Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'Homesick Maple Muffins and Sausage Toes' imprimido.

Receta Homesick Maple Muffins and Sausage Toes
by Elizabeth Bard

Sorry for the hiatus – it’s been a heavy week, literally. Here I was – all proud of myself for being “pregnant like a French woman” with a basketball under my shirt. Then I discover at my appointment yesterday that I’ve gained 11 pounds in 10 days – most of it, it seems, in my toes. With two weeks to go, I am filling up with water like a fish tank.

My family has very long skinny toes – but now, they look like little sausages. Pigs without their blankets. It’s depressing and uncomfortable. I shudder to think of the opinion of a certain foot fetishist I dated after college. He would flee in horror.

It’s been quite a “French week” – by which I mean a week where I find out something stupid and ridiculous about this country that I must learn to accept. It’s about my family name. I am an only child – the last one to carry the Bard name, and I feel strongly that I’d like to pass it on to my child.

Apparently, in France, it is illegal to use the mother’s maiden name as a middle name. Even more bizarre, there is a new law that if you want to hyphenate with your husband’s last name, you have to use a double hyphen (- -), which pretty much guarantees mistakes and administrative woe for the rest of the kid’s life. I’m trying to be philosophical. Some days I succeed, some days I don’t.

During these French weeks – I often get homesick for American style food. I start reading The Joy of Cooking in bed and thinking a lot about cream cheese frosting. I was flipping though my copy of Maple Syrup Recipes by Ken Haedrich, where I found these Maple Oat Muffins. They are made with oats and buttermilk, which seemed like a wholesome way to deal with mid-morning carb cravings.

I had a pint of raspberries from the lone vendor still left at our Sunday market. Perfect. And a dead banana in the fridge. In it went.

For the sake of freshness – and portion control – I tend to freeze my muffins and bake them individually when I’m in the mood. With a sprinkle of brown sugar on top, they made my “French” week a little sweeter.

Preheat the oven to 400°. Line a 12 cup muffin tray tin with paper (or foil) liners and set aside.

Measure out the oats; crush between your fingers until you have a mixture of oats and “oat flour”. Add the other dry ingredients. Toss to combine.

In a separate bowl, whisk the eggs. Then blend in the buttermilk, maple syrup and oil. Mush up the dead banana and whisk to combine.

Make a well in the dry ingredients, pour in the egg mixture and stir just to combine.

Fill your muffin cups halfway. Add one or two raspberries. Cover with additional batter and top with two or three raspberries. Add a sprinkle of brown sugar and bake for 20-25 minutes, until toothpick comes out clean. Serve hot from the oven.

I freeze my muffins and bake them direct from the freezer. If you decide to do the same, add the sugar just before you put them in the oven. Bake for 30-35 minutes.

Makes 12 muffins.