Comment by zoklet-enjoyer
4 hours ago
Just a few hours ago while celebrating Easter, I had a discussion about oatmeal with my girlfriend's husband's dad about all the ways oatmeal can be enjoyed. My favorite way to make it is let the oatmeal sit overnight in vanilla soy milk, then mix in peanut butter, coffee, and cocoa powder or chocolate protein powder, and microwave. It's so good. I eat that at work maybe two or 3 times a week.
> with my girlfriend's husband's dad
With your what now?
I can’t figure out which is worse, a girlfriend’s husband’s dad, or a husband’s girlfriend’s dad.
My girlfriend is married but they been split up for like 10+ years, just never got divorced. We're all friends and it's all good.
I appreciate the world building in this oatmeal comment
that was an unexpected Occam!
I do roughly the same thing -Just oats with nuts and berries, no coffee or powder- but I haven't landed on what kind of oats to use yet for soaked oats. There are a ton of different kinds out there.
I usually just get the quick oats. I dunno the difference between em all. Texture doesn't really matter to me.
Sometimes I like to put a banana in there or some blueberries.
Quick oats are typically just rolled/cut to be smaller, so that they have a higher total surface area and so soak up liquid more easily. The downside is that this also makes them easier/faster to digest, so they have a higher glycaemic index (i.e. deliver a higher blood sugar spike) and give a shorter period of satiety.
Rolled oats are the uncut variety, which don't cook quickly for convenient porridge, but are great to soak as overnight oats. You can also get some which are basically in the middle - cut a bit so good for reasonably quick porridge (~5-7 minutes) but a bit more filling.
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Alton Brown did a great episode of good eats about oats. Basically, the faster they cook the fewer vitamins and minerals and good things there are in it for you