Entries in Bread (3)

Saturday
14Mar2009

Irish Date-Nut Bread

A holiday bread recipe by guest author, Heather Forsyth.

Date Nut Bread 002 This recipe has been in my sister's family for over a hundred years, and came from her father's Irish grandmother.  The way the recipe comes together is a little unusual, but like most quick breads it is leavened by baking soda.  Once baked, it is has a dark crust, and a moist and chunky interior, something like a fruitcake, but without those gross candied things.  It keeps beautifully, and is equally at home on a cheese plate or toasted with butter for breakfast.  If you're lucky enough to be invited to someone else's house for dinner on St. Patrick's Day (so it's not your house that smells like boiled cabbage), it makes a great hostess gift.  It's also a great morning-after cure if you drink a little too much green beer!


Irish Date-Nut Bread



  • 1/4 c. shortening

  • 1 c. whole, pitted dates, coarsely chopped

  • 3/4 c. coarsely chopped walnuts

  • 1 1/2 t. baking soda

  • 1/2 t. salt

  • 3/4 c. boiling water

  • 2 eggs

  • 1/2 t. vanilla

  • 3/4 c. sugar

  • 1 1/2 c. flour


Preheat oven to 350.  Generously grease a loaf pan and set aside.  Put shortening, dates, walnuts, baking soda and salt in a bowl.  Pour the boiling water over everything and put a plate over the top of the bowl to keep the heat in.  Set it aside for about 10 minutes.  In the meantime, beat the eggs with the vanilla and sugar, then stir in the flour.  The dough will be very stiff, almost like a sugar cookie dough.  Now go back to your date mixture.  The shortening will be mostly, but not completely disolved.  That's okay.  Stir it around a bit and poke around any remaining big lumps of shortening to blend them in.  Dump the sugar dough on top of the date mixture and begin mixing together.  I find it easiest to use a big fork for this.  You want to blend the two mixtures together well, but just until blended.  Don't beat or overmix.


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Scrape the batter into the loaf pan and bake for 50-60 minutes until the loaf starts to pull away from the edges of the pan and a tester comes out clean.  If you feel it is becoming too dark before it will be done, you can cover it loosely with foil.  Let it cool in the pan for about 5 minutes, then turn out onto a rack to finish cooling.  It slices most easily if you let it cool completely and use a very sharp knife.


Note:  I know it's out of style for most of us to cook with shortening anymore, but this is the one recipe that I do.  I suppose you could substitute butter, but I never have as I like to keep this recipe as it was passed down to me.  If someone does try it with butter, let me know how it works out.

Tuesday
18Mar2008

Mexican Chocolate Bread Recipe

On occasion, when I was in
the depths of the misery that was my former marriage, I would console myself
with the bread machine. Actually, it was
a gift from my ex, so maybe he was onto me. I've never been a baker, but I envied people who could create the
comforting smells in their kitchen that came from home-baked bread. Having the sense to know this kind of
consolation was not possible from my oven, I relied on my then newfangled
machine. It's ancient now, but I still
have it. One of my most vivid comfort
recipes was Mexican Chocolate bread. The
recipe I used had chocolate chips, cocoa and salted peanuts in it. My sister stopped by one day in the middle of
the afternoon to find me having a slice of it with tea, and looked at me like
I'd lost my mind. Well, I probably had,
but she was on a diet at the time and I'm sure she wished she'd made a U-turn
at my street. This is not that same
recipe, but is delicious nonetheless. You could always toss in some peanuts if you wanted. But don’t save it until you're in a miserable
relationship. This stuff was made for
happy eating.

Mexican Chocolate Bread
Recipe for Machine
 

Makes one 1.5 pound loaf

  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1/2 cup orange juice
  • 1 large egg plus 1 egg yolk
  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter,
    cut into pieces

  • 2.5 cups bread flour
  • 1/4 cup light brown sugar
  • 3 tablespoons unsweetened Dutch-process
    cocoa powder
  • 1 tablespoon gluten
  • 1 1/4 teaspoons salt
  • 1 teaspoon instant espresso
    powder
  • 3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 cup bittersweet chocolate
    chips

  • 2 teaspoons fast acting
    yeast, or 2 1/2 teaspoons bread machine yeast
     

Place all ingredients in the
pan according to the order in the manufacturer's instructions. Set crust on medium and program for Sweet
Bread Cycle. Press start. (This recipe not suitable for delay timer).

When the baking cycle ends,
immediately remove the bread from the pan and place it on a rack. Let cool to room temperature before slicing.

Courtesy: The Bread Lover's Bread Machine
Cookbook, Beth Hensperger

Saturday
15Dec2007

A Berry Good Breakfast

Cranberries
photo: Melodi T.

I have been eating this for
breakfast now for about two weeks. I
keep expecting to get bored with it, but so far, it hasn't happened. How many things in life can you do every day
for two weeks without getting bored? Plus, it's an easy way to be kind of festive. Cranberries = red = festive. If you have a bread machine, this recipe is
simple. Just throw everything in and
push start. If you don't have a machine,
you're on your own. I never claimed to
be a baker.

Cranberry English Muffin
Bread

2 teaspoons yeast
2 cups bread flour
1 teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup minus 1 tablespoon milk
1/8 teaspoon baking soda
1 cup fresh cranberries

Put all ingredients in bread
machine according to your manufacturer's directions. (Mine likes liquids first, but yours might
want them last.) If you have a fruit or
nut cycle, add the cranberries then. Otherwise, dump them in all together. Makes one 1-pound loaf.

p.s.: I seldom eat butter, but it's awfully good
on this bread.