Large Clump Granola
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This granola is a staple in our house: my children are never happier than when they walk into the kitchen to find a freshly baked batch cooling on a sheet pan. Seasoned with maple syrup and sea salt, and loaded with nuts and seeds, this granola is not only super tasty but healthy to boot. Read below to find my tips for making excellent large-clump granola.
As I mentioned a few weeks ago in the Bircher muesli post, this granola is a staple in our house, one treat my kids never tire of, a great healthy breakfast or after school snack.
Four Tips for Making Granola that Clumps
- Don’t stir. Don’t stir while it’s baking; don’t stir after you remove it from the oven.
- Bake at a lower temperature. I bake this granola at 275ºF for 45 minutes to an hour or until it’s lightly golden all around. The lower temperature allows the granola to brown slowly and evenly without having to stir.
- Once you remove the granola from the oven, let it cool completely on its sheetpan — this allows it to crisp up further and set. Once cool, you can break the granola into big ragged shards.
- Parchment paper sheets: Parchment paper prevents the granola from sticking to the pan and therefore allows it to break away into big chunks. Save the sheets and use them again and again — store the used sheets in a bag.
Large-Batch Granola
If you’re going through the process of making granola, I don’t think there’s any point in making anything other than a large batch. With that in mind, here’s one final tip:
- Invest in a single large sheetpan: I love these 15x21x1-inch sheetpans. The below recipe yields nearly 3 quarts of granola. You can spread the granola over two standard sheet pans, but a single large sheetpan makes the process easier.
PS: Homemade muesli + Bircher muesli, another staple:
How to Make Large-Clump Granola
First, gather your ingredients. Combine rolled oats, almonds, millet, unsweetened coconut, sea salt, maple syrup, and oil (melted coconut oil or a neutral oil such as grapeseed) in a large bowl. Toss to combine.
Spread onto a parchment-lined sheetpan.
Bake until evenly and lightly golden.
Let cool completely; then break into shards.
Store in an airtight vessel at room temperature.
PrintLarge Clump Granola
- Total Time: 1 hour 10 minutes
- Yield: 10 cups
Description
You can bake this granola on two sheetpans, rotating them halfway through the cooking. OR, bake the entire batch on a large 15x21x1-inch sheetpan.
Parchment paper sheets — can’t say enough about them. Save them and use them again and again — I fold mine up and stick them in a ziplock bag.
The recipe halves well, too. See notes below the recipe for those proportions.
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup (160 g) whole millet
- 4 cups (408 g) oats (not instant)
- 1 1/2 cups (100 g) unsweetened coconut flakes
- 2 1/2 cups (220 g) sliced almonds
- 2 teaspoons (7 g) sea salt, such as Maldon
- 1 cup maple syrup
- 1/3 cup grapeseed oil or other neutral oil or melted coconut oil
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 275ºF.
- In a large bowl, toss together the millet, oats, coconut flakes, almonds and salt. Pour in the maple syrup and oil. Stir to coat.
- Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and spread the oat mixture out on it. Place it in the oven and bake for 45 minutes to hour, or until the edges look slightly dark. Note: As soon as you start smelling it, start checking it. This may take you 30 minutes; it may take you an hour and 15 minutes depending on your oven and baking pan. Really try to use the visual cues: lightly golden throughout with slightly darker edges.
- Do not stir: As in: Do not stir during the cooking process or when it comes out of the oven.
- Let the mixture cool completely on sheet pan. When ready to store, lift up edges of parchment to loosen the granola — this will create nice big shards. Transfer shards to storage container. Pour in remaining granola — it will inevitably break into smaller pieces.
