Quite often in the past couple of
months I have heard the question, “Do we have any cookies in the
house?” My response has always been negative but on more than one
of these occasions I've thought to myself that I should make some
type of healthier cookie than I could by in most stores. Eventually
one afternoon about a week ago, I decided to not only think about
making a great cookie, but decided to actually make some. Even before
I started on this very short and sweet baking adventure, I already
had a name for them: Figgy Oatmeal cookies!
I've never been much of a baker, but
like most things that need some hands on experience I've taken on the
phrase for many things. If you can read, you can.... and in this
case it was bake cookies. I haven't baked a thing in over twenty-five
years, but I figure the Web is my recipe book, at least to get some
of the basic mechanics of the tasks required to not ending up with a
failed project. After a quick search for some healthy oatmeal and fig
cookies I found a recipe which I could play substitution with what I
had on hand.
Taking stock
One thing I've been trying to keep around the house as a nice quick
snacking food that hasn't gone through some strange mechanical
process before it arrives in the local store:dried figs. I knew for
fact that I had a few packages and these would give my cookies both
some natural sweetness and an interesting texture. In addition to
adding to what I would call these three bite morsels. Rolled oats was
also something that I have, and while not steel-cut they are still
miles cleaner than the plethora of breakfast cereals which the
corporate food businesses try to ply to consumers.
While I didn't have some of the ingredients that I found on one of
the simplest recipes, I knew I would be able to substitute out the
honey with some fresh homemade strawberry and rhubarb jam as my
natural sweetener – no processed sugar in that jam as I made it
myself earlier in the season. And while I didn't have the called for
almond flour I did have flax-seed and wholewheat flour.
The other simple ingredients were simply the glue to hold all the
dry stuff together and add a little flavour. They included baking
powder, eggs, vanilla extract and cinnamon.
Ingredients – about 129
calories per serving of two cookies (makes between 20 and 24 cookies)
- Oatmeal, 1 3/4 cups
- Whole wheat flour, 3/4 cup
- Figs, dried, finely chopped, 1/2 cup
- Brown flax-seed, ground 3 table spoons gr
- Cinnamon, ground 1 tbsp
- Baking powder, 14/ tsp
- eggs, two
- Olive oil, 2 tbsp
- Strawberry-rhubarb jam, 1 tbsp
- Vanilla extract, no-alcohol, 1 tbsp
Putting it all together
Preparation is anywhere between ten and fifteen minutes and baking
time is ten minutes.
The magic starts when you turn on your oven and preheat it to 350
degrees Fahrenheit and start to chop up your figs, make sure you
remove the stem, though while they are probably edible they do not
enhance the consumption experience. Once you have half a cup of figs
finely chopped put them aside. For the purpose of this recipe they
are not considered dry ingredients but a building block.
While you can buy pre-ground flaxseed, I keep my flaxseed in a bag
and grind it when I need it. Sometimes I sprinkle it in with my
oatmeal and yogurt in the morning, and at times I have even included
ground flax-seed sprinkled over salad, or mashed potatoes along with
some chopped dill.
Mix all your dry ingredients in a bowl, ensuring they are well
combined. That includes the three tablespoons of freshly ground
flaxseed and your cinnamon.
In a small bowl break two eggs and beat them together with the jam,
olive oil, vanilla extract. Once you have this mixture well blended
add your chopped figs a bit at a time. You want to make sure that the
little building blocks of fig all get coated with your mixture of wet
ingredients. Once done we move on to making the batter.
Mix the wet ingredients in with the dry to create your batter a
little at a time to make sure it becomes one wonderful well mixed
mass of ingredients which, in just a short while become your Figgy
Oatmeal cookies. The batter will be pretty firm once you have mixed
it well enough.
Prepare a cookie sheet. It can either lined with parchment paper,
sprayed with your preferred non-stick coating or wiped with a light
coating of your favourite cooking oil.
Then you will be scooping your little dollops of dough on to the
cookie sheet using a teaspoon as a basic measuring device. You will
have to shape your dough on the cookie sheet as they will not change
their form during the baking process. Don't be afraid do use your
fingers, as long as they are clean. My little mounds were about one
and a half to two inches in diameter. Though had I made them smaller
I would have been able to avoid doing two batches in the oven. Live
and learn.
What's in it for you
When I set out to bake these Figgy Oatmeal Cookies, I was looking
for health alternative to store-bought cookies and I think I found
one. This snack or desert is very low in sodium and high in dietary
fibre and manganese which plays important roles in bone development,
skin integrity, blood sugar level control and damage by free
radicals. I don't think I have to give you much about the importance
of dietary fibre as we do hear a great deal about it in the
mainstream media, though these morsels are packed with it.
Calories
|
129
|
RDA
|
Carbohydrates
|
20 g
|
7 %
|
Fat
|
5 g
|
7%
|
Saturated
|
1 g
|
3%
|
Polyunsaturated
|
1.3 g
|
-
|
Monounsaturated
|
2.4 g
|
-
|
Trans
|
0 g
|
-
|
0 mg
|
0 %
|
|
Sodium
|
62 mg
|
3 %
|
Potassium
|
147 mg
|
4 %
|
Dietary Fibre
|
4 g
|
14 %
|
Sugar(s)
|
5 g
|
-
|
Protein
|
4 g
|
%
|
Vitamin A
|
3.3 IU
|
0 %
|
Vitamin C
|
|
1 %
|
Calcium
|
|
6 %
|
Iron
|
|
6 %
|
Other important vitamins and minerals include vitamin K, Choline,
Folate, Magnesium and Phosphorus with at about 10% of the RDA and
about 13% of daily Selenium requirements.
These Figgy Oatmeal Cookies are simple
to make, and you, like I did, can substitute out certain ingredients
adding your favourite ones such a pumpkin seeds or sesame seeds, or
using other natural sweeteners: honey, maple syrup, or agave nectar.
Bake up a few batches and you can
include them in your or kid's lunch without any guilt for feeding
them or you eating sodium and sugar packed manufactured goods.
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