CATEGORY |
CUISINE |
TAG |
YIELD |
Dairy |
Vegetarian |
Bread |
12 |
Servings |
INGREDIENTS
1/2 |
c |
Milk |
2 1/4 |
c |
White or wheat flour |
1 1/2 |
T |
Sugar |
1/2 |
|
Onion, minced |
1 |
t |
Salt |
1/2 |
t |
Dried dill weed |
1 |
|
Yeast |
1 |
t |
Crushed, dried rosemary |
1/2 |
c |
Warm water |
INSTRUCTIONS
Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 14:22:39 -0500 From: Dotnapier@aol.com Scald
the milk and dissolve in it the sugar and salt; cool to lukewarm. In a
large bowl, dissolve the yeast in the warm water. Add the cooled milk,
flour, minced onion, and herbs, and stir well with a large, wooden
spoon. When the batter is smooth, cover the bowl with a towel and let
the cough rise in a warm place until triple in bulk--about 45 minutes.
Stir down and beat vigorously for a few minutes, then turn into a
greased bread pan. Let it stand in a warm place about 10 minutes
before putting it into a preheated, 350 F oven. Bake about 1 hour.
Notes: I like to substitute oregano for the rosemary because I'm an
oregano freak. I usually add more herbs than it calls for. I sometimes
add dried parsley, just so that there are more little green flecks in
the dough. (That way people know they are supposed to be there, and
not just something weird that fell in the dough). Even though this
recipe doesn't call for it, I knead the dough, because I'm happier
with the texture that way. This bread smells incredible when baking!
Making bread by hand may seem daunting, but it only took me about 2 or
3 batches to get used to it. Once you learn how to do it, it's very
rewarding, and doesn't really take that much time. It takes several
hours, start to finish, but most of that time is not labor-intensive.
I'm glad that people with bread machines are getting the taste of real
bread, but it seems to me that they're missing out a lot of the
experience. I hope you enjoy these! Basic Bread Info: Most recipes
call for dissolving the yeast in warm water. Hot water out of the tap
can be too warm for this. The water should be about 100-110 F (37-42C,
310-315K). If it is too hot, you will kill the yeast and your bread
won't rise. Test it on your wrist like you would baby formula.
Kneading the dough develops the gluten. It is also when you add the
last bits of flour. Since flour varies so much in moisture content,
the amount of flour you add will be a little different every time.
Books always say to quit kneading when the dough is smooth and satiny.
I usually stop kneading when it doesn't stick to my hands anymore.
Then I let it rise. I put a little oil in the bottom of a bowl, put in
the dough then turn the dough upside down. The point of this is to
grease the top of your dough so that it doesn't dry out. You could
spray it with Pam instead, or make sure it rises in a fairly humid
spot (put a bowl of warm water next to it while rising) . Then put a
dish towel over the bowl and put it in a warm draft-free place. I use
my oven, even though it isn't THAT warm. Do NOT turn the oven on. Let
the dough rise until doubled (i.e., it's twice as big as it was
before.) Then punch it down, by literally punching your fist into the
dough. This is fun! The dough collapses. Now, some recipes call for
letting the dough rise again. This gives the bread a lighter texture.
Now you form your loaves and bake it. ALWAYS preheat the oven. The
bread is done when it pulls away from the side of the pan. OR, you can
take it out of the oven, flip it out of the pan, and knock on the
bottom. If it sounds hollow, it's done. This is the true baker's way,
but I can never tell if it's hollow or not. You can eat bread fresh
out of the oven, but it's easier to cut if you wait until it cools. It
tastes better if you don't wait, though! Posted by "Von Balson,
Kathleen" <VBalson@IT.jea.ci.jax.fl.us> to the Fatfree Digest [Volume
14 Issue 7] Jan. 7, 1995. :from "The Vegetarian Epicure" by Anna
Thomas: Individual recipes copyrighted by originator. FATFREE Recipe
collections copyrighted by Michelle Dick 1995. Formatted by Sue Smith,
SueSmith9@aol.com using MMCONV. Archived through kindness of Karen
Mintzias, km@salata.com. MM-RECIPES@IDISCOVER.NET MEAL-MASTER RECIPES
LIST SERVER MM-RECIPES DIGEST V3 #83 From the MealMaster recipe list.
Downloaded from Glen's MM Recipe Archive, http://www.erols.com/hosey.
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