Granola - a toasted muesli, nice with fresh fruit and yoghurt for a vegetarian breakfast, this is a very adaptable recipe using any grains, seeds and nuts that you fancy.
Ingredients
- 12 oz / 300g rolled oats, wheat flakes, rolled barley or any other rolled grains
- 4oz / 100g chopped hazelnuts, pecans, almonds or any other nuts
- 2oz/50g pumpkin, flax, sunflower seeds or seeds of your choice
- 2oz/50g desiccated coconut
- 4 fl oz Hill Farm rapeseed oil or sunflower oil
- 4 fl oz Suffolk honey
- 6oz/150g raisins or sultanas
Method
Preheat the oven to 130c/Gas 2 ( a cool setting)
Place the rolled oats in a bowl and mix in the nuts, seeds and coconut. ( not the raisins yet!) Stir well.
Warm the honey and oil together in a small pan and pour onto the dry mixture.
Coat all the nuts, oats, seeds etc in the honey and oil.
Spread the mixture onto a baking tin and place in the oven for 40 mins. You will need to move the granola around a little from time to time to ensure that it crisps all over.
Remove from the oven and mix in the raisins. Leave to cool and store in an airtight container. where it will keep for several weeks.
Here is the veg plot for this year - extended by a curve, with a new rose arch for beans and a hi-vis scarecrow to keep off the pigeons. But a sad year for broccoli, still no rain and will be lucky to get two portions from this crop.
is on the 22nd, 23rd and 24th April and are looking for Suffolk chefs and restaurants to take part. Would you like to do a demonstration? Call Paula Edmundson on 0788 1787534 direct if you're not doing anything that weekend.
We’d long been planning to try this place when going for walks along the docks at Woodbridge, particularly when it regularly announces fish soup and seafood platters. Finally we got the chance at the weekend. It’s in a great spot for watching the tide and the boats and the menu is appealing, with a good choice of wine by the glass. I went straight for the fish soup and the boys started with oysters which they loved.
Then I became obsessed with the size of the tiny kitchen and the absence of any cooking smells and it became clear that the food must be cooked elsewhere and reheated at the restaurant. Nothing wrong with that, but if I go back I will either go for afternoon tea (cakes looked delicious) or for a cold seafood platter and mixed leaf salad.
Hidden away in the Old Fox Yard in Stow, it's worth a visit for the Peach Flan alone, a retro delight decorated with loads of squeezy cream. In fact the whole cafe is a riot of signs and hundreds and thousands.
Our April Dish of the Day - George Biddle at the Kings Head, Laxfield
Written by Claire

And here is George's recipe
What's happened to the competition, I hear you ask. Well according to the producers it's been so successful they are having a second series and Suffolk will be in that. Did any of you enter? Strangely there's no mention of it on Gino's blog, but here' s something from him to keep us going...
Ciao everyone!· Guess what I’m thinking about… it's long and meaty, and sums up everything there is to love about Italian cooking. Yes! It’s my favourite pasta dish ever - Bucatini alla carbonara.
A lovely joint of Norfolk reared beef, carved at the chef's table in full view of the kitchen at this renowned Norfolk restaurant - the perfect place to take our Dad out for a birthday lunch - and back to the village where he grew up.
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our roast beef being carved by Richard Hughes
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excellent board of East Anglian cheeses
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watching the kitchen in action
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Lavender House is in a lovely location in Brundall
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first course of starter tasters
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