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Home » Granola

Crunchy Cranberry Granola

Modified: Nov 8, 2019 · Published: Jan 3, 2012 by Anna · This post may contain affiliate links · 8 Comments

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Have you ever made granola with molasses? How about almond extract? When I saw Crunchy Cranberry Granola on the Fisher Nuts site, I was curious to see how those two ingredients would work and made a quick batch.

cranberry granola

I chickened out on the molasses, though. Two tablespoons seemed like a lot of molasses for such a small batch of granola, so I made the cranberry granola with 1 tablespoon molasses and increased the maple syrup a bit. At first I could really taste the molasses, but then the flavors kind of mellowed out.  After a few days of eating this I can hardly taste the molasses at all, so I think I'm going to  make another batch with the full amount. I'll let you know in the comments section or write a little update after I've increased the molasses.  Don't lose any sleep waiting!

Update:  I now make this granola fairly often, and I do use the full 2 tablespoons of molasses.  I also like to bake it at 300 instead of 325 and I never stir it because we prefer chunky granola.  Other changes I sometimes make are to add about ¼ teaspoon of ground ginger and add a sprinkling of sea salt before baking.

 

Recipe

cranberry granola

Crunchy Cranberry Granola

Cookie Madness
An easy granola recipe from Fisher Nuts
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Servings 4

Ingredients
 

  • ⅓ cup canola oil or any other vegetable oil
  • ⅓ cup maple syrup plus 1 tablespoon
  • 1 tablespoon molasses or use two and omit the extra T. of maple syrup
  • 1 teaspoon almond extract
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 2 cups rolled oats not quick cooking
  • ½ cup Fisher® Chef’s Naturals Walnuts Halves and Pieces coarsely chopped -- I used ¾ cup
  • ¼ cup Fisher® Chef’s Naturals Sliced Almonds -- I used ¾ cup
  • ½ cup flaked coconut
  • ¼ cup unsalted pumpkin seeds -- omitted
  • ¼ cup unsalted roasted sunflower seeds -- omitted
  • ¼ cup Fisher® Dried Sweetened Cranberries

Instructions
 

  • Preheat oven to 325°F. Line a large heavy rimmed baking sheet or jelly roll pan with non-stick foil or parchment.
  • In small bowl combine oil, maple syrup, molasses, almond extract and cinnamon; stir well.
  • In large mixing bowl combine oats, walnuts, coconut, almonds, pumpkin seeds (if using), and sunflower seeds (if using). Slowly pour maple syrup mixture over at mixtures; toss to coat.
  • Spread oat mixture evenly onto pan. Bake 18 to 20 minutes or until golden brown; stirring halfway through baking. For clumpier granola, don't stir -- just press it down into a thin sheet, let it cool completely, and break into chunks
  • Remove from oven; cool slightly. Stir in cranberries; cool completely.
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

 

More Granola Recipes on Cookie Madness

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    Olive Oil aka Early Bird Granola
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    Buckwheat Granola
  • Low FODMAP granola
    Simple Low-Fodmap Granola

Comments

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  1. Sue says

    January 03, 2012 at 6:23 pm

    This looks like an interesting granola recipe! I feel like I owe my daughter a batch of granola and haven't gotten around to it. This is a good reminder.

  2. Mackenzie@The Caramel Cookie says

    January 03, 2012 at 3:28 pm

    Never heard of molasses in granola, sounds good though!

  3. Anna says

    January 03, 2012 at 3:22 pm

    Great tip! I have a personal recipe which I haven't posted yet that uses egg white. It does include some oil and butter, but the egg white adds a lightness. You can also make decent granola without any oil at all, but I prefer using some fat since ounce for ounce, the fat doesn't make much of a difference. If you take out the fat, you just up the proportion of carbohydrates and sugar. Adding the egg white is a good alternative.

  4. Nrthwoodsknitter says

    January 03, 2012 at 3:13 pm

    If you like crunchy granola, you might consider trying egg whites instead of oil. I found a recipe a while back, I want to say from Martha, that included maple syrup, brown sugar and oil. When I tried it, I replaced the oil with egg whites, and made sure to toast the granola well (ensure the egg whites cooked), and I have to say, it has been a huge hit. Everyone loves it. I have not tried molasses, but I will. Thanks. C-

  5. melissa says

    January 03, 2012 at 1:40 pm

    I love granola. I should make it more often. When I was pregnant with J, I used to make a Martha Stewart version that was all molasses. I'm with you -- I like the mellowness of maple syrup better. I think the idea is that the molasses has more "nutrients" good for the baby or something... though at only 1-2 tablespoons for a whole batch, it really is a negligible amount!
    Hope you guys had a Happy new Year's celebration!

  6. Adam says

    January 03, 2012 at 11:34 am

    That's interesting about the flavour. It's like the opposite of what I have found with maple syrup where the flavour becomes stronger over time. Maybe the discrepancy in the flavour is the maple syrup bullying the molasses?
    And ginger is a great idea! and nutmeg too... because.. uhm.. there should be a little nutmeg in everything :).

  7. Anna says

    January 03, 2012 at 9:40 am

    That's a great idea! I'm going to make another batch and put a pinch of ginger in portion of it.

  8. Katrina says

    January 03, 2012 at 9:34 am

    Would you ever add ginger? I think things with molasses need ginger (like some certain biscotti)! 😉

Peanut Butter Fudge Jumbles recipe baked in a 9-inch square Pampered Chef stoneware pan.

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