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  • #20498
    RiversideLen
    Participant

      I ground up (with my Kitchen Aid food grinder attachment) a pot roast yesterday and made it into meatloaf today. Had it with brown rice.

      #20490
      aaronatthedoublef
      Participant

        Hi Mike. I have not used any recipes from Ginsberg. I have used recipes from George Greenstein Secrets of a Jewish Baker (which is really 90% bread) and Marcy Goldman's Treasury of Jewish Holiday Baking which has been my go-to Jewish recipe book for about 20 years. After trying things from both I combined them and then modified it based on some advice from Ginsberg's blog. So I make a caraway rye with about %35-40 first clear and the rest bread flower. I use a starter which I remake every time as I don't really have a place to keep a sourdough starter that I keep going.

        Ms. Goldman's recipes produce good results and are simpler and less fussy than many others. It was a great place for me to start learning when I was starting out on my own. She is Canadian and, sadly, is not very well known in the US.

        I am also now traveling four days a week for work so I don't know if I could maintain a starter. I will need to train my kids. I am going to teach them to make pizza dough so they can make when I am on the road.

        Both FedEx and UPS rely very heavily on USPS for moving many of their packages handling the last mile themselves. This is true too for Amazon although less true in places where they offer two hour delivery.

        #20484
        BakerAunt
        Participant

          I have my doubts about FedEx. KAF has used FedEx Smart Post, and it seems to take a long time for packages to move. An order from another place suddenly disappeared from the tracking. I inquired from the seller, and it turned re-appeared on the tracking--apparently sent back from Michigan to Ohio (or never sent in the first place), and then sent back to the same place in Michigan, where it finally was dropped off with the post office, who got it to me quickly. I had a similar problem with a book from Barnes & Noble last year.

          #20481
          BakerAunt
          Participant

            On Friday, I baked a new recipe, “Barley Crispbread,” from Jan Hedh’s Swedish Breads and Pastries (Skyhorse Publishing, 2010), p. 144. I had mentioned this recipe in December at Nebraska Kitchen, since one topping mentioned is lentils. I decided not to use them, as I did some googling and did not find raw lentils used as a topping anywhere. I had some uncertainty about flours. After reading in the introduction, which is not a lot of help, I decided that “wheat flour high in protein” is probably bread flour. For “fine rye flour,” I used Bob’s Red Mill dark rye, which seems fine to me, and I used King Arthur’s pumpernickel for the “coarse rye flour.” I used BRM for the barley flour. I topped with sunflower and sesame seeds. Although it lists pumpkin seeds, in addition to the lentils, the picture does not show pumpkin seeds. I’m not sure that it shows lentils, so perhaps it is flax seed, which I don’t use. The technique for the seeds sticking is an egg wash, seeds, then I covered the dough with waxed paper, and rolled over it. That has kept almost all the seeds in place. Baking time was 20-30 minutes; I found it needed the 30 minutes. I baked it on the third rack up (slightly above the center). After they cooled, I tested one—and my husband had two. They are quite nice—crisp, with just a bit of chewiness, and a natural sweetness, although they have no sugar other than the pinch I added to proof the yeast.

            I ended up with 32 10x9cm squares. The recipe states "60 rounds," which is clearly an error, since it directs that the dough be cut into squares.

            Quick Note: These are somewhat salty--10g (about 3 tsp.) salt in the recipe. When I bake them again, I will cut it back to 7-8g.

            • This reply was modified 6 years, 3 months ago by BakerAunt.
            #20479
            Mike Nolan
            Keymaster

              I ordered two assortments of rye flour from NY Bakers and they arrived yesterday. (I’m glad it came yesterday, we got an inch and a half of snow overnight.)

              It was a bit of a challenge to find containers to hold 8 different three-pound bags of flour, but we managed, losing about half my open counter space in the process, at least for a little while. I now have about as many containers of rye flour as I do wheat flour.

              I’m starting the process of building a rye starter, I’ll be using some of the discards from that to make some rye breads in Ginsberg’s book that use commercial yeast.

              Aaron, have you made many of his recipes yet? A BBGA member told me he thinks some of those recipe are too wet/gummy or not baked long enough. From what I’ve read about rye, in Ginsberg’s book and elsewhere, I know there are challenges ahead, but I’m hoping to produce some eastern European black bread, as well as some other interesting rye breads.

              Locally the only rye flours I can find are the Bob's Red Mill dark rye and some bulk rye flour at the Open Harvest Coop and Hy-Vee that both appear to also be a dark rye flour (and may be from the same source), it looks similar to several of the ones I got from NY Bakers.

