Beyond Breakfast: The Many Surprising Uses for Oats

January may be National Oatmeal Month, but in my humble opinion, these grains deserve our adulation year-round. After all, there’s no better way to start the day than a steamy bowl of cooked oats topped with, well, anything you can imagine! Blueberries, bananas, raisins, almonds, peanut butter (yes, peanut butter), walnuts, brown sugar, honey, butter … the possibilities of combinations are endless and delicious. But even if you can’t get on the oatmeal-for-breakfast bandwagon, that doesn’t mean you can’t celebrate rolled oats with the rest of us. They have purposes far beyond the a.m. shift that benefit more than just heart health and satiety (both of which are due to oats’ high fiber content). With their many uses in culinary, beauty, and crafting endeavors, oats are diverse enough to play an important part in everyone’s daily routine. 

Take a Walk on the Savory Side
Oatmeal is traditionally thought of as a sweet breakfast food, but it’s actually as versatile as any grain. If the idea of a sugar rush in the morning is unappealing to your stomach, why not try a savory version of oatmeal? It’s a controversial idea, but one that Mark Bittman, food aficionado of the New York Times, has been championing as of late. He’s written about mixing soy sauce and scallions with cooked oats in a congee (an Asian porridge-style dish), or with olive oil and tapenade. Sounds strange, but think of what plain oatmeal tastes like—the answer is, not much. Like plain rice or grits, it serves as a building block for any number of flavors. And like grits, oatmeal’s enjoyable with cheese and/or a fried egg on top

Some people don’t like the texture of oatmeal, but oats themselves can be used in other dishes. When ground up in a food processer, oats become oat flour, a great substitution for all-purpose flour in recipes. Not only does oat flour offer more nutrients than white flour, but it has less calories, too (120, compared with 152 in a one-third-cup serving). It also works well in recipes that call for grains as a thickening or binding agent, such as meatloaf, meatballs, homemade burger patties, casseroles, chili, and so forth. Oats are a useful replacement for bread crumbs and a good coating for prefried foods as well. 

Skin Solutions for Everyone
Oats can make your insides and your outside healthy and happy. Inside these grains lie saponins, which act as natural cleansers when mixed with water. Not only do oats soothe dry and itchy skin, but the natural protein in them also helps lock in moisture. There’s a reason why oats are listed as ingredients in a number of lotions and skin creams—but luckily for us, there are less expensive ways to enjoy their skin-restoring properties. 

Make colloidal oatmeal—that’s oats ground into powder—and put it in the foot part of an old pair of nylons or in a piece of cheesecloth. Immerse the bundle in hot bathwater and soak in the goodness for twenty to thirty minutes. This treat is especially good for sufferers of chicken pox, rashes, eczema, and itchy, dry skin. Even if your skin’s not too sensitive, add milk and honey to an oat bath for an enhanced softening experience.

Oats are a great base for homemade facial masks. The other ingredients depend on skin type (for example, oily-skinned people shouldn’t go for egg yolks, and dry-skinned people should avoid egg whites), but simply mixing colloidal oatmeal with water so that it becomes a paste makes a good all-around mask. It scrubs pores clean and helps get rid of dead skin. 

No time to jump in the shower? Supposedly, colloidal oats and baking powder make dry shampoo, which you can rub through your hair and shake out to make it appear less greasy. 

Oats aren’t just beneficial for human complexions—dogs enjoy it, too! If your pup has itchy skin, mix water and colloidal oatmeal together and put it in a cloth bag, gently rubbing it on problem areas for a few minutes. 

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10.11.2011
emma manukian
mario tricoci at 900n michigan ave have perfect oatmeal scrab go get it
Trader Joe's used to make fabulous colloidal oatmeal lotion - I was so sad when they discontinued it.
01.21.2010
Harriet M
I definitely want to try the oatmeal mask. That sounds like it'd be great for skin.
I have always seen oatmeal as such a boring breakfast option but you have actually made it sound delicious! I will have to try it with peanut butter ...sounds yummy!
01.21.2010
Rebecca Brown
I had no idea January was National Oatmeal Month. Kind of a silly observation, but then again, not really ... I love oatmeal! Never heard of colloidal oatmeal before and its benefits...thanks for this info.
It feels good to write.

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