potato substitutions
I have a recipe that requires dry (instant) mashed potatoes.
Can you substitute:
- Potato starch?
- Cooked mashed potatoes?
- Potato water?
If so, any recommendations on how best to work out the substitutions?
I have a recipe that requires dry (instant) mashed potatoes.
Can you substitute:
If so, any recommendations on how best to work out the substitutions?
Hi all,
I have recently come across a delicious bread called Alex's Wuppertaler bread.
The ingredients listed are
- Sour rye dough balm
- Bread making rye flour
- Salt
- Potato
- Olive oil (cholesterol free)
- Herbs and spices
- Water added
It's a lovely bread but comes all the way from Melbourne and i would love to know if anyone has any recipes with similar ingredients to this one that i could give a try
Cheers
A friend on the other side of the planet said he was making "Salt Risen Bread" and was wondering if I could help figure out why his didn't have enough oven spring.
Well, first I had to point out I was unfamiliar with "salt risen" (or salt rising, as it seems to be referred to more in Google), the few recipes I checked first all seemed to be ancient : "use sweet milk", "mix in a quart of flour" and "add a lump of lard", the sort of thing you'd find in old farmer's recipes with estimated amounts and vague temp ranges.
From Reinhart's The Bread Baker's Apprentice...


Beautiful, soft crumb with exceptional flavor.
I found this recipe in one of my grandmother's cookbooks, which is at least 50 years old. The recipe states that it's "an old recipe handed down in the family" (not mine). I tried this recipe once, but found the sourdough taste more pronounced than I care for. The loaves had a lovely, even crumb.
Swedish Limpa