              Ideal Grocery, a Lincoln fixture since 1919, carried bags of medium rye that they were repackaging, but it burned down several years ago and wasn't rebuilt. The people who run Leons bought Ideal about 8 years ago but Leons doesn't carry everything that Ideal did, and I don't really shop there much. They do carry a mustard from France that I like.

              I also still have some of the pumpernickel flour I was getting from the Mennonite store in TN, though none of the ones I got from NY Bakers appears to be the same flour. When I was buying whole rye berries and grinding them up in my flour mill at the coarsest settings, that flour looked fairly similar to the pumpernickel flour.

              It kind of hard to tell some of the 8 types of rye flour apart, there's one that's really coarse, almost like rye chops. There's one that appears to be really fine, several of the others appear fairly similar, time will tell whether I can detect much difference.

              The total price from NY Bakers, with shipping, was in the $3.60 per pound range, a bit more expensive than the local options, but not that different from KAF and other online sources, and now I've got a lot of options to try. I doubt I'll use enough rye flour to justify buying a 25 or 50 pound bag of any one flour.

              I ordered it on the 8th, it came on the 16th, that's not too bad. I didn't get a tracking number from them (it came Fedex), but I don't think KAF sends them, either. I'm spoiled by Amazon, which not only gives you detailed tracking information but if it is coming via an Amazon truck they'll tell you how many stops away the truck is on delivery day. They've definitely raised the bar for online ordering.

              Looking through the recipes in Ginsberg's Rye Baker book, I didn't see any that use first clear flour. Maybe its just too hard to get. (I don't think NY Bakers stocks it.)

              Followup: There are a few recipes in TRB that mention clear flour as an alternative to bread flour.

              • This reply was modified 6 years, 3 months ago by Mike Nolan.
              #20477
              BakerAunt
              Participant

                I'm looking forward to reading about your rye experiments, Mike. I'm also interested in what you think of the flours you bought, as I've considered buying from that place.

                I've baked two straight dough recipes from the book. The Rye Bites (pp. 225-226) I've baked twice. I've learned that when he says to use an upper oven rack when baking, I should do it. When kneading with my Cuisnart mixer, I did have to stop and adjust the dough, but that may be the result of a 7-qt. mixer.

                I've also baked the Salty Rye Rolls (pp. 141-142). Again, baking in the upper third of the oven is essential to avoid burned bottoms.

                I have his Yogurt Rye Recipe (pp293-294) marked to try, so maybe I'll make that my next bread. I'd need to substitute buttermilk for the yogurt, as I can only get good Greek yogurt or full-fat Stoneyfield in this area.

                I'm a big fan of his pumpkin bread recipe on his site, which I've baked three times. It is a pretty wet bread, and I think that the loaf came out with the most height the first time that I bake it, but that may be due to the variations in water in pumpkin.

                • This reply was modified 6 years, 3 months ago by BakerAunt.
                #20475
                Mike Nolan
                Keymaster

                  I'm starting a major project here on My Nebraska Kitchen, my goal is to bake every recipe in Stanley Ginsberg's book The Rye Baker, which will often be abbreviated as TRB. I think there are 78 full recipes, plus variations that I probably won't do all of. My original goal was to finish in 2020, but now I figure it'll take me 4-5 years.

                  I will be posting pictures and assessments of the breads as I make them in this topic, though some work-in-progress comments may go in the weekly 'What are you Baking' topic. If so, I'll try to cross-link them.

                  Here are the recipes in The Rye Baker by chapter, as I make them I'll turn these into links to the post reviewing that bread.

                  Immigrant Bread: America

                  Old School Deli Rye (39% rye flour)
                  Dakota Norwegian Rye (29% rye flour)
                  New York Corn Rye (35% rye flour)
                  Boston Brown Bread (40% rye flour)
                  Jewish Bakery Pumpernickel (42% rye flour)
                  Old Milwaukee Rye (45% rye flour)

                  The Essential Loaf: France and Spain

                  Breton Folded Rye (64% rye flour)
                  Galician Rye Bread (44% rye flour)
                  Avergne Rye-Wheat Boule (50% rye flour)
                  Normandy Apple Cider Rye (71% rye flour)
                  Spiced Honey Rye (33% rye flour)
                  Provençal Rye (54% rye flour)

                  Robust and Complex: Holland, Denmark and Northern Germany

                  Dithmarsch Cabbage Rye (29% rye flour)
                  Danish Rye Bread (75% rye flour)
                  Pumpkinseed Rye (69% rye flour)
                  Frisian Black Bread (50% rye flour)
                  Scorched Crust Sour Rye (79% rye flour)
                  Salty Rye Rolls (56% rye flour)
                  East Berlin Malt Rye (75% rye flour)
                  Frisian Gingerbread (100% rye flour)
                  Ammerland Black Bread (80% rye flour)
                  Slow Baked Frisian Rye (100% rye flour)
                  Hearty Seeded Rye (100% rye flour)
                  Berlin Cobbler Boys (100% rye flour)