Notes
For a half recipe, use these proportions:
- 1/2 cup (102 g) whole millet
- 2 cups (204 g) oats (not instant)
- 3/4 cup (48 g) unsweetened coconut flakes
- 1 1/4 cups (128 g) sliced almonds
- 1 tsp sea salt
- 1/2 cup maple syrup
- 3 tablespoons grapeseed oil or coconut oil (melted)
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 hour
- Category: Breakfast
- Method: Baked
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
245 Comments on “Large Clump Granola”
I love this company’s mission, empowering moms all over the world. I would be lucky to try their products. This granola recipe looks wonderful, I am learning to add/replace coconut oil in lots of my daily cooking. My 2 young boys would love this over some Greek yogurt and fruit. Thank you for another wonderful recipe, your blog is the best!
I love your recipe for the toasted granola and we do at least one batch per week. I will try the coconut oil for sure. Your blog is fantastic, so many recipes are keepers for our family. We can’t wait to hold your book in our hands. Thanks also for raising awareness of Fairtrade!
This granola looks great! Love that it uses fair trade and the lower temperature is a great idea (I burnt 2 batches of granola last week)
Yummy recipe, making it right now! Smells great. Love the no stir!
Terrific combination of items!
I love granola and make it nearly every other week.
This sounds amazing. Another small ingredient that makes a big difference is using both vanilla and almond extract. It is so subtle, but really delicious.
looks gorgeous!!
This granola recipe looks delicious! I’m always looking for new ways to use coconut oil in my cooking. Thanks for the giveaway!
I love using coconut oil in my granola! I agree – the subtle, coconut flavour it provides makes a wonderful difference. Thanks for sharing this recipe – it looks fantastic!
yum! this version looks awesome. i love using coconut oil in my granola. so good!
This looks so amazing. I can’t wait to try it!
Great granola recipe! My family loves it!
Fair Trade is awesome! I am a big fan and supporter. And I especially love the chocolates for baking.
Great giveaway! I’ll be dreaming about winning. Mmmmmm!
That looks like the best granola I’ve EVER seen. Yum!
I am definitely trying this granola! Thank you so much for the yummy recipe and giveaway. 🙂
I love multiple grain foods. I have never had millet in muesli even though I always have it in the pantry as a rice replacement. I will use it next time and will probably add some amaranth. I use both changing my five grain hot cereal to nine grain. I also add ground flax and chia.
what an incredible giveaway!!! so many amaazing goodies 🙂
Millet has become one of my favorite granola ingredients! So excited to see this recipe!
This granola looks amazing!
This granola looks delicious! I need to make this soon!
I’d love to win the fair trade prizes. Thanks for a fun giveaway.
This looks wonderful! I can eat packaged granola, but only if I absolutely have to. Your recipe looks easy enough and I’ll make it my Saturday project. YUM!
I love coconut and I love granola – this recipe looks perfect for me, especially since I just picked up some millet to try!
What gorgeous granola. I make my own too. they stuff you buy (even at Whole Foods) has too much stuff that I don’t want in it. I like to put pistachios in it sometimes though, and dried cherries.
I think my husband would love having this around to munch!
Thank you for the opportunity to win these lovely gifts! I just drool over your recipes. Thanks for your generosity.
Regards,
Jan
I am going to try this recipe and method! Lately, we’ve been addicted to “Grantola” from Dash and Bella. Lots of different ingredients. For sweeteners–maple syrup, brown sugar, & honey–and for fats–butter, olive oil, & coconut oil. We sub all seeds for nuts, but the stuff is amazing. Her trick for clumps is an egg white. Looking forward to trying yours!
This looks great! I have some millet that I’ve been trying to figure out what to do with… last thing I made with it was your millet banana bread, actually! I recently made granola where the liquid came from a mix of coconut butter (although coconut oil would be fine), maple syrup, and almond butter. Really good! I’d like to try baking my granola at a lower temp, but the lowest my oven goes is 170C, unfortunately, so I remain a slave to my timer and oven. 🙁
Olive using coconut oil in a granola bar recipe I have been using. Will definitely try your mudslides recipe! Thanks!
Wow…that granola looks so good! Looks really crunchy!
Thank you for sharing it!
Love fair trade!