Don't Ignore Breakfast
View PDF | Print View | Publish Article |
So, some kind of multi-grain cereal is good, as is multi-grain bread or baked goods or even traditional porridge. Eating a proper breakfast will even help stave-off hunger cravings and means that you do not over-compensate by eating too much at later meals. There is more truth in the old adage of: 'Breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince, dinner like a pauper' than we would care to admit.
Below are three classic breakfast dishes that are also good for you. We start with traditional muesli:
Seven-part Muesli
Ingredients:
420g oats
200g mixed nuts (include macadamia, if available)
80g sesame seeds
80g sunflower seeds
75g raisins
75g dried cranberries
150g ready to eat apricots or dates, chopped
Method:
Put the oats in an air-tight container and stir-in the remaining ingredients, mixing thoroughly to combine.
This is excellent served 'Swedish style'. Spoon your muesli into a bowl, make a 50:50 mix of milk and yoghurt (any yoghurt will do) then pour over the muesli (but just milk is fine, too). Top with fresh fruit and serve.
Next comes a healthy breakfast muffin from New Zealand:
Morning Glory Muffins
Ingredients
400g flour
180g sugar
1 tsp baking powder
2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp salt
380g grated carrot
80g sultanas
80g chopped nuts
60g grated coconut
160g grated apple
2 tsp vanilla extract
3 eggs, beaten
180ml oil
Method:
Mix together the flour, sugar, baking powder, cinnamon and salt then stir-in the carrot, sultanas, nuts, apple and vanilla. Mix the eggs and oil together and fold into the dry ingredients. Spoon into a greased muffin tin, making sure you fill the wells no more than 3/4 full. Then place in an oven pre-heated to 180°C and bake for 20 minutes, or until coloured and springy to the touch.
And you can't have a list of breakfast recipes without including traditional Scottish porridge.
Scottish Porridge
Ingredients:
8 rounded tbsp meedium oatmeal
1.2l water
salt, to taste
Method:
Bring the water to a boil in a saucepan then reduce the heat to a low simmer and sprinkle the oatmeal slowly over the top, stirring continuously to avoid lumps. Raise the heat a little and cook slowly until the mixture returns to a boil.
Reduce to a simmer once more and allow the porridge to cook very slowly for 20 minutes, stirring frequently. About half-way through cooking you should add salt, to taste. Pour into four soup bowls and eat hot.
Traditionally, porridge would be served with a separate bowl of milk and each spoonful of porridge would be dipped in the milk before eating. If may not be traditional, but a spoonful of currants or raisins stirred into the porridge works well and gives you some of the extra complex carbohydrates you need at breakfast.
Essentially any mix of grains, nuts, seeds and fruit works well for a good and balanced breakfast and the recipes above are just a small selection of the various breakfast dishes you can make. Just remember that most of these recipes take little time to prepare and many can be prepared well in advance and just need to be served on the day.
About the Author
Dyfed Lloyd Evans is the creator of the Celtnet Recipes site where you can find many hundreds of Breakfast recipes from all across the world for you to try and enjoy.
Bookmark this article:
DropJack! |
del.icio.us |
Furl |
Technorati |
Blinklist |
Reddit |
Spurl |
Everywhere Else
More Articles from the Recipes Category
West African Offal Pepper SoupChilli and Chocolate Sauce for Game
Pork and Aubergine in Hot Sauce
How to Prepare a Vegetable Pot Roast
The World's Hottest Chilli Dish?
The Origins of Chutney
How to Maximize your use of Mushrooms
The Surprising Recipes of Tanzania
The Wild Side of Food — Cooking with Wild Greens
The Recipes of Wales — Modern and Traditional Foods
British Dessert, Traditional and Modern
Ice Creams and Sorbets – Freezing as a Cooking Technique
Great British Springtime Recipes
Classic Recipes from Scotland
What is an Ice Cream (compared with a glace) and How do you Make one?
Rating: Not yet rated


