recipe

All posts tagged recipe

20130303-162432.jpg

Professor Joe says:
“You have been delinquent with your Hayloft updates”.

20130303-162723.jpg
We’ve had quite a dose of snow this year. Much of which has melted in last week but, the chickens and the boy have enjoyed it.

20130303-163003.jpg

20130303-163038.jpg

20130303-163048.jpg

20130303-163101.jpg
Little Red approves of the boy’s nest building abilities.

20130303-163154.jpg
Here are some deep winter Hayloft projects:
Chair caning:

20130303-163335.jpg

20130303-163342.jpg

20130303-163349.jpg
The boy has taken up fencing:

20130303-163430.jpg
Preteen sleepover’s with a donut breakfast. Two and a half hours to make. Seven minutes to eat.

20130303-163600.jpg
Recipe courtesy of Alton Brown. I always half this recipe. Plenty for four at least. The first time made these we called our neighbors and said “Get ready! Hot donuts on the way!”
Ingredients
1 1/2 cups milk
2 1/2 ounces vegetable shortening, approximately 1/3 cup
2 packages instant yeast
1/3 cup warm water (95 to 105 degrees F)
2 eggs, beaten
1/4 cup sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
23 ounces all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting surface
Peanut or vegetable oil, for frying (1 to 1/2 gallons, depending on fryer)
Directions
Place the milk in a medium saucepan and heat over medium heat just until warm enough to melt the shortening. Place the shortening in a bowl and pour warmed milk over. Set aside.
In a small bowl, sprinkle the yeast over the warm water and let dissolve for 5 minutes. After 5 minutes, pour the yeast mixture into the large bowl of a stand mixer and add the milk and shortening mixture, first making sure the milk and shortening mixture has cooled to lukewarm. Add the eggs, sugar, salt, nutmeg, and half of the flour. Using the paddle attachment, combine the ingredients on low speed until flour is incorporated and then turn the speed up to medium and beat until well combined. Add the remaining flour, combining on low speed at first, and then increase the speed to medium and beat well. Change to the dough hook attachment of the mixer and beat on medium speed until the dough pulls away from the bowl and becomes smooth, approximately 3 to 4 minutes. Transfer to a well-oiled bowl, cover, and let rise for 1 hour or until doubled in size.
On a well-floured surface, roll out dough to 3/8-inch thick. Cut out dough using a 2 1/2-inch doughnut cutter or pastry ring and using a 7/8-inch ring for the center whole. Set on floured baking sheet, cover lightly with a tea towel, and let rise for 30 minutes.
Preheat the oil in a deep fryer or Dutch oven to 365 degrees F. Gently place the doughnuts into the oil, 3 to 4 at a time. Cook for 1 minute per side. Transfer to a cooling rack placed in baking pan. Allow to cool for 15 to 20 minutes prior to glazing, if desired.

And finally, a sad fare well to a dear mate of twenty years. Rest in peace Clementine.

20130303-164117.jpg

20121207-111820.jpg

Wish you could smell this. Fresh sesame sourdough from our family pet seth the starter. My son and I grew Seth about a year and a half ago. We feed him weekly by removing one cup of the starter and baking bread, muffins (so moist), pretzels and even the occasional dog treat.

20121207-111844.jpg
This is Seth. He lives in our fridge.
Seth has sired two new starters for friends, Beth and Macbeth.

The recipe for sourdough bread:
Don’t panic and no hurry. The dough will happily wait for you.
1c starter
1.5c water
3c flour
Mix.

20121207-112424.jpg
You have just created a sponge. Let it sit and grow. About 6 hours. If in six hours the dog decides to barf on the rug, the sponge will wait. Too tired? Throw it in the fridge.
When your ready, add:
2 Tbsp kosher salt
Up to 3 cups of bread flour
I say up to 3 cups because some days you need more and some days less. I add at least the first cup and a half and dump the whole sloppy mess on a floured counter. Start to knead (with floured hands). Add flour as needed. When the dough is silky and resistant, meaning I can slap it (It’s not often I get to slap something and I have to admit sometimes I get carried away. ) and it bounces back then smack the dough into an oiled bowl and let it rise. It can rise for a few hours or, again, if it’s inconvenient stick in the fridge and slow it down until your ready. Let it come back to room temp. for the next step. Dump out the dough onto a floured counter and resist the urge to slap and knead again. Gently divide it and shape into two loaves or bake as one biggie, four minis. Whatever you desire. It is your bread to do what you please. Be sure to tuck the seams under. Leave plain or baste with egg yolk and sprinkle with your favorite topping. Then cover the dough with a tea towel. Turn oven to 475 and add a pan of water to it. Let the dough rise an hour or so. This is when you need to be available. When ready, slice the top (deeper than you think) and transfer (with floured hands) to pizza stone or baking sheet and bake for about a half an hour. Maybe more. I never set the timer. I am always so amazed by the explosion of rising bread in my oven that I am peeking in the window constantly. When the top browns nicely give it a tap. Sound hollow? It’s done. Now you can smell what I am smelling at home. Yeasty goodness. Cool on wire rack but resist the urge to slice too soon. You will squish all those lovely air pockets you work so hard to create. A little butter, maybe some honey and mmmmmm. Could it be better than….?

