GF OATMEAL COOKIES WITH DRIED CHERRIES AND TOASTED SLIVERED ALMONDS

Now, Mr. C. and I are not always going to agree on the relative merits of a new food item I make. Like this cookie, for example. He prefers a lighter cookie when almond flavoring is involved. Me, I think this cookie, based on a recipe I found on the flavourandsavour.com site, is perfect. Plus, it’s a cookie I can eat. (This may have something to do with my finding nothing about this cookie I don’t like.)

Now this isn’t to say that Mr. C. doesn’t like these cookies. He would just prefer them to be shortbread. But as he is quickly finding out, I am going to keep experimenting with healthier cookie recipes that I can enjoy on occasion. And not feel totally guilty about. And then feel good about sharing the ones that work with all of you.

Because even if you aren’t restricting sugar and white flour from your diet, you probably still want to eat healthier just for the sake of eating healthier. And starting out before it becomes mandatory is a really good idea. (Wish I’d have thought of it sooner!)   

The funny thing about my new passion to create healthier cookies, is that I’ve never had a sweet tooth. Until now I rarely ate more than one cookie from even a double batch. But now that I shouldn’t have any cookies, I can’t seem to think about anything else. Now I ask you, is that fair? Of course, it isn’t. Never-the-less, this is my new reality. Grrrrr

So, if you too are being careful about the ingredients you put into your body, this is a good cookie recipe for you. Especially if you are diabetic. Or require a cookie that is gluten free. Whatever! Just make the darn cookies. They are really, really good.

Well, that’s all for today. It’s cloudy outside, but it’s not raining. So, the courtyard and kitchen doors are both open and I can hear the birds singing. Of course, this often drives our poor cats crazy, but today they are in hiding. Andy’s sister Katie and her husband Rick are visiting. And although they have been here many times, our scaredy cats are mainly residing in our bedroom closet. They will periodically show their faces, but only when both Mr. C. and I are in the living room with our guests. Go figure! But what a joy to have Rick and Katie visit. It’s so lovely when your relatives are also close friends.

So, as always, have fun in your kitchen, never hesitate to play with your food, and stay positive. Staying positive is my new prime directive. So, I thought I might remind you to do the same.

Peace, Love, and Understanding to all.

This is a short story about Nick Lowe’s song (What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding that I found on the americansongwriter.com site.

“There are some songs that we wish weren’t still relevant, but we’re nonetheless grateful for their existence and the pure catharsis of the truths that they speak. Certainly, if most of us had our druthers, “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, And Understanding” would now sound hopelessly dated, as if it were the relic of another time. Instead the song, written by Nick Lowe in 1974 and performed by his band Brinsley Schwarz, is as timely as it’s ever been, its searching questions begging for answers now more than ever.

As Lowe told the A.V. Club in 2011, he originally intended the song to be tongue-in-cheek, only to rethink the tone along the way. “I wrote the song in 1973, and the hippie thing was going out, and everyone was starting to take harder drugs and rediscover drink,” he said. “Alcohol was coming back, and everyone sort of slipped out of the hippie dream and into a more cynical and more unpleasant frame of mind. And this song was supposed to be an old hippie, laughed at by the new thinking, saying to these new smarty-pants types, ‘Look, you think you got it all going on. You can laugh at me, but all I’m saying is ‘What’s so funny about peace, love, and understanding?’ And that was the idea of the song. But I think as I started writing it, something told me it was too good of an idea to make it into a joke. It was originally supposed to be a joke song, but something told me there was a little grain of wisdom in this thing, and not to mess it up.”

Adorned with Who-style power chords and Beach Boys-flavored harmonies, Brinsley Schwarz’s take on the song charges full-on into the breach even as Lowe begs us to stop and consider his pleas. His narrator attempts to navigate “this wicked world” and “searches for light in the darkness of insanity.” He admits that despair is never too far removed: “My spirit gets so downhearted sometimes.”

“Is all hope lost?” he wonders, and he laments about the ubiquity of “pain, hatred and misery.” Yet he suggests that the only way out of this malaise is vigilance, the kind that constantly presses and pushes for something better than the status quo, which he expresses via a series of queries: “So where are the strong? And who are the trusted? And where is the harmony?”

