I’m too crabby to blog officially today because yesterday I severely pulled my calf muscle doing the dangerous and exciting activity of…stepping off a curb.  Yes—one minute I’m walking on a little errand instead of driving there, perhaps whistling (okay, not really), congratulating myself for lessening my carbon footprint while at the same getting exercise and enjoying a lovely spring day—and next thing you know, I’m in the middle of the street in immense pain after stepping off the curb (not even a high curb).
Being from Iowa, a stoic place, I continued on my errand, which wasn’t a good plan.  (Stoicism can be so over-rated.)
Now, I’m lurching/hobbling around like Frankenstein with a peg leg.  That was a fun way to ride the metro last night at rush hour, let me tell you; those hordes pause for nothing!  To top it off, I’m supposed to go out to dinner on Saturday AND Sunday, and now I can’t wear my cute new shoes. 
A moment, please, as we contemplate how tragically difficult my life is. 
So, no writing about writing today.  Instead, I’ll pass along a recipe, and since the last recipe I shared was for stuffing (mmm), here’s something that sounds more healthful though it probably isn’t; granola is tricky that way.  I think this might be from Better Homes and Garden magazine, but I’m not sure; I’ve been making it for quite a while.  Don’t be afraid: it’s easy.
 
GRANOLA
4 cups old-fashioned oats (NOT the one minute kind; NOT instant)
1 ½ cups sliced almonds
½ cup packed light brown sugar (I actually like the new, loose brown sugar for this if you can find it)
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ cup cooking oil (i.e. canola, vegetable)
¼ cup honey
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 ½ cups raisins or dried cranberries (a half-and-half mix is nice, too)
1.  Preheat oven to 300 degrees.  In a bowl, mix the oats, almonds, brown sugar, salt, and cinnamon.  In a saucepan warm the oil and honey.  Whisk or stir in vanilla.  Carefully pour liquid over oat mixture.  Stir gently with a wooden spoon; finish mixing by hand.
2.  Spread granola in a 15x10x1 inch baking pan. (I suppose two regular cookie sheets would work also, as long as they have a rim; also, I spray the baking sheet with Pam to keep the granola from sticking.)  Bake 40 minutes, stirring carefully every 10 minutes.  Transfer granola-filled pan to a rack; cool completely.  Stir in raisins/cranberries.  Seal granola in an airtight container or self-sealing plastic bags.  Store at room temperature for 1 week or in freezer for 3 months.  Makes 9 cups (24 servings).  186 calories/serving