banana nut bread
need i say more?
probably not, but i will anyway:
i used my dad's basic recipe for banana nut bread and "veganized" it. it's still not "healthy," but it's safe to say it's at least "healthier."
3 ripe bananas
1 tbsp ground flaxseeds
3 tbsp water
2 tbsp unsweetened apple sauce
2 cups flour
3/4 cups sugar
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
about 1/4 cup chopped walnuts (depending on how nutty you feel. sorry, but no recipe for banana nut bread would be complete without this pun.)
a dash of soy or rice milk (I used rice)
Preheat the oven to 350°.
Viciously thrash the bananas in a large mixing bowl with a fork. In a separate bowl or cup, mix the flaxseeds, water, and applesauce, and whisk together with a fork. it should be kind of goopy (like egg whites!). Add to the bananas and mash it all together. Add the rest of the dry ingredients, minus the walnuts, and mix well, adding just a dash (about and ounce or so) of rice (or soy) milk as you do so. Fold in the walnuts.
Pour the batter into a greased bread pan and bake in the oven for one hour.
My roommate loved it, and I swear it tasted exactly the same as the kind my dad makes whenever we have three overripe bananas lying around the kitchen.
...Other Stuff...
I wrote a reflection the other day on my current situation in life and my thoughts about pursuing post-graduate education. Here's what I had to say about it...
Tonight I stayed up very late making stuffed mushrooms for tomorrow’s company potluck. The sleep-deprived feeling sweeping throughout my body—the aching back, the bloodshot eyes, the stomach that can’t seem to decide whether it’s hungry or sick, all exacerbated by the fact that I’ve been up since 5:30 this morning—brings me back to my too-long estranged student days. There is something dear about staying up late, working on something I half love, half despise because it is keeping me away from my bed, which I half love, half despise. When I stepped into in the bedroom to change into my pajamas while waiting for some of the ingredients to cool so that I might proceed to the next step in the unpredictably drawn-out culinary process, I momentarily caught an unidentifiable smell that instantly took me back to my late nights and early mornings in my Oxford flat, struggling against time and overwhelming fatigue to finish a paper on 20th Century British Theatre or Gender Roles in Shakespeare, wondering if I would complete it before the Study Abroad office closed, or if I would indeed have to walk all the way down to New College and pay about 70p to print out the whole thing.
I want to be a student again. Stuffed mushrooms, no matter how delicious they turn out, don’t give me the same depth of satisfaction as a well-written contrastive study of the differences between Cleopatra and Lady Macbeth’s distinctive approaches to queenly rule. I want to hear a bell tower chiming three a.m. somewhere in the distance, to try to force another cup of chamomile tea and handful of saltines into an upset stomach that really wants noting more than for the rest of my body to get a full night’s rest, and to know, somehow, as the glare of my laptop screen burns into my retinas, that there really is no other way I would rather be spending my time.
27 September 2007
a new twist on dad's classic recipe
Labels:
bananas,
education,
flaxseeds,
graduate school,
Oxford,
Shakespeare,
vegan recipes
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1 comment:
I like the recipe for the nut bread. It sounds scrumptious (is that how you spell it?).
When I think about it, I would rather make stuffed mushrooms than write a paper in the middle of the night. Then again, I would rather write a good story or book than stuff mushrooms, unless that stuffing was into my mouth, which then would be quite tasty.
In answer to your question, I did in fact get the Cobra beer from the Brog Shop. Too many beers and they could remove some, like the Cobra, and it would be instantly better. I feel overwhelmed when I go there.
I wish you were here to dance with me at the Purple Turtle. It is a happenin spot.
I will keep writing.
Cheers!
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