The crunch!
Eating healthy isn’t always as simple as, in reality, it should be: especially when it comes to such things like a hasty breakfast — devoured on the run — a midmorning ‘snack’ to maintain energy and concentration levels or that permanent mother’s headache of ‘something nutritionally healthy yet tasty enough to meet the exceedingly difficult palettes of school-going youngsters’.
Enter ‘The Crunch’ — the answer to a mother’s prayer!
It is, depending on budgetary matters, a simple matter to purchase boxes of commercially manufactured muesli bars in various flavours but, aside from not always being quite as healthy — due to the presence of those notorious ‘E numbers’ — as advertised, they can, if more than one person is hooked on them on a daily basis, work out surprisingly expensive.
Rather than depend on commercially manufactured items what about experimenting with recipes at home
The solution to this, of course, is to conjure up your own: a task which, thankfully, is surprisingly easy, plus, you can vary the ingredients too.
Jam-packed full of essential vitamins, minerals and many other naturally good things in life, homemade muesli bars — carefully wrapped of course — can be a life-saver as they provide a healthy boost, a very rapid yet lasting one, due to the sugars, dried fruit, nuts and seeds they contain.
Recipes are for playing with: something to be fiddled around with until they meet personal — and the all important family — tastes and homemade muesli bars withstand a lot of playing around with.
Basic recipe
1 cup (and please remember that the cup size can vary all depending on the amount of muesli bars you wish to make) of raw oats — not oat meal — such as are used in the making of porridge.
1 cup shredded coconut
1 cup ‘kishmish’ (raisins / sultanas)
Half cup wheat germ or bran
Half cup sesame seeds (till)
Half cup sunflower seed kernels
Half cup pumpkin seed kernels
Half cup goji berries
- This means, in addition to the essential oats, a total of four cups of ‘something’ chopped small and which complement each other. Here in Pakistan we are incredibly lucky to have, at reasonable cost, a wide assortment of dried fruits and nuts, mostly indigenous, to chose from and the following are all ideal for using in muesli bars: dried apricots, figs, dates, plums, almonds, walnuts etc but do please, if possible, include the sesame seeds, sunflower kernels and kishmish as these are ultra-healthy ingredients.
Dried orange, lemon or grapefruit peel, cut into matchstick sized pieces, can also be used and they add an interesting, Vitamin C packed, tang.