20121207-115300.jpg
Jersey and Jo love sourdough treats.

I’ve been away from my computer.  I’d love to write some glorious story of how my studio in the loft of the barn is up and running and I’ve been bathing in spacious creative juices.  That would only be partially true however.  Yes, my studio is near completion and yes, I am troubling over how to begin art classes.  I am also obsessed with my new smart phone, baking a recently discovered recipe for true philly sticky buns, over and over and over. Mowing lawns, doing laundry, washing dishes and anything else to procrastinate jumping in.  I am at the window to my future and merely peeking in.  I’ll post you when I have figured out how to break in!  Meanwhile, anyone else looking for a chance to procrastinate might like to bake lots of sticky buns too.

I assemble them the evening before, cover with plastic wrap and stick them in the fridge.  In the morning, two or so hours before baking remove from fridge.

Sticky buns:  from postandcourier.com

Philadelphia Sticky Buns

For yeast dough:

1/3 cup milk

1/4 cup granulated sugar

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/4 cup butter or margarine

1/4 cup warm water (105-115 degrees)

1 package active dry yeast

1 egg

2 1/2 cups unsifted all-purpose flour, divided use

For filling:

Butter or margarine, softened

Light brown sugar

1/2 cup pecan or walnut halves

1/2 cup chopped raisins

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

In a small pan, heat milk just until bubbles form around edge of pan; remove from heat. Add granulated sugar, salt and the butter; stir to melt butter. Cool to lukewarm (drop on wrist is not warm).

Check temperature of warm water with thermometer.

Sprinkle yeast over water in large bowl; stir to dissolve. Stir in lukewarm milk mixture. Add the egg and 2 cups of the flour; beat with electric mixer until smooth. Add the remaining 1/2 cup flour; mix with hand until dough is smooth and leaves side of bowl.

Turn out dough onto lightly floured pastry cloth. Knead until dough is smooth and blisters appear. Place in lightly greased large bowl; turn to bring up greased side. Cover with towel; let rise in warm place (85 degrees), free from drafts, until double, 1-1 1/2 hours.

Meanwhile, make filling: In small bowl, with wooden spoon, cream 1/4 cup butter with 1/4 cup light brown sugar. Spread on bottom and sides of a 9x9x2-inch square baking pan. Sprinkle with pecans or walnuts.

Roll dough on lightly floured pastry cloth or surface.

Roll dough into a 16×12-inch rectangle. Spread with 1/4 cup soft butter; sprinkle with 1/2 cup brown sugar, the raisins and cinnamon. Roll up from long side, jelly-roll fashion; pinch edge to seal. Cut crosswise into 12 pieces; place, cut side down, in pan.

Let rise, covered in warm place (85 degrees), free from drafts, 1-1 1/2 hours, until doubled (rises to top of pan). Meanwhile, preheat oven to 375 degrees. Bake 25-30 minutes, or until golden. Invert on board; let stand 1 minute; remove pan. Serve warm.

Doughnuts are a traditional New Years Day delight.  Of course, that does not stop us from having doughnuts any other time of the year, however we did have our New Years Day doughnuts and this time we tried out our new jelly tip for making jelly doughnuts.  Warm little puffs of yeasted heaven with a crunchy granulated sugar-coating and sweet raspberry jelly oozing out the side.  Yum!  I use Alton Brown’s recipe which has a touch of freshly grated nutmeg in the dough and makes perfect doughnuts every time.  A deep fryer is handy but a heavy pot will do.  It’s a wet dough and I try not to work it too much.  Don’t want chewy doughnuts.  I also learned after the first few rounds to cut the recipe in half.  It makes a lot of doughnuts for a family of three and we had to call our neighbors(a family of five) up the road and alert them that warm doughnuts were on the way.  They didn’t seem to mind.  Even with half the recipe, we have a tree of friends we text “Donuts!” to.  One of those friends dropped her shopping from twenty minutes away, raced over, scarfed down a faceful and drove back to the store.  It would be terribly easy to eat these doughnuts every weekend so I am thankful that they are a bit of an ordeal and require some time to rise.  It also allows our homemade doughnuts to be a special occasion that always brings my nine-year old son to my side in the kitchen.  That alone is worth all the effort. 

Here’s the path to Alton Brown’s recipe:
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/yeast-doughnuts-recipe/index.html

Enjoy!