on the Kitsap Peninsula, where we have five acres in trees and pasture, an old orchard in need of much restoration work, a HUGE Concord grape vine, and vast swathes of Himalayan and Evergreen blackberry bushes. We also have salal berry, red huckleberry, evergreen huckleberry, salmonberry, not nearly enough Cascade trailing blackberry, and the bare beginnings of a few blackcap raspberry stands.
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<br>My cooking style tends towards a blend of California and Northwest, which should be no surprise, since I grew up in the Bay Area and bought a pocket farm west of Seattle.