                  Sweet and Crisp: Sweden, Finland and Iceland

                  'Archipelago' Bread (21% rye flour)
                  Honey Flaxseed Crispbread (75% rye flour)
                  Helsinki Buttermilk Rye (50 rye flour)
                  Rye Biscuits (100% rye flour)
                  Gotland Rye (50% rye flour)
                  Rye Tortillas (100% rye flour)
                  Sour Rising Bread (100% rye flour)
                  Sweet Limpa (100% rye flour)
                  Rye Raisin Scones (53% rye flour)
                  Slow-Baked Finnish Rye (73% rye flour)
                  Buttery Crispbread (100% rye flour)

                  Aromatic and Flavorful: Bavaria, Switzerland, Austria and Italy

                  Munich Penny Rolls (43% rye flour)
                  Swabian Rye Blossom (51% rye flour)
                  South Tyrolean Christmas Zelten (60% rye flour)
                  Sauerkraut Bread (63% rye flour)
                  "Lifted" Country Boule (75% rye flour)
                  Bavarian Rye (63% rye flour)
                  Black Bread of Val d'Aosta (67% rye flour)
                  Rye Bites (67% rye flour)
                  Austrian Country Boule (70% rye flour)
                  Caraway Beer Bread (50% rye flour)
                  Valais Rye (90% rye flour)
                  Franconia Crusty Boule (87% rye flour)
                  Vinschgau Twins (58%)

                  Dark and Intense: Russia and the Baltics

                  Sweet Sour Rye Bread (74% rye flour)
                  GOST Borodinsky (81% rye flour)
                  Christmas Bread (100% rye flour)
                  Riga Rye (89% rye flour)
                  Minsk Rye (90% rye flour)
                  Vilnius Rye Bread (100% rye flour)
                  Raisin Orange Rye (100% rye flour)
                  Belarusian Sweet Rye (94% rye flour)
                  Spiced Honey Squares (100% rye flour)
                  Lithuanian Potato Rye (100% rye flour)
                  Scalded Rye Bread (100% rye flour)

                  Tender and Piquant: Southern Poland

                  Cumin Rye (70% rye flour)
                  Yogurt Rye (50% rye flour)
                  Mountain Oat Rye (49% rye flour)
                  Zakopane Buttermilk Rye (50% rye flour)
                  Polish-Ukrainian Rye (59% rye flour)
                  Sunflower Seed Rolls (57% rye flour)
                  Milk Rye (61% rye flour)

                  Rich and Varied: Central and Southwestern Germany

                  Rhineland Black Bread (33% rye flour)
                  Rye Sticks (36% rye flour)
                  Weinheim Carrot Rye (39% rye flour)
                  Münster Country Boule (45% rye flour)
                  Ham and Dark Beer Rye (54% rye flour)
                  Kassel Rye (60% rye flour)
                  Westphalian Pumpernickel (100% rye flour)
                  Ginger-Plum Bread (60% rye flour)
                  Paderborn Rye (75% rye flour)
                  Sauerland Black Bread (100% rye flour)

                  • This topic was modified 6 years, 1 month ago by Mike Nolan.
                  • This topic was modified 6 years, 1 month ago by Mike Nolan.
                  • This topic was modified 6 years, 1 month ago by Mike Nolan.
                  • This topic was modified 6 years, 1 month ago by Mike Nolan.
                  • This topic was modified 6 years ago by Mike Nolan.
                  #20464
                  chocomouse
                  Participant

                    Aaron, are you anywhere near North Haven, CT? The CT Sheep and Wool Festival is moving to that new location this year, April 25-26 I think. The Justameretree Farm will be vending there and they sell a lot of maple syrup and it's good quality. It's not made in CT (NH, as I recall, but not sure) but it would be lot cheaper than purchasing syrup by mail order and paying for shipping. You could also check out the MA Sheep and Wool Festival - it might be closer and I think the sell it there also.

                    #20463
                    Italiancook
                    Participant

                      Well, I missed your 300th question, Mike. I've seen Food Network hosts bard (can I use it that way?) meat. I've never done it. I guess that means I don't cook real lean meat.

                      #20456
                      aaronatthedoublef
                      Participant

                        Thanks CM! This is great.

                        I usually buy from Costco, which by me has Vermont/New Hampshire (down at my in-laws they have Canadian). If I don't buy from Costco I buy from Trader Joe's. I try very hard not to buy Canadian. BA, I may check out the VT Country Store.

