Monday, December 28, 2015

Hail the Bran!

Through Amazon's Subscribe and Save, along with intermittent filler from Vitacost, 40 oz. bags of oat bran are regularly deposited on the doorstep. Emblazoned across the box: "Life insurance you can eat."
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5136mTdaL5L._AC_UL320_SR218,320_.jpg
I like to cook mine with extra water for longer, thickening the liquid. The serving of 1/4 cup morphs into a brimming bowl of heartiness, made heavenly by a spoonful of raw honey. 
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Via livestrong
For those with celiac disease, it is particularly miraculous. Many gluten-free options out there are nothing more than simple sugars; oats are the one halachic grain without gluten, yet it is, nutritionally, a star. 

But it has a multitude of uses beyond an anytime meal. Along with my trusty spice grinder, I can make it finer if I so desire and slip it into meals in countless ways. 

I've used it in kugels instead of flour. I've used it as a binder wherever stale bread is called for, like in meatballs and fish patties. I've ground it and used it for roux in soup; I've also shaken it in during the cooking process to thicken. I've used it instead of flour in the beloved cheese latkes, and they were all gobbled up by the "picky" ones. The original recipe for túrógombóc called for Hungarian "grits"; I used oat bran instead. 

Pretty much anywhere matzoh meal is called for as a binder, oat bran can replace it. 

Although, it can't be used everywhere; gluten is the protein that makes flour rise. But if not relying on any sort of height, send in the bran.     

4 comments:

  1. I don't eat oat bran, but porridge made from rolled oats and flavoured with sultanas (not sugar!) is very nice on a cold winter day.

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  3. The title had me thinking you were talking about bran flakes. Trader Joes makes the killer bran flake cereal. Even my 7 year old brother likes it!

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  4. DS: Fab on a cold winter day.

    Prof: Trader Joe's is da bomb.

    ReplyDelete