The farmers returned one day after the wheat was stiff and dry and had long forgotten what it felt like to be grass. They cut the wheat with large, noisy machines that billowed clouds of dust behind them. The hollow stalks were cast aside for someone else and the seed heads rubbed against the drum inside the harvester until all of the little kernels fell away and were carried into a holding bin.
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(It should be noted that "Bearded Wheat" is much prettier, but as you can imagine, all of those barbed pieces caused innumerable amounts of equipment grief, and thus farmers everywhere rejoiced when the beards were engineered right off the plants. In an extreme effort at self restraint, I am going to avoid the rant about how all grain is genetically engineered now days, and the protestors against such are insane.)
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Our Daily Bread (in other words, the bread we make most often for sandwiches and other ordinary uses)
Half Whole Wheat Bread Machine recipe
8 1/2 oz. water
1 T. Honey
1 1/2 c. bread flour
1 1/2 c. whole wheat flour
1 1/2 t. salt
1 1/2 T. brown sugar, packed
1 1/2 T dry milk
2 T. butter
2 t. active dry yeast, or 1 1/2 t. fast rise yeast
Whole Wheat cycle
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Egg Braid Do It By Hand Recipe
2 packages yeast
1/2 c. warm milk
1 1/ 2 c. warm water
1/4 c. sugar
1 T. salt
3 eggs, beaten
1/4 c. butter, softened
7-7 1/2 c. flour (half whole wheat, if desired)
1 egg yolk
2 T. water
sesame seeds
Dissolve yeast in water. Add milk, sugar, salt, eggs, butter and 3 1/2 c. flour; mix well. Stir in enough remaining flour to form a soft dough. On a floured board (on in Kitchen Aid!), knead until smooth and elastic, 6-8 minutes. Place in greased bowl, turning once to grease top. Cover and let rise in warm place until doubled, 1 1/2-2 hours. Punch down. Cover and let rise until almost doubled, about 30 minutes. Divide into six portions. On a floured board, shape each into a 14 inch long rope. For each loaf, braid three ropes together on a greased baking sheet; pinch ends to seal. Cover and let rise until doubled, 50-60 minutes. Beat egg yolk and water; brush over loaves. Sprinkle with sesame seeds. Bake at 375* for 30-35 minutes, until golden.
Try not to eat entire loaf in one sitting. (recipe compliments of Taste of Home magazine)
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I'd like to thank Massey Ferguson, Bosch NutriMill, Kitchen Aid, and West Bend for making this bread not exactly possible, but certainly a heck of a lot easier than it would have been in Pioneer days.
Stacy, you rock!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tour, and for the recipes. The fancy egg bread we call challah :-)
My girls are going to love reading this. They will want to compare the recipes to those that we use regularly and try yours.
ReplyDeleteQuestion: We have wheat berries (golden something) and a mill. How long do the berries keep? Please don't ask how old mine are. I'll give you a hint . . . three alpha-numeric blanks, the first is the letter Y.
Maybe I should make a VLB out of this!
As long as your wheat berries are a normal color, don't smell funky and things don't flutter out of the container when you open it, then you're probably okay. If they were kept in the freezer, then that's even better. However, if in doubt, throw it out. You can always buy more.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't recommend the same for rye, though, on account of that whole Salem witch trial thing.
S
wheat, stored in a cool place, will keep 30 years or more. shelf life shortens to about 4 years or so once you grind it into flour.
ReplyDeleteromana
Great bread recipe! I just finished making the one you use in the bread machine! I can't wait to taste it!
ReplyDeleteCool, Stacy! Love your challah! :o)
ReplyDeleteYour work surprised me a lot because it's been a long time since I found this wonderful sharing.
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