                        Ironically, it's hard to find CT maple syrup even though I am in CT. I do not tend to see it at farmer's markets and the only farm near me that makes it is the Four H farm. May have to buy some from them next time they have a sale.

                        #20450
                        BakerAunt
                        Participant

                          On Wednesday I baked brownies. My base recipe is the Deep Dark Brownies that I got from KAF over ten years ago. I wanted to reduce the saturated fat, so I made some changes. I deleted the optional chocolate chips (sigh). I replaced one of the three eggs with 1 Tbs. flax meal combined with 3 Tbs. water. I used half the canola oil (1/4 cup) and replaced the other half with buttermilk. I always bake these in a 10x10 ceramic pan that came from KAF; the larger size works better than the 9x9 where it is hard to get the center done without burning the edges. I replaced the 2 Tbs. of coffee with water, because while I can get the espresso powder past my husband, coffee is another matter. I sprinkled the top with some snowflake sprinkles. It baked for 30 minutes on the third rack (slightly above center of oven). Not counting the optional chocolate chips, I reduced the saturated fat from 24g to 18.

                          I'll add a note to this post after we try them for dinner, although this recipe is usually better the day after.

                          Added note: These are fudgy and delicious. I wouldn't hesitate to bake them again this way.

                          • This reply was modified 6 years, 3 months ago by BakerAunt.
                          #20449
                          BakerAunt
                          Participant

                            Thanks, Chocomouse--that information is good to have.

                            Aaron--I usually order my dark syrup from Vermont Country Store in the large jars. (I also bought their plastic pour spout lid that fits the jars.) I buy enough to get free shipping--usually three jars, although this time, I might buy four. I bought a quart at the farmers market last year (out of Michigan), and that is what I'm using now.

                            #20447
                            BakerAunt
                            Participant

                              That is an interesting idea, Chocomouse. Maybe a google search is in order?

                              My husband cooked some thin-sliced boneless pork for Wednesday's dinner. I roasted a cubed butternut squash and combined it with farro (1 cup cooked in 2 cups turkey/chicken broth), and some thyme. We had microwaved frozen peas as well.

                              • This reply was modified 6 years, 3 months ago by BakerAunt.
                              #20445
                              chocomouse
                              Participant

                                I like to use corn that has been roasted on the coals last fall, and then frozen for winter use in chowder. The kernels get a little charred, and turn a golden brown to a black (burned! not so tasty). It gives the soup a smokey flavor - not quite the same as bacon, but a healthier smokey. I wonder if roasting the kernels (or whole ears?) in the oven would accomplish the same thing?

                                #20444
                                chocomouse
                                Participant

                                  A few years ago, maybe 7-8 years ago, maple syrup makers in the US changed the labeling of maple syrup to match the labels used in Canada. This is what we have been using to help our customers to learn the new language:

                                  OLD: “Fancy” or “Vermont Fancy”
                                  NEW: Grade A | Golden Color and Delicate Taste
                                  This is the lightest of the new maple syrup grades and highly recommended for drizzling over waffles, pancakes, or ice cream.

                                  OLD: Grade A Medium Amber, Grade A Dark Amber
                                  NEW: “Grade A | Amber Color and Rich Flavor”
                                  This grade of maple syrup is a little more flavorful and works well when cooking and baking.

                                  OLD: Grade A Dark Amber, Grade B
                                  NEW: “Grade A | Dark Color and Robust Flavor”
                                  This grade of maple syrup is even stronger in flavor, and is best used for recipes that require a heavy maple flavor.

                                  OLD: Grade C
                                  NEW: “Grade A | Very Dark and Strong Flavor”
                                  This grade of maple syrup is very strong, and probably best used as a substitute for molasses and for making maple flavored candies.

                                  Notice the use of two key words, one describes the color, the other the taste. "Dark, robust" is what most of us use for cooking (and for everything at my house!). It is the same syrup (that is, it meets the same density requirements that the "old" syrup met) that was formerly called Grade B. It's still a fairly mild flavor, and most bakers use a tiny bit (as BakerAunt described) of artificial flavoring to enhance the natural flavor of syrup.

                                  Maple sap is officially called syrup when it reaches a temperature of 219.5*F. We begin our initial assessment of the syrup stage using a thermometer, but then use a hydrometer for the final exacting measurement of the density. If, as Mike pointed, the syrup has more water and less sugar, it will not be as sweet; nor should it be called maple syrup if the correct density has not been obtained! I'm not sure that most us can tell the difference that easily. As a side note -- we are hanging our lines this week to start gathering sap for the 2020 season as soon as it runs, usually in early-mid March. The changing weather patterns makes planning ahead a challenge these days.

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