Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Bite by Bite: Nourishments & Jamborees by Aimee Nezhukumatathil

   


I have a lot of cookbooks in my TBR, and there is nothing my husband loves more than for me to cook. To inspire me, I took photos with 24 cookbooks I have and I've prescheduled one post a month for the next two years. I'll plan to link up with In My Kitchen, hosted by Sherry's Pickingsand Weekend Cooking, hosted by Marg at The Intrepid Reader (and Baker). To further inspire me, I've created a Cooking/Baking Challenge for me for 2026 in which I read and bake from and post about one cookbook a month.



Aimee Nezhukumatathil shares the foods of her life, food by food, bite by bite, and, in the process, tells the stories of her life. 

Some of the foods are exotic to me and I've never seen these: Pawpaw, lumpia, bangus, lychee, jackfruit, mangosteen, kaong, gyro, leche flan, halo-halo.

Some of the foods are foods I have heard of, but I've never cooked or baked with: Mango, mint, crawfish, gyro. 

Some of the foods are foods I have cooked with once: Risotto.

Some of the foods are foods I use often: Rice, pineapple, cinnamon, blackberries, vanilla, black pepper, apples, bing cherry, Concord grape, maple syrup, butter, waffles, sugarcane, coconut.

Some of the foods are so familiar to me that I actually grow them in my yard and cook with them all the time: Tomato, onion, watermelon, pecan, figs, potato.

Here's a recipe I make that uses several of these foods. You can choose to leave out any of the ingredients you don't like.



My Mom's Homemade Granola

Oats     Coconut     Sesame seeds
Sunflower seeds     Pecans     Walnuts
Vanilla     Cherries (dried)     Cinnamon
Maple syrup     Almonds (sliced)     Honey
Oil     Cranberries     Raisins

Mix together oats, coconut, sunflower seeds, sesame seeds, pecans, walnuts, almonds in a huge pot. Add oil and honey and vanilla and maple syrup and cinnamon and stir well. Put onto rimmed cookie sheets and bake at 325 degrees F for about an hour, turning and stirring several times to get a nice brown bake. Put the baked mix into storage containers and add in cranberries and raisins and cherries. Granola can be frozen. 



My mom would collect and refill our granola storage container every year as her Christmas gift to us. Even though she passed away fifteen years ago, I can still see my mom's faded blue letters: Deb and Jim's Granola Jar. Every time I make granola, I think of my mom.


Be a part of the friendly In My Kitchen (IMK) community by adding your post at Sherry's Pickings each month - everybody welcome!  We'd love to have you visit.  Tell us about your kitchen (and kitchen garden) happenings over the past month.  Dishes you've cooked, preserves you've made, herbs and veg. in your garden, kitchen gadgets, and goings-on.  And one curveball is welcome - whatever you fancy; no need to be kitchen-related. The link is open from the first of the month to midnight on the thirteenth of the month, every month.

Weekend Cooking was created by Beth Fish Reads and is now hosted by Marg at The Intrepid Reader (and Baker). It is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book (novel, nonfiction) reviews, cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page. For more information, see the welcome post.  

For more photos, link up at Wordless WednesdayComedy PlusMessymimi's MeanderingsKeith's RamblingsImage-in-ingSoul and Mind and So OnWild Bird Wednesday, and My Corner of the World.

21 comments:

  1. Lovely cover on this book. I love granola, Deb.

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  2. We have two shelves of cookbooks, most of which are not used these days. New recipes are almost exclusively taken from the internet, and so many people share their favourite recipes on their blogs, as in fact you are doing here. I think that a trip to the thrift store is in the cards!

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  3. I love this post and I love granola so thanks for sharing the recipe. It looks good and I may have to try it. I don't have all the ingredients but I have a bunch of them. I want the house to feel warm and cozy and smell good and that would help! I'm looking forward to this series -- it will be loads of fun!

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  4. Granola has such an interesting history. The word (and the mixture) originated in the 19th century with a health-food movement popular over 150 years ago. It was low key for a while — then in the 1960s, as I recall, it became generally a home-made thing, not mainstream. As you would expect the Big Cereal people took over. Now the People are taking it back. I have a heretical view that my home made granola wasn’t that much better than the kind you buy in a bag, but that’s contrary of me.

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  5. Hubby makes granola and it's most delicious. Food is something wonderful to share with those you love.

    Thank you for joining the Wordless Wednesday Blog Hop.

    Have a fabulous Wordless Wednesday. ♥

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  6. It's lovely that you have that reminder (not that you would need one) of your mother. This brings back some memories for me of when I actually did make my own granola years ago. These days I just buy it at the grocery store, already made. It's convenient but not nearly as good (I think) as what I used to make.

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  7. That granola looks good. What a cute picture of you.

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  8. interesting project you gave yourself.

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  9. What a great recipe. Happy cooking and exploring cookbooks!

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  10. thanks for joining in Deb. I will add your post manually (as it's post 13th Jan. - no worries of course). I like to make toasted muesli (granola) now and then too. So nice to add your own fave bits and bobs.
    cheers
    sherry

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  11. I wish you well with your challenge! As a retired chef, I'm sure I'd find that book intriguing!

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  12. I found a delicious recipe for granola in a cookbook of Melissa Clark's and make a big batch every week or so. Oats, coconut chips, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, pecans, maple syrup, oil and brown sugar. Very similar to yours! Time for me to get back to my cookbooks. I'm getting bored with our usual rotation for dinners.

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  13. What a fun challenge! The granola looks delicious!

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  14. I've borrowed this book from the library and enjoyed skimming it - many exotic, for me, foods too. Good luck with your challenge and I will look forward to your posts.

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  15. I love your idea, of one cookbook per month -- and pictures :-) That will be fun for you *and* your husband.

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  16. The granola looks delicious. Enjoy.
    rsrue.blogspot.com

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  17. I am so glad to have you joining us in Weekend Cooking, and I look forward to seeing all your posts!

    I enjoyed this one too. My post will be up on Saturday!

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  18. Ah, here's the granola post! I forgot to share my Sunday post to Weekend Cooking (Morning Glory Muffins) so maybe I can still share it next weekend.

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  19. I'm glad you enjoyed this book. I don't like cooking (I'd rather be reading) but I do it. I love this author's writing and her memories surrounding food. I had a mead at a meadery in Georgia that incorporated pawpaw. It was odd at first but it grew on me. Good luck with your challenge!

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