By keeping any kind of specifics out of his tale, Lowe ensured that his song would resonate in times of worldly turmoil or personal angst. It all builds to the scorching common sense of the refrain: “And each time I feel it slipping away, it just makes me want to cry. What’s so funny about peace, love, and understanding.”

Elvis Costello’s 1978 hard-charging, heart-on-sleeve version of the song, which was produced by Lowe, brought it to a wider audience and became one of Costello’s best-known recordings. Lowe, however, probably preferred the 1992 version by Curtis Stigers. Why? Because it appeared on the multi-platinum soundtrack to The Bodyguard, thus producing a royalties windfall for the writer.

In any case, “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, And Understanding” endures. Hopefully we’ll reach a day where we can appreciate the song based on its artistic merits alone and not because the title sounds like it could be the headline of an editorial in this morning’s newspaper rather than the lament of a songwriter written fortysomething years ago.”

The lyrics to (What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, And Understanding:

As I walk through this wicked world
Searchin’ for light in the darkness of insanity
I ask myself, is all hope lost?
Is there only pain and hatred, and misery?

And each time I feel like this inside
There’s one thing I wanna know
What’s so funny ’bout peace, love and understanding? Oh
What’s so funny ’bout peace love and understanding?

And as I walked on
Through troubled times
My spirit gets so downhearted sometimes
So where are the strong

And who are the trusted?
And where is the harmony?
Sweet harmony

‘Cause each time I feel it slippin’ away, just makes me wanna cry
What’s so funny ’bout peace, love and understanding? Oh
What’s so funny ’bout peace, love and understanding?

So where are the strong?
And who are the trusted?
And where is the harmony?
Sweet harmony

‘Cause each time I feel it slippin’ away, just makes me wanna cry
What’s so funny ’bout peace, love and understanding? Oh
What’s so funny ’bout peace, love and understanding? Oh
What’s so funny ’bout peace, love and understanding?

The recipe for this cookie:

½ c. (1 stick) unsalted butter, room temperature

½ c. coconut palm sugar*

½ tsp. pure almond extract

1 lg. egg, room temperature

1¼ c. oat flour, certified gluten-free, if necessary

½ tsp. baking soda

½ tsp. kosher salt

½ c. chopped dried cherries

1½ c. rolled oats, certified gluten-free, if necessary

½ c. toasted slivered almonds  

Line 1 medium sized baking sheet with parchment paper. (The baking sheet should be small enough to fit in your refrigerator.)

Cream the butter and sugar together with an electric mixture until fluffy. Add the almond extract and egg; beat until smooth.

In a separate bowl, whisk the oat flour, baking soda, and salt together. Add the chopped dried cherries and using your hand(s), stir the cherries into the flour mixture. As you stir them in, try to break the cherry bits up as much as possible so that each little bit is covered with flour. Then stir in the rolled oats and toasted slivered almonds. Add the dry ingredients to the butter mixture and beat only until blended. Do not over mix.

Using a #60 (1 tablespoon) ice cream scoop, drop balls of dough on the prepared cookie sheet. Flatten slightly. (They can be close together at this point. They will need more room in between when you bake them off.) Refrigerate the dough for at least 4 hours, but 24 hours is better.

Line a larger baking sheet with parchment paper. Place the balls right out of the refrigerator at least 1-inch apart on the pan. They aren’t really going to spread out very much. But they still need to have a bit of breathing room.

Pop them immediately into a pre-heated 350-degree oven for about 11 minutes or until lightly golden brown. Do not overbake.

Remove from oven and let sit on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely. Store in an airtight container. 

*Coconut Palm Sugar has a lower glycemic index than regular sugar, so it won’t spike your blood sugar in the same way. Coconut sugar tastes like caramel infused brown sugar. (Not a bad combination.) It is more grainy than brown sugar, however. So, it really works best in recipes that already offer a lot of texture. So, as in this cookie recipe with oats, dried cherries, and slivered almonds, it is perfect.  

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