Cool Breakfast in a Jar

Several years ago, when I was visiting an out-of-town friend, she served oatmeal in a very interesting way. She told me we were eating breakfast Portland-style. That’s where she had chilled oatmeal for the first time.

She called it Swiss Muesli, which I think of as a wholesome and hearty granola-type cereal. This was different. The night before serving she had mixed uncooked old fashioned oats with skim milk, brown sugar, dried fruit (she used dried blueberries and cranberries), low-fat vanilla yogurt, salt and chopped pecans. She covered the mixture and chilled it overnight. At serving time, she scooped the mixture into cereal bowls. No cooking and no heating involved. It was very good, and what a convenient way to serve a nutritious breakfast to overnight guests.

I’ve taken my friend’s breakfast idea a step or two further by making it with dairy-free milk and yogurt and portioning the mixture into wide-mouth jars for individual servings. This makes it an easy grab-and-go breakfast and a very convenient way to serve a house full of summer weekend guests or a husband who heads to the golf course very very early on weekend mornings.

This time of year, fresh berries are a must in this thick breakfast soup. I packed chopped fresh strawberries on top of the oatmeal mixture. You can stuff chunks of toasted pecans just under the lid of each jar. If my cool breakfast in jars will be eaten at home, I leave the crunchy nuts out of the jars and offer them in a bowl at serving time for each person to add as they wish.

A pint-size wide-mouth jar is just the right capacity to hold a serving of chilled oatmeal along with plenty of berries and nuts, but any wide-mouth jar will do the trick.

Children will enjoy eating their breakfast from a jar. In fact, everyone will find it fun to eat breakfast from a jar.

I served chilled oatmeal last week with Strawberry-Rhubarb Scones that I posted not long ago. It was a great taste and texture combination.

If you like the idea of the ease and convenience of preparing and serving meals in a jar, check out the Cool Veggie Bliss In A Jar that I have in my column this week. It’s a great lunch.

Now all you need to do is make room for all of these jars in your refrigerator.

Chilled Oatmeal In A Jar

  • 2 1/4 cups uncooked old-fashioned rolled oats
  • 2 1/4 cups plain almond milk or flax milk
  • 1 1/2 cups Greek-style dairy-free vanilla-flavored yogurt
  • 3 tablespoons brown sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • Fresh berries (strawberries (chopped), raspberries, blueberries)
  • Toasted pecans, broken

In a large mixing bowl, blend oats with milk, yogurt, brown sugar and salt. Spoon the mixture into wide-mouth jars. Scoop berries on top of the oat mixture. Top with nuts. Seal jars and refrigerate overnight. Makes about 6 servings.

Tips from the cook

  • Skim milk and low-fat vanilla yogurt can be used for the dairy-rich version of this recipe.
  • The original recipe I got from my friend calls for 3 tablespoons dried fruit and 3 tablespoon chopped nuts to be stirred into the mixture in a large bowl before overnight refrigeration.
  • I used Greek-style SO Delicious dairy-free cultured coconut milk vanilla yogurt.

Layers of Chocolate, Strawberries and Cream

When I pulled out the pocket folder filled with recipes I’ve gathered from cooking classes I’ve attended over the years, I was surprised to see that some of the recipes dated back to 1984. That was the year I started taking classes from Andrea Halgrimson in her cozy little kitchen in Fargo. I had two young sons at the time. Gathering with a small group of food-loving people in Andrea’s kitchen was always a special night out for me.

I flipped through my stash of recipes to find Chocolate Strawberry Shortcake. On a May evening in 1984, Halgrimson mixed up a biscuit-like chocolate dough that she rolled out and pressed into large round cake pans. The two chocolate shortcake layers were packed with a filling of whipped cream and fresh strawberries.

That was the night I got over my fear of unflavored gelatin. Halgrimson showed how easy it is to dissolve a little gelatin in water in a glass measuring cup. She placed the measuring cup in a small amount of water in a saucepan over low heat. As the water in the saucepan warmed up, the granulated gelatin dissolved in the water in the cup. Easy.

The warm gelatin and water mixture got whipped into thick cream that created the filling for the chocolate shortcake. The gelatin stabilizes the whipped cream, making it stay fluffy and beautiful as the shortcake sits in the refrigerator. The stabilized whipped cream will also have a much longer life at room temperature.

This time I used stabilized whipped cream to make my own Chocolate Strawberry Shortcake.

I baked the light and moist chocolate cake that I use for creating Strawberries and Cream Chocolate Roll. When it was cool, I pulled out the round cutters that I found at an antique shop in Pequot Lakes last month. One can never have too many round and square cutters:)

The tin has seen better days, but the cutters are in perfect condition. I love them.

I stacked the thin chocolate cake rounds with lots of sweetened stabilized whipped cream and fresh strawberries. Magnificent individual desserts!

This dessert is heavenly and needs nothing but a dainty edible flower on top. If you’re looking for over-the-top decadence, drizzle each dessert with your favorite hot fudge sauce.

Just another way to enjoy the fresh-picked berries of the season.

