BBC Good Food
Ingredients
- 2 x cans chickpeas in water, drained
- 2 fat garlic cloves, roughly chopped
- 3 tbsp Greek yogurt
- 3 tbsp tahini paste
- 3 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra
- zest and juice 2 lemons
- 20g pack coriander
BBC Good Food
Mix together 350 – 400g oats with 50g seeds, 4 tablespoons sesame seeds (35g) and 150g chopped nuts.
2 tablespoons each of oil and honey with 1 teaspoon salt and
50g brown sugar, heat gently to mix together. Stir into oats, with 1 – 2 cups aquafaba, beaten
to a stiff foam.
Spread onto two baking trays, bake at 140 ish, stirring
halfway through, until golden brown.
3 large black bananas
https://food52.com/recipes/15831-nekisia-davis-olive-oil-maple-granola
Tips for adapting
Unlike darker crannies of the internet, Food52 has always been an unusually welcoming space to ask questions, to share cooking triumphs (and flat-out fails), to experience the kind of supporting community so many of us crave in a haze of angry tweets and lonely scrolls through Instagram.
But this recipe is my favorite little nook. Everyone loves this granola—undying appreciation kind of love. People make it weekly. They have it every morning for breakfast. They wrap it up to give during the holidays, in mason jars and cellophane bags and Christmas-y tins. Their families and coworkers clamor for it.
And—maybe most notably—they make it their own. Every ingredient has been swapped or doubled or abandoned, depending on whim and what’s in the pantry. The technique, which is essentially just stirring, has spun off to work in a slow cooker; to become crispy granola bars; to get ditched in a cold oven for hours and picked back up. This recipe is unbreakable.
In honor of Food52’s 10th anniversary (and this recipe’s almost-8th), I’m rounding up the 50-ish ways community members have customized this recipe to date below to inspire you to do the same, for yourself or for your loved ones.
All The Genius Granolas