ready in about an hour and 5 minutes; serves 10
You might need to buy:
  • unsliced french bread- remove ends
  • lg eggs
  • tspn vanilla extract
  • Powdered sugar
  • Warm pancake syrup
  • dark brown sugar firmly packed
  • butter
Belongs to momx2ms French Toast 
ready in about 15 minutes; serves 6
You might need to buy:
  • bread 1/2 in thick
  • tspn salt
  • Powdered sugar
Belongs to momx2ms Quiche Lorraine 
ready in about an hour and 20 minutes; serves 4
You might need to buy:
  • Pastry for single pie crust or frozen 9 in pie crust
  • medium onion finely chopped
  • beaten eggs
  • half and half
  • tspn salt
  • ground nutmeg
  • shredded sharp cheddar cheese

Recipe from Wolfermans (make for Mary)

serves 4
You might need to buy:
  • grated cheddar cheese
  • Butter
  • Scrambled Eggs With Cheese
  • Olive or Canola Oil
  • Hash Browns
  • Wolferman’s Signature English Muffins Split and toasted
  • Milk
You might need to buy:
  • maple syrup
  • whole milk
  • nutmeg
  • golden raisins
  • chopped toasted almonds
  • cooked long grain brown rice
Belongs to kylerhea Daily Oatmeal 

You may add fresh fruit other than apples. Berries, in season, are great. Bananas, pears, peaches, apricots are all good choices. Fresh fruits may be added after the oatmeal cooks. I cook the apple with the oatmeal in Winter so it’s more like baked apple in flavor and consistency. In summer I add fresh currants, raspberries, blackberries, gooseberries, plums, or mulberries (because this is what grows in my garden). My apples don’t ripen until Autumn…so in summer I’ll used canned or dehydrated apples from the prior season. In Winter I may used canned peaches or apricots. Apples store well so I do get to enjoy fresh apples all Winter long.

Dried fruits are tasty to mix and match…plums (used to be called “prunes”), berries, apricots, mango, currants, dates, fruit leathers…whatever you like and have.

Nuts and seeds are rich sources of fiber, Omega 3’s, protein, etc.

As to milk…I once read that using cows milk with oatmeal creates a combination that binds the calcium in each so that it isn’t available to the body. This is why I use a non-dairy milk.

Sweetening such as honey, molasses, real maple syrup, agave syrup, rice syrup…and sugar make things extra tasty, although with raisins it’s really sweet enough. I like agave syrup because it is very low on the glycemic index, meaning your body digests if first rather than shooting it straight into your bloodstream. Agave syrup also has a mild flavor similar to maple syrup, but lighter. It’s good in coffee and tea, as well.

You might need to buy:
  • raisins
  • water.
  • flax seed
  • raw sunflower seeds
  • Agave nectar
  • cinnamon
ready in about 35 minutes; serves 10
You might need to buy:
  • 150g plain flour
  • cocoa
  • 300ml whole milk
  • Chocolate hazelnut spread
  • 50g hazelnuts
  • caster sugar
  • 200ml single cream
You might need to buy:
  • cottage cheese
  • eggs
  • salt and pepper to taste

Recipe serves 1

serves 1
You might need to buy:
  • large eggs
  • large egg whites
  • pepper
  • vegetable oil
  • chopped cooked broccoli
  • chopped fresh zucchini