Wheat & Dried Fruit Porridge

Another one of my winning recipes from this week came to me from The Essential EatingWell Cookbook: Good Carbs, Good Fats, Great Flavors. It’s called Wheat & Dried Fruit Porridge. I don’t think I’m in the minority when I say that the only experience I have with the word “porridge” is through fairy tales. Something about Goldilocks and porridges of various unsatisfying temperatures…
So I don’t know what possessed me to try this one. My only bulgur wheat experience comes from tabbouli and I’ve never had porridge. My expectations were fairly low going into this one, but both my breakfast-hating husband and I ended up loving the warm, creamy sweetness of this dish. And it really was creamy! I don’t know why, as there’s nothing guilt-worthy in this recipe. I think that the dried fruit in the simmering water lent a lot of flavor to the mixture. Oh and it has 48% of the fiber you need in a day, in one steamy cup. Even better!
I found that the cooking time that the Eating Well folks suggested was totally off. I ended up following the directions from my bulgur box and I would recommend that you do the same. The original recipe calls for cooking the grain for only 4-5 minutes. I found that it needed at least 10 minutes cooking time. Just make sure that almost all of the liquid if absorbed before serving.
Another guilt-free breakfast! Now if only I could get my ass out of bed in time to prepare these goodies before having to run to work each morning. That’s literally a mission impossible. So realistically… I guess this will only have to be a weekend treat.
Wheat & Dried Fruit Porridge
Adapted from The Essential EatingWell Cookbook
Serves 2 (about 1 cup each)
1/3 cup dried apricots, sliced
1/3 cup dried cranberries (E.W. recommends currants)
1 T honey or to taste
1/4 t ground cinnamon, plus more for garnish
Pinch of salt
2 cups water
2/3 cup bulgur
Combine apricots, cranberries, honey, cinnamon, salt, and water in a saucepan. Bring to a simmer over medium heat. Stir in bulgur; cook, stirring constantly, until the bulgur starts to thicken, 1 to 2 minutes. Remove from the heat, cover and let stand until most of the liquid is absorbed and the fruit is tender, according to the directions on your box of bulgur. Divide between 2 bowls, dust with a little cinnamon and serve.


Looks lovely! Porridge is just oatmeal as far as I’m aware, its just that we brits call it something different to you americans. Do you have the nutritional content?
Comment by Jenny — January 19, 2006 @ 9:37 am
i too always associate porridge with oatmeal! i’m very curious to try this out and i may even have some bulgar deep within my cupboard!
Comment by jeannette — January 19, 2006 @ 10:42 pm
That looks really interesting! I love bulgur! I wm going to try this, thanks!
Comment by patti — January 20, 2006 @ 7:11 am
Sounds really good! My first experience with porridge was on a trip to England and after eating nothing but Indian food an dfish for three weeks decided to give some “British Cuisine” a try. The porridge was to die for - wish I hadn’t waited to the last day of the trip to try it.
Comment by Rorie — January 20, 2006 @ 10:54 am
Oh and you know the best thing to have with porridge is golden syrup. Mmmmm. Get it at cost plus world market.
Comment by Jenny — January 20, 2006 @ 11:00 am
Real nice looking.. have linked you on my weekend Culilinkus..
Comment by anthony — January 21, 2006 @ 7:33 am
just a thought - bulgar comes in various coarseness, so maybe eating well used a fine bulgar where you had a medium?
Comment by dave — January 28, 2006 @ 8:26 pm