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Our parents (Adam and Eve) fell for it, and in them we have all fallen for it. It is now part of our nature. We take the mirror of God's image which was intended to reflect His glory in the world, turn our backs to the light, and fall in love with the contours of our own dark shadow, trying desperately to convince ourselves (with technological advances, or management skills or athletic prowess or academic achievements or sexual exploits or counter cultural hair styles) that the dark shadow of the image on the ground in front of us is really glorious and satisfying. In our proud love affair with ourselves we pour contempt, whether we know it or not, on the worth of God's glory.
John Piper

Flour Tortillas #05

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables Bread 12 Servings

INGREDIENTS

3 c Unbleached all-purpose four
1/3 c Vegetable oil; such as corn, safflower; or olive oil
1 ts Salt
1 c Tap water

INSTRUCTIONS

From: Kenji_Kono@postoffice.brown.edu (Kenji Kono)
Date: Tue, 30 Aug 1994 02:53:27 GMT
From the Well-Filled Tortilla by Victoria Wise and Susanna Hoffman (page
30) purchased at a Buck a Book store:
1.  Place the flour in a mixing bowl.  Add the oil and mix together with a
fork or your fingers until thoroughly distributed and the flour is crumbly
in texture.
2.  Mix the salt with the warm tap water and add to the flour.  Mix
together with your hands until you can gather the dough into a ball. Place
the dough on an unfoured board and knead until smooth and elastic, 3 to 5
minutes. Return the dough to the mixing bowl, cover with a towel, place it
in a warmish spot, and let rest for up to 2 hours, but no less than 30
minutes.  The dough may be wrapped in plastic and stored in the
refrigerator.  Use within 1 day.
3.  To make the tortillas, divide the dough into 12 equal pieces and roll
each between your palms to make a ball. Flatten the balls, then place on a
very lightly floured board. With a rolling pin, roll each ball into an 8-
to 9-inch very thin round. The uncooked flour tortillas may be layered
between sheets of plastic wrap and stored in the refrigerator overnight.
4.  To cook the tortillas, heat a heavy cast-iron frying pan, griddle, or
comal over medium-high heat.  Place the tortillas, one at a time or as many
as will fit without overlapping, in the pan and cook for 30 seconds. If the
tortillas puff up, gently press them down with a spatula.  Turn and cook on
the other side until speckled with brown spots but still pliable and not
crisp, about 30 seconds more.  Remove and stack as you go, while the
tortillas are still warm. Used the cooked tortillas right away or reheat
ust before serving.
REC.FOOD.RECIPES
From rec.food.cooking archives.  Downloaded from Glen's MM Recipe Archive,
http://www.erols.com/hosey.

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