Cereal Killer
No doubt about it, breakfast cereal is a physique killer.
Ninety-nine percent of what's on store shelves is nothing but
    candy, the solid food equivalent of sugared soft drinks,
    nutritionally bankrupt love-handle fertilizer. If cereal were your
    roommate, he'd use the last of the toilet paper and not replace the
    roll. Yeah, that bad. 
What's worse is that many of the "healthy" cereals on the market
    are even more fattening than the kid stuff! A prime example of this
    is granola. Oh sure, it's touted as outdoorsy, healthy, 100%
    natural hippy food, but take a look at the label of most
    mass-marketed granola: high calories, tons of sugar, and
    ill-advised oils. 
One of the most popular "low fat" granola cereals out there
    today has double the calories of Coco Puffs! Now that's
    cuckoo. And don't even get me started on granola bars.
Of course, much like beautiful blondes with emotional issues,
    granola is mighty yummy (until it lets the air out of your tires
    and doesn't return your CDs). So I set out to apply my method
  of food preparation to granola. 
When I cook, my goals are to:
• Reduce calories without reducing the volume of food. This
    means you can get satiated with fewer calories. 
• Replace most sugary or starchy carbs with complex or high
    fiber carbs. Likewise, replace bad fats with good fats whenever
  possible.  
• Increase the fiber and protein count if I can. Fiber and
    protein rate the highest on the Satiety Index, which basically
    means they get you full fast and keep you full longer. 
So let's see what we can do with granola cereal.
Chris's Homemade Half-Calorie Granola
Ingredients:
6 cups old fashioned oatmeal
	1/4 cup chopped almonds
	1/4 cup chopped pecans
	3 tablespoons Splenda
	1/4 teaspoon of kosher salt
	1/3 cup of sugar-free syrup
	1/4 cup pure honey or sugar-free imitation honey
	1/4 cup unsweetened pineapple juice
	1/2 teaspoon almond extract
	1/4 cup dried cranberries
	1/4 cup dried apricots
	Pam nonstick spray
Step #1: Preheat the oven to 300 degrees.
Step #2: Prep dry ingredients. In a large bowl, toss the oatmeal
    with the almonds, pecans, Splenda, and salt. 
Step #3: Prep wet ingredients. Add the syrup, honey, pineapple
    juice, and almond extract to your rolled oats mixture. 
Step #4: Coat a flat pan or "jelly roll pan" with Pam and spread
  mixture evenly. (This might take a couple of pans.)
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Step #5: Bake for 40 to 45 minutes at 300 degrees, stirring
  every 15 minutes so it all gets evenly toasted. 
Step #6: After cooling, add cranberries and apricots.
Step #7: Store in zip-lock plastic baggies or sealed jar.
Yield: 10 half-cup servings for normal people, 5 servings for
  bulking bodybuilder types, 1 serving for Chad Waterbury
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Tips:
• We've removed most of the plain sugar here by using sugar
    substitute. But watch for extra sugar being slipped into your dried
    fruits. If you can't find plain ones, just place them into a
    strainer and rinse them off. Let dry before adding to granola. 
• I like to use sugar-free syrup but prefer regular, natural honey to the artificial, sugar-free stuff. Reason
    is, most sugar-free syrups and honeys use sugar alcohols like
    maltitol or sorbitol. A little of these ingredients is fine, but
    too much and you'll... well, let's just hope you have big dog in
  the house to blame. 
• Options: Try figs, apples, or whatever dehydrated fruits you
    prefer. Also, try playing with your nuts. You know, use walnuts
    instead of pecans or something. (What did you think I meant, perv?) 
• Half-calorie granola is not only good as cold breakfast
    cereal, it can also be sprinkled over yogurt or added to protein
    shakes. Heck, I like it right out of the baggie for airplane food. 
• If you choose to use it as cereal, knock out even more
    calories by using Calorie Countdown milk. Even better, make your
    own "milk" by mixing water with vanilla Low-Carb Metabolic Drive.
     Make it
    thin and ice cold (add one or two ice cubes to blender) and pour it
  right over your granola. 
Good for breakfast, great for an on-the-go snack, and a pretty
    darn good post-workout meal, too. And you won't end up looking like
    a fat hippy. Try it!
 
									
								 
					 
					