Apple Pie Granola
Loaded with nuts and seeds, this protein-packed breakfast tastes like dessert!
Apple Pie Granola
Makes about 2 Liters, or 8 cups
Store-bought granola is marketed to seem healthier than boxed cereal, but it is usually just as ridden with sugar! Those tasty clusters are so tasty; the bad news is that they are mostly crystallized sugar.
Save yourself from the blood-sugar roller coaster by making this tasty cereal from scratch instead! The high proportion of nuts and seeds (half the bulk of the recipe!) gives you lots of protein and good fats to get your day started right. And enough whole grain to keep you feeling full till lunch.
Ingredients
4 cups slow-cooking rolled oats
1 cup cashews or almonds (whole, raw or sprouted)
1 cup seed of your choice (I like pumpkin seeds)
1 cup dried, unsweetened coconut
1 pinch salt
Spices
1 Tbsp cinnamon
1 tsp nutmeg
1 tsp cloves
(Or substitute 1.5 Tbsp apple pie spice if you have it)
In Blender
¼ cup chia or ground flax seed
½ cup honey, maple syrup or coconut nectar
2 cups unsweetened apple sauce OR just core, chop and blend 3 apples in the blender for ‘lazy’ raw apple sauce!
1 Tbsp vanilla
3 Tbsp coconut oil, melted
1 cup dried raisins (optional) or un-sulphured dried apple pieces
Directions
In a blender, combine chia or flax with apple sauce (or raw apple pieces if doing the ‘lazy’ version), sweetener, melted coconut oil and vanilla in blender until smooth.
In a mixing bowl, combine oats, spices, salt, nuts/seeds. Add with blended mixture to the dry mixture and stir well to combine. This part is important because once the flax or chia gets moist from being mixed into the blender mix; it starts to thicken, giving you nice clusters!
Spread mixture evenly and not too thick onto 2 parchment paper-lined baking sheets and bake at 320F, checking and stirring regularly. This takes about 1-2 hours, or just until it is dry to the touch.
Store it
Stir in dried fruit, cool and store in ziplock bags or airtight containers.
Keeps for at least a month.
Eat it
Enjoy with milk or alternative, on yogurt, over stewed fruit, eating out of hand, make granola bars or add a crunchy sprinkle to ice cream etc.




