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Nearly everyday our dog Pompy and I take a liesurely stroll along the dirt roads and cornfields in our neighborhood. It’s a nice ritual. Being a Border Collie, Pompy thrives on this much-needed exercise and loves being able to herd the the cows that graze in one of the nearby pastures. He runs along the electric fence fiercely hopping and barking at these big, black creatures that most certaininly are not sheep but will do in a pinch. They just look at him calmly and cooly, chewing their cud and probably wondering what this forty pound dog thinks he possibly could have on their half-ton girth.

I on the other hand am not much into herding but I like the zen of  walking and the familiarity of our route.  I enjoy watching how the blue of the sky changes from day to day, seeing the tracks animals leave behind, and observing the varying rocky, muddy shoreline of the dam-controlled Ompompanoosuc River. It is deeply calming to walk this same route because I always notice something different.

Yesterday I  marvelled at pumpkins dotting the landscape – some big enough to win constests, some small enough to carry on a bike – and had fun kicking the crisp leaves out of my way as I strolled. Something about that whooshing, rustling sound reminds me of being a kid all puffed up in a sweater and zipped into a windbreaker heading home after school for a cup of tea. So as it inevitably will, my mind moved to food. I started imagining what I could eat and drink when I got home from this walk. Yes, a cup of tea would be perfect. But what else? Maybe it was the autumn leaves that made me think of the glass jars of crisp oats and crunchy nuts in the pantry and of whipping them into a tray of granola bars. Whatever it was, I picked up the pace and Pompy and I headed home, me eager  for a nutty treat, him just always hungry for more.

Crunchy Homemade Granola Bars with Cranberries and Nuts

These granola bars taste absolutely fabulous (especially after a nice autumn walk) and are as easy to prepare as the recipe looks. All you need to do is gather your oats, nuts, coconut, and dried fruit, measure them, stir in a can of warmed condensed milk and bake for an hour. That’s it, really. No surprises – except how delicious they are and how quickly they disappear. My kids love them in their lunchboxes and they travel very well. The original recipe given to me by my friend Donna (as always, thank you Donna!) called for peanuts, but I prefer them without and instead rely on other mixed seeds.

Ingredients

1 396 gram can sweetened condensed milk

250 grams or 3 1/2 cups 1-minute oats (rolled oats can be used but the bars will be drier and may not cut as easily)

75 grams or  1 1/4 cups of shredded coconut

100 grams or 1 cup of sweetened, dried cranberries

250 grams or 2 1/3 cups of mixed seeds (pepitas or pumpkin seeds, unsalted sunflower seeds, sesame seeds, and sliced almonds)

Instructions

Preheat the oven to  130 celcius or 275 degrees farenheit. Oil a 10 x 15 inch baking sheet.

Warm the condensed milk in a small pan. Meanwhile, mix together all of the other ingredients in a medium sized bowl and add the warmed condensed milk using a wooden spoon or spatula until well stirred.

Spread the mixture in the prepared pan using your fingers or an oiled spoon or spatula.

Bake for one hour or until lightly browned, remove, let cool for 15 minutes and cut into bars. Let cool completely.

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It’s raining. Again. In Vermont.

At this point we’re really feeling pretty soggy here. So many are still struggling to dig out from tons of river silt and to get their lives back in order. Luckily, our home survived the storm intact except for a single downed tree but many neighbors were impacted heavily by Tropical Storm Irene. One friend was unable to leave her driveway for three days and her husband’s place of work still remains closed due to flood waters with no plans to reopen.

But as Calvin Coolidge so famously said in 1928 after surveying the damage from the Flood of 1927:

My Fellow Vermonters:

For two days we have been traveling through this state. We have been up the East side, across and down the West side. We have seen Brattleboro, Bellows Falls, Windsor, White River Junction and Bethel. We have looked toward Montpelier. We have visited Burlington and Middlebury. Returning we have seen Rutland.

I have had an opportunity of visiting again the scenes of my childhood. I want to express to you, and through the press to the other cities of Vermont, my sincere appreciation for the general hospitality bestowed upon me and my associates on the occasion of this journey.

It is gratifying to note the splendid recovery from the great catastrophe which overtook the state nearly a year ago. Transportation has been restored. The railroads are in a better condition than before. The highways are open to traffic for those who wish to travel by automobile.

Vermont is a state I love. I could not look upon the peaks of Ascutney, Killington, Mansfield, and Equinox, without being moved in a way that no other scene could move me. It was here that I first saw the light of day; here I received my bride, here my dead lie pillowed on the loving breast of our eternal hills.

I love Vermont because of her hills and valleys, her scenery and invigorating climate, but most of all because of her indomitable people. They are a race of pioneers who have almost beggared themselves to serve others. If the spirit of liberty should vanish in other parts of the Union, and support of our institutions should languish, it could all be replenished from the generous store held by the people of this brave little state of Vermont.

I made these muffins yesterday while considering our brave little state and trying to warm up and usher out the damp air in our kitchen.  The recipe was shared with me years ago by one of my daughter’s teachers. With the maple syrup flowing through every vein and crumb of these goodies, it makes me think of the delicious flavors of Vermont, the amber colors of the autumn light, the strength of our stately maples and of the people who live here.

 

Vermont’s Best Maple Pecan Muffins

With each bite of these scrumptious muffins, think of Vermont and send your good wishes this way. If you feel inspired, send some food relief as well to The Vermont Foodbank which is the largest hunger relief agency in the state.

Makes 12 regular sized muffins or 24 mini-muffins

Dry Ingredients

2 1/4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour

3 teaspoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

Wet Ingredients

3/4 cup milk

1 egg

1 cup pure maple syrup

1 tablespoon barley malt syrup

Extras (which can be omitted if you are serving them to someone who is sensitive to nuts)

1 1/2 cup coarsely chopped pecans

Preparation

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Whisk together wet ingredients in a small bowl.

Measure and sift dry ingredients into a large bowl.

Add chopped pecans to dry ingredients and stir to mix.

Pour wet ingredients into dry ingredients. Stir gently until just combined. Spoon the batter into greased muffin tins. Bake 15 to 20 minutes or until lightly browned and firm in the middle. Allow to cool in the muffin tin for a few minutes before serving.

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