My friend Lauren, on the other hand, has attempted and succeeded at creating some amazing granola, and when I say amazing, I am talking about the kind of dessert or snack you pledge not to finish in one sitting, the kind you wrap up and place in the back of the refrigerator or cupboard to try and forgot only to find yourself going back until you’ve finished it all. The granola in question is both sweet and savory, satisfies both hunger and dessert cravings, is, in the words of Isaac Mizrahi from the 1995 cult classic Unzipped, “good.”
Amelia: I feel like to create your own recipe, you have to have either reached a certain level of culinary self-esteem and/or not be afraid to fail if things don’t turn out. How did the Granola Project start?
Lauren: The kitchen has always been a place of total freedom for me. You can always try again. I love reading recipes but also have a difficult time following rules. So I suppose the objective is to master something so I can then stray. Granola lives and dies with friends and my loved ones.
A: From where do you draw your culinary and/or granola inspiration?
L: Granola seems simple, right? It looks simple. It's one of the those complete things where all the individual ingredients can be recognized but together form something unique. So within this simplicity there are complexities. You see this a lot in cooking. But granola seemed like the perfect place for me to rest.
L: I am always looking at granola recipes and the ingredients of granola on the shelves. As far as recipes, there are so many I draw from. It's really interesting for me to see ratio and proportions—how much or how little makes a world of taste difference. Louisa Shafia's Lucid Food has a wonderful recipe, and my vintage copy of Kripalu Kitchen has a real classic hippie version that is a total throwback.
A: What are some of the flavor combinations you’ve had success with?
L: The two that have been consistently successful and praised by friends are dried cherry, cocoa nibs with pumpkin seeds and preserved lemon and dates. My son loves Monkey Seed which is dried bananas, sunflower seeds and chocolate chips.
A: My mom recently almost had a major meltdown over purchasing what she thought was an unnecessary bottle of olive oil of which I felt the opposite. Is there one ingredient apart from oats that must go into every batch of granola no matter what flavor you’re making? L: Maple syrup and salt. When can I get in the kitchen with your mom?
A: The banner of your website features the word granola in hand-lettering within the outline of the state of California. California is a big state—what kind of California specifically is your granola all about? Like, I kind of picture it hanging out along the PCH with some black-leather-jacketed bikers. There’s something very earthy, but also very fresh and sort of Rolling Stones about it. L: I love you, Amelia. California is sort of my version of the promised land. The place where it all comes together. A bit of nature complimented with a lot of rock and roll.
A: And while we’re getting deep into this, can I say that I love your hair, which is very Debbie Harry and that picture on your blog of Walter de Maria who kind of looks like Alvy’s friend in Annie Hall, but what’s up with these things? Is it all a part of the granola lifestyle? Can the Granola Project bring granola out from under the connotations of hippie-dippy-mama meets convenience?! (Sorry, I’m getting excited.)
L: Thank you for the hair compliment. I suppose it has become my signature thing. But what's most impressive is how you managed to weave Annie Hall and granola in the same conversation—I am thinking A Neurotic Granola. Oh, and Walter De Maria is totally inspired and he just put it out there.
I go through a lot of obsessions and my head rattles with images from music, art, film, etc. Food is the place where all this energy takes shape—that's the glue in my life. I appreciate anything culinary that is open for interpretation and constant reinterpretation, but at heart, I am a purist (a bit of a contradiction, I know!). Granola Project can be the whipping post of all my passing fancies. The granola of 1972 is not the granola of 2010. it may have undertones and a scent of a hippie past but this granola is au courant—it's what is happening right now.
A: What are some tips for tackling your own granola at home?L: Like anything you take on in life—watch the heat; don't worry about being too careful; good quality well chosen ingredients, and excess passion and love.
A: And lastly, when will it be available in stores??!
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