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Thursday, January 8, 2026

Best Recipe Finds of 2025



Three recipes I tried this year make the cut.

First up is this granola recipe. It's supposed to stick together enough to make bars. I think it needs more honey to do this (or maybe I didn't use enough- not sure). But the taste was great. I skipped the chocolate chips because I didn't want them to melt if taken outside. Mine fell apart into clumps. Still tasted good. I will be making this again with more of the "glue."

granola bars

• 2 cups rolled oats
• 1 cup nuts (almonds, walnuts, or cashews), chopped
• ½ cup dried fruit (raisins, cranberries, or apricots), chopped
• ¼ cup honey
• 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
• ¼ cup peanut butter (or almond butter)
• ¼ teaspoon cinnamon
• ⅓ cup dark chocolate chips (optional)

Steps:
1. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C) and line a baking dish (8x8 inches) with parchment paper.
2. In a large mixing bowl, combine the oats, chopped nuts, dried fruit, and cinnamon.
3. In a small saucepan over low heat, warm the honey and peanut butter until melted and smooth, stirring frequently.
4. Remove the saucepan from the heat and stir in the vanilla extract.
5. Pour the wet mixture over the dry ingredients and mix well until everything is evenly coated.
6. Press the mixture into the prepared baking dish, making sure it's evenly spread and compacted.
7. If using, sprinkle the chocolate chips on top, pressing them gently into the mixture.
8. Bake for 15-20 minutes, or until the edges are golden and the center is firm.
9. Let cool completely before cutting into squares or bars.

Rhubarb Glazed Chicken is so good, I've fixed it several times. It helps that I have a ton of rhubarb. Remembered to put some in the freezer this year. The recipe is at Rhubarb Glazed Chicken. I did leave out the hot sauce. This batch might have gotten a little too done, but it really didn't taste "blackened."

rhubarb glazed chicken

I've also fallen in love with this recipe for Green Goddess Herb salad dressing. I've been somewhat unhappy with all the extra ingredients in bottled dressings. It also now costs more than $3 for a 16-oz bottle unless you can catch a sale. I'm not sure this saves any money. It does eliminate all those extra ingredients.

a few stalks of basil
a handful of fresh dill (or I've used dried dill when I couldn't find fresh)
a handful of fresh parsley (or I've used dried parsley when I couldn't find fresh)
a few green onion stalks
several garlic cloves
2 c. lowfat yogurt
2 c lowfat sour cream

Chop the herbs and garlic fine. Mix with the dairy products

It has some preparation issues:
It says to blend with an immersion blender. That is mostly a mess because any herbs you don't get fine enough beforehand just glob up. I have switched to chopping the herbs or cutting with scissors. I've finally decided that they don't have to be quite as fine as they suggest.

Keeping leftover herbs is also an issue. Freezing them in water was a mess. Chopping and freezing was a mess. Now I'm just freezing them whole and dry and trying to use before they have been in there too long. Chop them white still frozen.

Also, finding all the fresh herbs is usually impossible, and then they are expensive. After making, I kept half in the fridge while freezing the other half. The last half of the second half tends to separate and get watery. Still tastes OK.

So, I've sort of alternated between commercial dressings and this. It's hard to compare prices. When I can get the fresh herbs they aren't cheap, but a bunch is enough for at least 3 batches if I can sucessfully keep the leftovers.

homemade green goddess dressing

I was really good today. Dishes, laundry, editing, walked a mile (just along the road). I think I'm going to lie down with a book.

Miles hiked in 2026: 10.2

One mile of roadwalk

See Best Recipes of 2020

1 comment:

Ann said...

They all sound delicious