The Fresh Loaf

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Orange Caraway Crusty Biscuits

Hermit's picture
Hermit

Orange Caraway Crusty Biscuits

Adapted from the NY Times' "vegan quick biscuits" to blend in some warmer, earthy overtones. They take just 20 minutes to make. The roasted Caraway seed will give your whole kitchen a warm, inviting fragrance that carries through in the bread. You'll need a spice grinder to get the best flavour from the herbs.

2 cups (472ml/240g) all-purpose flour. 
1/2 cup or 120ml orange juice (I used Tropicana w/ calcium). Don't use the kind with extra pulp.
1/2 cup or 120ml shortening or margarine 
3/4 tsp salt
1 tbsp baking soda
1/2 tbsp Caraway seed
1/2 tbsp dried Savory
(optional) 1/2 tsp turmeric, for an even warmer autumn color.

Preheat the oven to 425F.

Take the Caraway seed and heat it on a dry skillet on high temperature for 2 minutes. You should hear them pop and hiss just slightly. Take them off and throw them in the spice grinder for 30 seconds. Take the dried Savory and also grind it to a loose powder if it isn't already powdered.

Mix the ground herbs into the flour with the salt and baking soda. Whisk them so that they're fully mixed. Put the margarine in a bowl with the orange juice and microwave them on high for a minute to get the margarine soft, then fold the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients.

Combine the whole mixture with a fork to cut up the margarine, then use your hands to massage it into a dough ball, aiming for a uniform consistency. Don't worry about it being loose or crumbing or flaking. This is a very dry dough.

Divide it into ball or puck shapes according to taste. If you have a scale, 45-50g dough balls make a nice tea-sized biscuit. 55-65g dough balls make a good dinner biscuit.

Lightly oil or grease a flat baking tray and throw them all in the oven for 13-14 minutes. Serve with butter or margarine on top.

 

I wish I'd learned to use Caraway seed sooner!

Kistida's picture
Kistida

I usually add caraway seeds to molasses or rye breads but I've yet to try savory in anything, Could you confirm if the flour used in the recipe is 240g?

Thank you for sharing, I've bookmarked this. :)

- Christi

Hermit's picture
Hermit

Hello Christi,

A single cup of flour for me is 160g, so the recipe uses 320g. I'm using Robin Hood All-Purpose Baking Flour, which is a Canadian flour that is a bit higher in iron and is pre-sifted. When I scoop the flour, I shake it until it's level but I do not pack it. Hope you enjoy.

Kistida's picture
Kistida

Alright, I use either Robin Hood or Five Roses AP. So far I’ve been using 120g/cup based on their nutrition facts listed at the back of the bag: 1/4 cup: 30g. Will definitely test your recipe. Thank you!

Hermit's picture
Hermit

I hadn't seen the equivalence on the bag, that is interesting. I've never had a lot of luck with recipes that use flour by volume but in this case I had copied the NYT recipe for the flour as a starting point. I measured with my kitchen scale to check after seeing your comment. Maybe I got a heavy batch of flour. I updated the recipe to reflect what I measured from my scale.

Hermit's picture
Hermit

After some experimentation I think that my measuring cup must be packing down some of the flour when I scoop it, because I never get the weight listed on the bag for the volume it claims. I have adjusted the recipe proportions slightly to make it more similar to the original recipe and to reflect this bias.