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I am looking for a way to prepare fast steel-cut oats.
I do not have a microwave, and I would like to have them for breakfast but I can not cook for ~40 mins to prepare them in the morning.
I have tried to cook them by simmering them ~10 mins till the water is gone but they did not taste good (were actually uncooked).
I have also tried leaving them overnight in a bowl of milk but they were not easy to eat either (was like chewing gum)
Note1: yes I know about instant oats etc but these are less nutritious than steel-cut oats so I am looking for a way to prepare them fast.

Note2: I don't care if the fast method suggested is for a warm or cold recipe. Either warm or cold are fine by me.

Debbie M.
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Jim
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  • This is like asking if there's a way to make rice in under 20 minutes... Do you have a rice cooker with a timer? – Catija Oct 31 '15 at 23:10
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    Are you open to going the opposite direction and doing some prep the night before? Recipes for slow-cooker steel cut oats aren't too unusual... – logophobe Oct 31 '15 at 23:49
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    I cook a large batch on Sunday night and then simply put servings of it in the microwave every morning. Steel cut oats are sturdy enough that they can be eaten days later and still taste pretty much the same. – Erica Nov 01 '15 at 00:26
  • I think you missed the word "cook" from the title. I was wondering how you cut oats with a microwave. 2. Exactly how much flexibility do you have in terms of acceptable end products? Must it be something porridge-like, or can it be e.g. flapjack?
  • – Peter Taylor Nov 01 '15 at 07:44
  • @logophobe:Yes I don't mind doing something the night before – Jim Nov 01 '15 at 08:40
  • @Erica:I don't have a microwave – Jim Nov 01 '15 at 08:41
  • @PeterTaylor:Sure I am flexible – Jim Nov 01 '15 at 08:43
  • @Jim I know, that's what I do. They can also be eaten cold, or stirred for a couple minutes in a pot to reheat. The microwave step does not (substantially) further cook the oats. – Erica Nov 01 '15 at 11:03
  • @Erica: 1) What is the ratio of water/oats for the large batch on Sunday night? 2) What is the proper temperature/water addition ration for reheat in a pot? – Jim Nov 01 '15 at 11:55
  • @Jim 1) Standard (4:1) and 2) no water, temperature depends on how warm you want them. Frankly, I find them tastiest cold. – Erica Nov 02 '15 at 16:18
  • related: https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/47097/whats-the-fastest-way-to-cook-oatmeal-porridge – rumtscho Aug 03 '18 at 16:21