Gently cook 1 cup of oats in 2 cups of milk until absorbed, about 20 minutes
While oatmeal is cooking, add the following ingredients to a mixer:
2 cups thick peach puree
1/2 cup of oat flour
1/2 cup flaxseed meal
1/2 cup coconut flour
2 eggs
1/2 cup honey
2 pinches of salt
2 tbsp cinnamon
1 tsp almond extract
1 tsp baking powder
3/4 cup of AP flour
1/2 cup heavy cream
Add 1/4 cup coc oil to hot oatmeal and stir until melted.
Combine with above mixture
Preheat oven to 375
Butter a 1.5 qt loaf pan
Chop up pistachio nuts
(Walnuts would be nicer, I only had pistachios)
Pour mixture into loaf pan
Sprinkle with turbinado sugar,
Then the pistachios
Bake for 70 minutes
Cool for 15 minutes. Remove from loaf pan, cool 15 more
Very moist, but stays together.
Yummy. Not sweet.
There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!
There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!
There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!
Cool! I've never noticed galls on staghorn sumac. Location: SE NH.
Melaphis rhois on Rhus typhina
https://bygl.osu.edu/node/1112