Oatmeal

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Oatmeal
Oatmeal.jpg
Rolled oats, a type of oatmeal
Origin
Alternative name(s) White oats
Details
Type Porridge
Main ingredient(s) Oat groats

Oatmeal is oat groats (i.e. grains) that have been ground, steel-cut, crushed, or rolled. Ground oats are also called 'white oats'.

The term 'oatmeal' is also used in the U.S. and parts of Canada to mean oat porridge.

Use

Baked oatmeal in a dish

The oat grains are de-husked by impact, then heated and cooled to stabilize the oat groats, the seed inside the husk. The process of heating produces a nutty flavour in the oats.[1] These oat groats may be milled to produce fine, medium or coarse oatmeal.[2] Rolled oats are steamed and flattened whole oat groats. Steel-cut oats may be small and broken groats from the de-husking process; these may be steamed and flattened to produce smaller rolled oats. Quick-cooking rolled oats (quick oats) are cut into small pieces before being steamed and rolled. Instant oatmeal is pre-cooked and dried, usually with sweetener and flavouring added.[3][4] Both types of rolled oats may be eaten uncooked as in muesli or may be cooked to make porridge. It is also used as an ingredient in oatmeal cookies, oatcakes, British flapjack bars and baked oatmeal, or as an accent, as in the topping on many oat bran breads and the coating on Caboc cheese. In some countries rolled oats are eaten raw with milk and sugar or raisins (like a basic muesli). Oatmeal is also used as a thickening agent in savoury Arabic/Egyptian thick meat-and-vegetable soups, and sometimes in meatloaf.

The term "oatmeal" sometimes refers to porridge made from the bran or fibrous husk as well as the oat kernel or groat.[5]

An oatmeal bath, made by adding a cup of finely ground oatmeal to one's bathwater, is also commonly used to ease the discomfort associated with such conditions as chickenpox, poison ivy, eczema, sunburn and dry skin.[6]

Breakfast cereal health benefits

Daily consumption of a bowl of oatmeal can lower blood cholesterol, because of its beta-glucan content.[7] After it was reported that oats can help lower cholesterol, an "oat bran craze"[8][9] swept the U.S. in the late 1980s, peaking in 1989. The food craze was short-lived and faded by the early 1990s. The popularity of oatmeal and other oat products increased again after the January 1997 decision by the Food and Drug Administration that food with a lot of oat bran or rolled oats can carry a label claiming it may reduce the risk of heart disease when combined with a low-fat diet. This is because of the beta-glucan in the oats. Rolled oats have long been a staple of many athletes' diets, especially weight trainers, because of its high content of complex carbohydrates and water-soluble fibre that encourages slow digestion and stabilizes blood-glucose levels. Oatmeal porridge also contains more B vitamins and calories than other kinds of porridges.[10]

Regional variations

Scotland

Oatmeal has a long history in Scottish culinary tradition because oats are better suited than wheat to Scotland's short, wet growing season.[citation needed] Oats became the staple grain of that country. The ancient universities of Scotland had a holiday called Meal Monday to permit students to return to their farms and collect more oats for food.

Samuel Johnson referred, disparagingly, to this in his dictionary definition for oats: "A grain, which in England is generally given to horses, but in Scotland supports the people." His biographer, James Boswell, noted that Lord Elibank was said by Sir Walter Scott to have retorted, "Yes, and where else will you see such horses and such men?"[11]

A common method of cooking oatmeal in Scotland is to soak it overnight in salted water and cook on a low heat in the morning for a few minutes until the mixture thickens.

In Scotland, oatmeal is created by grinding oats into a coarse powder.[12] It may be ground fine, medium, or coarse, or rolled, or the groats may be chopped in two or three pieces to make what is described as pinhead oatmeal.[13] Ground oatmeal, rolled oats, and pinhead oatmeal, are all used (throughout Britain); one Scots manufacturer describes varieties as "Scottish Porridge Oats" (rolled), "Scottish Oatmeal" (medium ground), and "Pinhead Oatmeal".[14] The main uses are:

  • Traditional porridge
  • Brose: a thick mixture made with uncooked oatmeal (or medium oatmeal that has been dry toasted by stirring it around in a dry pot over heat until it turns a slightly darker shade and emits a sweet, nutty fragrance) and then adding butter or cream. Brose is eaten like porridge but is much more filling.
  • Quick-cooking rolled oats (distinct from "instant" variations) are often used for this purpose nowadays, because they are quicker to prepare.[13]
  • Gruel, made by mixing oatmeal with cold water that is strained and heated for the benefit of infants and people recovering from illness.
  • as an ingredient in baking
Oatmeal is a prime ingredient of haggis, seen here at a Burns supper
  • in the manufacture of bannocks or oatcakes
  • as a stuffing for poultry
  • as a coating for Caboc cheese
  • as the main ingredient of the Scottish dish skirlie, or its chip-shop counterpart, the deep-fried thickly-battered mealy pudding
  • mixed with sheep's blood, salt, and pepper to make Highland black pudding (marag dubh).
  • mixed with fat, water, onions and seasoning, and boiled in a sheep's intestine to make marag geal, Outer Hebridean white pudding, served sliced with fried eggs at breakfast. A sweeter version with dried fruit is also known.
  • as a major component of haggis.
  • in sowans, not strictly made from the meal but as a porridge-like dish made from the fermented inner husks of oats[15][16]

Staffordshire

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Staffordshire oatcakes are a local component of the full English breakfast. It is a plate-sized pancake, made with equal parts medium oatmeal and wheatmeal (flour), along with frothing yeast. Once the mixture has risen to produce something like a Yorkshire pudding batter, it is ladled onto a griddle or bakestone, and dried through. Staffordshire oatcakes are commonly paired with bacon, sausages, mushrooms, kidney, baked beans, among others.

Nordic countries and the Baltic

Havregrynsgröt, havregrød or kaurapuuro (Finnish) is a porridge made from rolled oats, water and/or milk and often added raisins. It is a traditional breakfast staple in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Estonia, Latvia (auzu pārslu [biez]putra) and Lithuania (avižinių dribsnių košė). Porridge made from rye (vattgröt) or barley (bjuggröt) was more common during the Middle Ages.[17]

See also

References

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  3. Trowbridge Filippone, F. (2007) "Oatmeal Recipes and Cooking Tips" About.com
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  5. Prewett's (manufacturer of oatmeal)
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Mayo Clinic Staff. Cholesterol: The top five foods to lower your numbers. MayoClinic.com
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  10. New Standard Encyclopedia, 1992 by Standard Educational Corporation, Chicago, Illinois; page O-8.
  11. The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D.: Including a Journal of His Tour to the Hebrides. Volume 3 by James Boswell. New York: Derby & Jackson, , 1858. Page 11.
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  13. 13.0 13.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  14. Oatmeal product list of a Scots manufacturer
  15. McNeill, F. Marian (1929). The Scots Kitchen. Paperback: 259 pages, Edinburgh: Mercat Press; New Edition (25 Oct 2004) ISBN 1-84183-070-4, p202
  16. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  17. Ohlmarks, Åke (1995). Fornnordiskt lexikon. Tiden. p. 115