Jam and poppy seed cake
- Log in or register to post comments
- 2 comments
- View post
- Szanter5339's Blog
Farro, or emmer, an ancient kind of wheat, is popular in some parts of Italy, and, ever since I purchased Maria Speck's wonderful book "Ancient Grains in Modern Meals", also in our family. Creamy farro with honey roasted grapes became our new breakfast favorite that even my picky, normally no-breakfast-type son wolfed eagerly down:
http://daleydish.com/blog/2011/03/creamy-farro-with-honey-roasted-grapes.html
Hi,
A little while ago Varda posted about her experiences with the Russian Rye from Andrew Whitley's Bread Matters, and there was a longish discussion of the formula.
I posted some photos of the process of making Russian Rye
Andy suggested to use the formula he remembers from his time with Andrew Whitley at the Village Bakery, and I had a closer look at a couple of German standard formulas.
This has pulled pork, habenero bbq sauce, hot pico, and a mix of cheddar and monterray jack cheese. It was crispy, delicious, and brutally hot. I think I'm going to make it again this weekend!
I said I was going to take a break and bake other things, and I am determined to follow through. We made our annual pilgrimage to Apple Hill in the Placerville area of California, USA this past Saturday. We go every year to buy fresh apples, eat too much apple pie, and enjoy the Fall season, mountain air, and fresh apples. With a half bushel of Stayman Winesap apples we brought home sitting in a corner in the kitchen, I had to bake Aunt Lillian's Apple Cake from Inside the Jewish Bakery. We are very glad I did, because this is really, really good!
My husband requested some seeded sourdough loaves to go with our soup this week. I was happy to find the 'Seedy Whole Wheaty Sourdough' recipe on this site and set out to fulfill the order.
I have said before that gluttony is among my favorites of the deadly sins; the craving for fat, salt and sugar is a delightful vice. Favoring gluttony, though, runs contrary to my part time dedication to rationality; good sense indicates that gluttony can be detrimental. This dissonance—which regularly afflicts bakers—is my topic today.
OldWoodenSpoon has been chronicling his adventures and misadventures of baking the Vienna bread from the Inside the Jewish Bakery book. Partly out of sympathy and partly out of curiosity, I decided to bake the same bread this weekend to see what would happen.
In a word (or three), not very much.
Things to note:
- I'm using a no-name AP flour
- The yeast was Fleischmann's IDY from a new package.
- Since I had no malt on hand, honey was subbed for the malt in equal amount.
Saturday
What better reason to bake than catching up with family and friends for lunch. On a hot humid Saturday we drove down to Nat’s parents for a lunch with old family friends from her childhood. In our possession was our contribution to lunch … bread. A bread based on Gérard Rubaud’s formula for Pain au Levain.