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I am specifically dealing with oat flakes, however I would be happy to hear answers from the spectrum of oats.

Preferably cheap, healthy, fast and easy but a comparison of the different possible methods would be great. If anybody could tag this post with oatmeal that'd be great.

I bought a bunch of oats (a nice bulk bag), and have learned the distinction between oats and the quick cooking instant oatmeal which I love.

Upon adding boiling water to the oats, I am left with softened oats but how can I get a product similar to instant oatmeal with the bulk oats I have already purchased?

user1821961
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2 Answers2

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I use large flake oats. Two-to-one by volume tap water to oats in a bowl. Don't even stir, you'll have to do something with the wet spoon if you do. Handful of dried raisins and/or cranberries. Microwave for 2 minutes at 70%. Add a few shakes of salt (salt is really important for oatmeal) and give it a good stir. When you take it out of the microwave it will look done, but stirring will reveal there are less cooked oats under the ones at the top.

Give it another 2 minutes at 70 and stir it well again. I often stir in a little milk at this point, which can cool it as well as making it creamier. If you find you would like it sweeter, a little brown sugar or maple syrup over the top and not stirred in work wonderfully.

If instead of large flake you have quick oats, you'll need less time in the microwave. Instant oats need only boiling water, but they generally only come pre-flavoured and sweetened. If you did get plain instant, you'd probably want to cut your dried fruit small so it would be ok with just boiling water. Steel cut oats need significant cooking - most people I know use a slow cooker over night. If you're not sure what you got from the bulk store, either experiment with different cooking times until you're happy, or look for pictures of various oat forms until you know what you have.

Kate Gregory
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Instant porridge/oatmeal normally has milk powder added to par-cooked oats. Non-instant porridge normally uses milk. You can make a water porridge, but soaking is good for most oats if you're going to do that. The exact method will depend on what sort of oats you have, but you will need to simmer for a few minutes at a minimum.

If you want a handy shelf-stable preparation my camping recipe works well: 60g of rolled oats, 30g of milk powder, 1 tsp sugar, and any dry flavourings you like (cinammon, dried fruit...). Add 350-400ml of hot water, bring back to the boil, turn down heat and cook until done. I actually turn the heat right off for about 10 minutes and cover/wrap in a towel, to save camping fuel and because my stove is rather fierce, before finishing off over the heat. This can also be microwaved in a large bowl - 2 minutes on high, wait a few minutes, 1 minute on high, repeat the wait/1 minute part until ready.

Chris H
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