I told you it has been a big food week at our house.
In addition to the pickles, my husband made home made pizza dough for home made pizza on Sunday. And I was a busy baking bee in the kitchen for all the birthdays.
I was inspired by my friend Chirsty who brought me these Yin Yang bars. She calls them Yin Yang bars because while they have corn syrup and sugar in them, they are also chock full of good stuff because she makes them with a variety of cereals and whole grains. See Below
So here is what I (think) is the
recipe for the Yin-Yang Cereal Bars… this is modified from a recipe off of the
GrapeNuts Cereal box. And she has provided her variation below. Thanks, Christy!
You can combine any dry
cereals, grains, seeds, and nuts you like, and will want to have about 5 to 6
cups of dry mixture to the 3 cups of sticky/sweet mixture for the recipe:
This batch I used:
Combine the dry ingredients in a
very large bowl.
2 ½ C Grape Nuts Cereal
2C Kashi Go Lean Cereal
1C Kashi Puffs Cereal
1/2 C Melaleuca Cinnamon
Clusters Cereal
2 handfuls Rolled Oats
½ C Chia Seeds
Handful Sunflower Seeds (Raw)
½ C milled flax seeds
¼ C Cinnamon
¾ C Caramel Balls/Bits (Consider
Chocolate Chips, Cinnamon Chips, Raisins, Craizins, etc.)
In a separate bowl, combine and
microwave in one minute intervals, stirring in between micro-ing, until you get
a smooth consistency and all sugar has melted (is not grainy):
1 Cup Sugar
1 Cup Peanut Butter
1 Cup Corn Syrup
Once the peanut butter mixture
is smooth, pour over the dry mix in a very large bowl. Mix well to coat all of
the cereal mixture. Pour into a buttered or parchment papered 13 x 9 in. pan and
press down…
Let cool and cut into squares.
Delicious!!!
I call them Yin-Yang, because…
Yin and yang can be thought of as
complementary (rather than opposing) forces that interact to form a dynamic
system in which the whole is greater than the assembled parts. Everything has
both yin and yang aspects, (for instance shadow cannot exist without light).
Either of the two major aspects may manifest more strongly in a particular
object, depending on the criterion of the observation.