Kimberly Roberto recently told me I needed to take out the "soon-to-be" part. Thanks, Kim! So, here it is.
Janet Early's Famous Teriyaki Almonds
• 4 Cups
raw almonds
• 1 cup
Liquid Aminos or Organic Tamari sauce
• ¼ cup –
1 cup balsamic Vinegar (This is an option - do not use if heating oven
above 250°F– the nuts will burn)
• 4 Cloves
mashed and chopped garlic (or 2 t. garlic powder)
• 2 “
finely peeled and ground fresh ginger (or 2 t. ginger powder)
• Dash – ¼
tsp. Stevita (optional)
• Dash of Cayenne powder (optional)
Mix together Liquid Aminos or Tamari sauce, garlic, ginger,
and optional balsamic vinegar, stevita and cayenne powder in a large glass or
stainless steel bowl. Add the almonds to the bowl and toss with a large spoon
to coat all the almonds. Put the bowl in
the oven, turn the oven to 350°F
for a few minutes, or just until preheated, and then turn the oven OFF. Leave the bowl in the oven for 1 – 3 hours
(can also leave overnight). Toss the
nuts to coat with sauce four or five times.
Taste-test the nuts occasionally.
When they are full of flavor, it is time to dehydrate or roast
them. First drain off the liquid using a
strainer. You can throw away the
liquids, or keep in the refrigerator for a week or two and use to coat a second
(probably smaller) batch of almonds.
Dehydrate the drained nuts in a dehydrator for 12-24 hours
(taste-tests will tell you when they are crispy enough to call done), or place
parchment paper on cookie sheets, cover the parchment paper with the drained
almonds and bake in 250°F oven.
Stir the almonds every 15 minutes or so, and taste-test until crispy. You can speed up the process by increasing
the temperature of the oven, but watch them carefully and stir more often so
they do not burn.
Note on dehydrating
or baking your almonds: Food that
has not been heated above 150°F,
maintains the live enzymes present in raw food.
There are numerous benefits to eating live, raw food. For this reason, I have dehydrated my almonds
most of the time and usually don’t let them soak for 1 – 3 hours in an oven that has been
preheated to 350°F. Instead, I will soak them for 24 – 48 hours
in an oven that has been turned on for 1 – 3 minutes only. Recently it has been pointed out that almonds
in the U.S. ,
even when labeled, “raw,” have been pasteurized. I’ve been thinking that the live enzymes in
almonds have already been destroyed, so lately I’ve been using the quick method
outlined above. Feel free to try it
either way. This is a hard recipe to
mess up.
Serving option: The almonds are good served as is, or mixed
with other nuts and large coconut flakes for a trail mix. The jars pictured above, behind the almonds
are filled with my latest trail mix featuring my famous teriyaki almonds.
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