• Em Adespoton
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        99 months ago

        Steel cut oats are still relatively inexpensive; no reason to buy prepared oatmeal.

        • @OpenStars@startrek.website
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          39 months ago

          The instant kind, which used to be an identical rather than now twice the price for Quaker Oats (ymmv), still has some benefits: ability to nuke it anywhere e.g. even at work without access to a stovetop, less cleanup for the pan, and less knowledge (zero chance to burn it) and effort required.

          Maybe the uncut kind tastes better, or something? For Quaker Oats I never thought so, especially not given the aforementioned tradeoffs, but probably other brands can be way better.

          Anyway thanks for the suggestion - that is a great thought. It may take some effort to switch over, but it seems like it may be worth it.

          • Em Adespoton
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            59 months ago

            Here’s what I do: Robin Hood steel cut (way better than Quaker):

            Bring water to boil in a pot

            Add oats and return to edge of boil, without stirring

            Turn off pot and cover with lid for 10 minutes

            Oats are ready to eat

            — the water to oats ratio differs depending on taste and volume, but it only takes a few tries to get it the way you want it.

            • @OpenStars@startrek.website
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              49 months ago

              Thank you. I will miss the “1-minute”, no-prep, no-clean aspect, but I needed to make the switch anyway, b/c despite the superfood health benefits the instant stuff tastes like crap.

              If you don’t mind my asking, why no stirring - wouldn’t that help?

              And what does “edge of boiling” mean? Is it just above, like I’ve heard for pasta and noodles, or just below, for whatever but I’ve heard it called “simmering”? Yeah, I don’t know the first thing about cooking, for the most part - I know how to stick something in the oven and leave it alone, and like fry-cook a scrambled egg, and that’s about it. Companies are taking advantage of my weakness there, by making low-effort prepped foods like cereal cost more, b/c they know that most people will just give in and pay more rather than learn to eat other foods:-(.

              • bitwolf
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                9 months ago

                Another good one to try is to put the oats, some frozen berries and a little bit of milk into a mason jar.

                Put the jar in the fridge overnight, they’ll be ready in the morning, sweeten as desired.

                  • bitwolf
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                    29 months ago

                    It kind of is like cold brew! Haha. They call them “overnight oats”. I have a bad habit of skipping breakfast and it really helps!

              • Em Adespoton
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                9 months ago

                You heat it back up until the oats start to roll in from the outside.

                You don’t stir, because this makes the oats stick to the pot. Cleanup is really simple if you don’t stir; serve the oats, then rinse the pot in soapy water and leave it to dry.

                • @OpenStars@startrek.website
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                  29 months ago

                  Cool, thanks! None of that really makes sense to me, so I guess I will just have to follow your directions and watch it happen in order to learn. Especially if I can find something where I can enjoy or even halfway stand the taste, that will be great:-).

        • @OpenStars@startrek.website
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          19 months ago

          Thanks. It sounds like my biggest problem is the over-reliance on the “quick 1-minute” kind, which really did used to be IDENTICAL in price - or at least I recall the two Quaker Oats versions, side-by-side, were the same price, though steel-cut ones of other brands may be better and/or cheaper.

    • @FirstCircle@lemmy.ml
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      29 months ago

      I routinely buy big boxes of “extra raisins” raisin-bran at Walmart for less than $4/box, did so today in fact.