Chocolate Strawberry Shortcake

  • 4 eggs
  • ¾ cup granulated sugar plus extra for sprinkling
  • ¼ cup all-purpose flour
  • ¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • ¼ teaspoon baking powder
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 cups coarsely chopped fresh strawberries
  • Sugar for sprinkling
  • 1 teaspoon unflavored gelatin
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons cold water
  • 2 cups (1 pint) whipping cream
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup powdered sugar

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 15- x 10- x 1-inch jellyroll pan. Line the greased pan with waxed paper. Grease and flour the waxed paper. Set aside.

In a large mixing bowl, beat eggs at high speed of an electric mixer until foamy. Gradually add ¾ cup sugar, continuing to beat for 5 minutes until mixture is thick and fluffy.  Sift flour, cocoa powder, baking powder and salt together. Add sifted ingredients to bowl and blend on low speed. Add 1/2 teaspoon vanilla and mix to blend.

Pour batter into prepared pan, spreading evenly. Bake for about 11 minutes in preheated 350-degree oven. Cake should spring back when pressed lightly with a finger.

While cake bakes, place chopped strawberries in a shallow dish. Sprinkle with sugar to taste. Refrigerate until needed.

Sprinkle large, clean linen or cotton kitchen towel with granulated sugar in a 15- x 10-inch rectangle.

Remove cake from oven and immediately loosen from sides of pan and turn out onto sugared towel. Carefully peel away the waxed paper. Allow cake to cool.

When cake is cool, prepare the cream filling. Place gelatin and cold water in a glass measuring cup or custard cup. Place cup in a saucepan containing an inch of water. Heat gently until the gelatin melts.

Place whipping cream and 1 teaspoon vanilla extract in a large bowl and beat until the cream has thickened slightly. Stir 2 tablespoons of the cream into the warm gelatin and quickly add mixture back into the large bowl of cream. Immediately resume beating. Sprinkle powdered sugar over the cream and continue beating until cream is thick.

Use a 2 3/4-inch or 3-inch round cookie cutter to make 12 rounds of cake. Place 4 cake rounds of serving platter, sugared side down. Top with whipped cream filling and prepared strawberries. Place another round of cake on top of each, sugar side up. Top with more cream and strawberries. Place a third round of cake on each serving. Garnish with an edible flower, if desired. Makes 4 dessert servings.

Tips from the cook

  • Try using vanilla sugar for sweetening the strawberries.
  • It’s important that the dissolved gelatin mixture is still warm when added to the whipping cream. It thickens as it cools. Thick gelatin will create little gelatin balls in the whipped cream, resembling tapioca. You don’t want that.

Baby Artichokes — Pure and Simple

When I visited Green Scene Organic Market in Walker a couple of weeks ago, I was given a lesson on artichokes  that covered both the large globe artichokes and the smaller variety referred to as baby artichokes.

Years ago, my friend Cathy taught me how to eat an artichoke. Unfortunately, they were cooked and ready to eat by the time I got to her house, so I never had the opportunity to learn how to prepare an artichoke. Like so many home cooks, I remained intimidated by the thorny vegetable that is actually an unopened flower bud of a plant related to the sunflower in the thistle family.

Erin Andrus Haefle, owner of Green Scene, showed me how easy it is to prepare a globe artichoke by snapping off some of the tough outer petals, trimming off the top with a knife and steaming it in a pot of water until it becomes tender. After preparing some artichokes at home and leisurely eating them with friends, I wondered why I didn’t give them a try much sooner — so many good conversations and buttery morsels of artichoke I’ve missed.

You can watch Erin on video as she demonstrates how to prepare an artichoke when you read my column on line this week. Click here to watch the video.

Part two of my artichoke cooking primer came from the chef at Green Scene, Kristin Melby. She turned a pound of baby artichokes into completely edible melt-in-the-mouth, two-bite nuggets.

You can learn how to prepare baby artichokes, too, by watching Kristin in the video below.

Baby Artichokes are delicious when sauteed in olive oil, showered with a bit of fresh citrus juice and sprinkled with sea salt. I think they would be lovely tossed with some pasta. When I prepared baby artichokes at home following Kristin’s instructions, we ate them as a snack while they were still warm.

I’ve discovered eating artichokes is a special event — a ritual of sorts. The artichoke experience forces me to slow down, enjoy the adventure and focus on the people who are joining me around the table.

I’ve got a lot of catching up to do.

It’s all about food — real food.

Baby Artichokes Pure and Simple

Recipe from Green Scene Organic Market, Walker, Minnesota

  • 1 pound baby artichokes, cleaned and halved or quartered
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • half medium yellow onion, chopped
  • 1-2 cloves garlic, minced
  • pinch of Herbs de Provence
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice or balsamic vinegar
  • pinch salt
  • pepper to taste
  • freshly grated Parmesan Regiano

Prepare artichokes and keep in bowl of acidified water  (1tablespoon lemon juice to 1 cup cold water) or equivalent amount of vinegar to water.

Pour 1/2 cup tap water into saucepan. Add artichokes and cover tightly. Steam over medium heat for 4-5 minutes.

Remove from heat and drain artichokes in strainer .Using the same sauce pan, return to heat and add the olive oil. Heat until a light smoke appears. Add onions and garlic and Herbs de Provence to pan and saute until tender, about 2 minutes. Add artichokes and continue cooking over low heat 5 minutes or more, depending on desired texture and artichoke size. Add lemon juice and season to taste.

Transfer to serving bowl. Add freshly grated Parmesan and serve.