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My mother-in-law shared the recipe for these golden waffles our daughter, Kayla, loves. Just add a few ingredients to the mix and you'll be enjoying their homemade whole-grain taste in minutes. —Michelle Sheldon, Edmond, Oklahoma
This recipe is:
Quick
Diabetic Friendly
Nutritional Facts 1 waffle (about 6 inches) equals 284 calories, 9 g fat (2 g saturated fat), 89 mg cholesterol, 482 mg sodium, 43 g carbohydrate, 5 g fiber, 12 g protein. Diabetic Exchanges: 3 starch, 1-1/2 fat.
Originally published as Whole-Grain Waffle Mix in Quick Cooking May/June 2002, p46
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Reviewed on May. 10, 2011 by Corrydon
Many years ago there was a restaurant in Sausalito California and they served this version of Whole Wheat Waffles. It was and is fantastic. I have taken it down to 1/3 to serve the two of us but feel free to triple it if you want to serve a crowd. Thought you might enjoy this one too. 1-1/4 cups whole wheat flour, 1 teaspoon brown sugar, pinch of salt, 3/4 teaspoon baking powder, 2 well beaten eggs, 1 cup milk, 2 Tablespoons plus 1-1/2 teaspoons safflower oil. For the topping: Plain yogurt, sliced peaches or mangos, sliced bananas, snipped raisins, chopped nuts, sunflower seeds. Sift flour, sugar, baking powder and salt into a large bowl. In another bowl, combine eggs, milk and oil. Gradually stir liquid ingredients into dry ingredients, whisk until smooth. Heat waffle iron. Pour batter onto hot iron as directed for your waffle iron and bake until done. Place on warm serving plates and top with yogurt, peaches or mangos, bananas, raisins, nuts and sunflower seeds. Or you can serve the toping ingredients on the side and let everyone help themselves.
Reviewed on May. 10, 2011 by mrsfoxburr
Bud Pues-if you look at thr recipe again, it is divided into 2 parts. First part are the dry ingredients that you mix together and store. The second part-additional ingredients- is the wet mixture that you add to the dry when you are ready to make them. Hope this helps!-Mrsfoxburr
Reviewed on May. 10, 2011 by PBscout14
This recipe is wonderful. It's great to have the mix in the fridge waiting for the weekend waffles. I always separate the eggs and whip the egg whites. Fold the egg whites into the batter right before pouring into your waffle iron and you will have really light waffles! YUM...
Reviewed on May. 09, 2011 by Bud Pues
Recipe is not clear about how many eggs to add to the single batch.I do a similar recipe but replace wheat germ with oatmeal. Optional: add chopped walnuts to batter on serve on top. Can store baked waffles in freezer & reheat in toaster.
Recipe is not clear about how many eggs to add to the single batch.
I do a similar recipe but replace wheat germ with oatmeal. Optional: add chopped walnuts to batter on serve on top. Can store baked waffles in freezer & reheat in toaster.
Reviewed on May. 08, 2011 by Mayberrygal
Thank you, joanpekrul, for your suggestion. I will process the rolled oats as you suggested to substitute for the oat bran.
Reviewed on May. 08, 2011 by Vegie19
loved them! and i was full until dinner time! they are very satisfying.
Reviewed on May. 08, 2011 by joanpekrul
Mayberrygal, I have not made this recipe, but to answer your question on oat bran. In other recipes I've used I process old fashion oats in my food processor and it comes out like flour. I use the same amount as for the oat bran. I hope this helps. God Bless You.
Reviewed on May. 08, 2011 by suesews
I have made a very similar recipe for quite some time with the following changes: I always have buttermilk in my fridge as I have several recipes using it. I use old fashion oats rather than the bran. The wheat germ I buy is labeled "toasted" so there is no extra step for that.My family loves these. I serve them with a fruit topping - whatever is in season.
I have made a very similar recipe for quite some time with the following changes: I always have buttermilk in my fridge as I have several recipes using it. I use old fashion oats rather than the bran. The wheat germ I buy is labeled "toasted" so there is no extra step for that.
My family loves these. I serve them with a fruit topping - whatever is in season.
I have not tried this recipe yet but have a couple of questions first. The previous reviewer said she added ground flax seed to the mix. How much did you add, and did you substitute it for anything else? Also, I don't have oat bran and was wondering if anything else could substitute well for this. Any thoughts?
Reviewed on Jan. 23, 2011 by lendi
I was looking for a more healthful breakfast idea to enjoy while my parents were visiting. I decided to make these waffles, and also had a batch of buttermilk waffle mix made up just "in case." Well.... everyone LOVED these waffles, my kids even preferred the whole-grain waffles to our usual buttermilk recipe. The only change I made was to add some milled flax seed to the mix. This recipe has earned a spot in the family favorites recipe box. Thank you for a great recipe!
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