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Saturday, May 30, 2015

challah

This recipe comes from:  Rose Behrens.

RECIPE:
  • 7 cups flour
  • 1 T salt
  • 1/2 cup sugar (or honey)
  • 2 pkg yeast + 1/3 cup warm water (if using bulk yeast, it's 1-1/2 tablespoons, or 4-1/2 teaspoons)
  • 1/2 cup oil
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 cup boiling water
  • 1/2 cup cold water
This recipe makes the equivalent of 3 large braided loaves or 4 medium ones.

I have used this recipe to make many variations, including cinnamon bread, and cinnamon nut wreath.

Here are the original directions.  (I tend not to follow them. . . )

Beat eggs in a small bowl.In a large bowl mix oil, sugar and salt.
Add boiling water to large bowl and stir until all is dissolved.
Sprinkle yeast into a measuring cup with 1/3 cup warm water. Wait a few minutes, then stir.
Add cold water to mixture in large bowl. (The stuff in the bowl should now be the right temperature to add yeast. If too hot, wait a few minutes; if too cold, put the bowl in the microwave to heat it.)
Add yeast to large bowl.
Add eggs to large bowl, reserving about 1 tablespoon.
Add flour 1 cup at a time, mixing thoroughly after each addition.
Turn out dough onto floured board and knead for 5 minutes, adding more flour as needed (but not too much). Dough is ready if it springs back after being poked with a finger.
Put back into bowl, cover with dishtowel, and put in warm oven (heated to 170-200, and then turned off beforehand) until doubled - about 1 hour.
Turn out onto floured board and knead for 1-2 minutes.
Divide dough into thirds.
Take one of the thirds, and knead for another minute. Form into 8-12 small "snakes" for bulkies, or 3 large snakes for braid. Make bulkies by knotting each small snake and pinching the ends together. Place bulkies close together pinched-end down in greased pan (I use Pam). For braids, pinch ends of 3 large snakes together and begin braiding. Pinch ends together when done. Place in greased round pan or loaf pan.
Repeat for 2 other thirds. Put formed loaves/bulkies into oven (pre-heated and then turned off, as before) for about 45 minutes.
Remove from oven. Turn oven to 350.
Brush tops gently with reserved egg. Sprinkle with poppy seeds, if desired.
Bake for about 30 minutes (loaves) or 20 minutes (bulkies). Times will vary. Watch for moderate browning on top, but be careful not to allow scorching on bottom.
Remove from pans, and put on dish towels to cool.
YUM!!

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Daffodils and the First Asparagus


Today was our first taste of asparagus.

There were 7 stalks - someone has nibbled. . . 

The daffodils are quite late this year.

And they will peak this week.

We haven't checked in a while.
At one point we had 18 different ones.

They are such a cheerful bloom.

They brighten the world after a long, cold, snowy winter.


The last to bloom will be the ones with pink trumpets and the multiples.  So there is still more to look forward to.


Monday, April 20, 2015

Finally a Daffodil


It's been a long time acomin'.  We had a huge amount of snow with few thaws this winter.  Today is our very first daffodil.


There have been some years when we are past-peak at this time in April.

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Early Spring Flowers


Finally we have a few spring flowers.


This has brought out the honeybees.
They have been scarce in recent years, so we're glad to see them!





Alas, the snowdrops sit on the north side of a boulder.  They have just appeared.




Sunday, April 5, 2015

It's Pizza Night

We were terribly disappointed when the world's greatest pizza place, Nina's, in Norwich, NY, was sold.  The new owners changed the recipes and the ingredients.  The new one is too salty to eat.  (The last one I bought I gave to the chickens.  It was inedible.) Also, the cheese does not have the right texture - more like American cheese.  Sad.

The original owners opened a restaurant about 1 1/2 hours away from home.  A couple of times a year we go there and enjoy a meal and stock the freezer.

I guess it's time to make my own.

I found some 00 flour in our local supermarket.  It is a finer grind than all-purpose flour.  The NY Times had a recipe for dough.  Roberta's Pizza Dough
Pizza Dough

INGREDIENTS

  • 153 grams 00 flour (1 cup plus 1 tablespoon)
  • 153 grams all-purpose flour (1 cup plus 1 tablespoon and 2 teaspoons)
  • 8 grams fine sea salt (1 teaspoon)
  • 2 grams active dry yeast (3/4 teaspoon)
  • 4 grams extra-virgin olive oil (1 teaspoon)

So I decided to try it.
It can be made that day.

It turned out to be excellent.  Not too tough, not too bready.  A real Goldilocks dough.

The dough is topped with sliced sausage, mozzarella, parmesan, olive oil.
The sauce is my standard sauce.

It's a keeper.

~~~~~~~

I froze half the dough (I had doubled the recipe to make four pizzas.)
That way, by thawing the balls, I could make two more pizzas.
Today's pizzas are pepperoni
and 
white garlic with black olives and anchovies.

The white one is a favorite!
FWIW, the garlic is "Chesnok Red" from our garden.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

My Standard Sauce
Parts of this sauce go back to Hurricane Irene (2011).
Begin by cooking some Hot Italian Sausage in a porcelain lined stock pot.
Add garlic, basil, parsley, and tomatoes (either my own or Tutto Rosa), and parmesan.
Enjoy!
Freeze the extra.

Thaw some sauce.  
Make meatballs.  Bake them in the oven and add to the sauce.
Remember to add the brown bits stuck to the pan.
Enjoy!
Freeze the extra.

Thaw some sauce.
Usually there is too much meat to sauce ratio, 
so add tomatoes, garlic, basil, parsley.
Enjoy!
Freeze the extra.

If there are extra porkchops or chicken pieces,
thaw some sauce and add them.
add tomatoes, garlic, basil, parsley.
Enjoy!
Freeze the extra.

Over time the flavor becomes impressive.
Oh, and don't forget to add some red wine every once in a while.



Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Nutella Star Bread

I need to take a dish-to-pass.  We've been watching the Great British Bake Off, and the home bakers in the competition make interesting bakery items.  Once they were tasked with making a "Tear and Share."  Never heard of it, but have been looking around.  Lots of super videos on youtube.  This sounds good.

Nutella Star Bread ready to rise:

Ingredients:
450 g flour
70 g sugar (I think less would be better)
2 eggs
180 ml milk
2t yeast
salt
40 g butter
Nutella™

It would probably be best to watch a video on how to shape the bread.  Makes learning it easy.

After fully risen, there are fewer spaces between the arms.

Smells delicious.


Artistry is not quite there yet.
Not too bad for a first try.
~ ~ ~ 

Five Days Later
Second Try
One of the group does not like Nutella™.
The large star is made with Nutella.
The top left two are plain.
The other five are cinnamon buns.

I also reduced the sugar to 50 grams.
I like that better.


Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Finally - some spring fauna have arrived

Happy St. Patrick's Day.  We have had snow on the ground since mid-January, and we were despairing of ever seeing a robin.

This morning, on the only cleared space - the driveway - four robins appeared.  By the time the camera was ready with a new battery, there was one left - sitting fluffed up in the viburnum.




This guy is a little hard to see in the driveway - it's probably a female or an immature male redwing blackbird.


This is the first time we have seen gray squirrels here.
Our squirrels are the red ones.

Here he is playing on an overturned chair.

And now, with about 16 inches of compacted snow on the ground, D has gotten an email that his trees will arrive by UPS tomorrow.