Race for ‘The Bread’ flies
through and over Sanford streets –
crow has a big slice!
Race for ‘The Bread’ flies
through and over Sanford streets –
crow has a big slice!
Carraway, rye and
wholewheat honey bread is dense,
tasty and crusty!
cornmeal and potato starch
with sourdough starter the trick*!
*(olive oil, kosher salt and vital wheat gluten)
Carraway, rye and
whole wheat honey bread is dense,
tasty and crusty!
scrub ginger and slice,
strip lemon grass and smash stalks,
stuff both in chicken*
*(a couple of garlic cloves inside, too, though rest of head in the water along with another section of cleaned just-harvested ginger, a few fresh Puerto Rican thyme stalks, parsley stems and let them swim with the carrots, celery and onions – chicken dunked in boiling water and returns to the boil, skim scum, and toss in the veg and herbs and let steep for an hour…check temp with instant-read until 165 for breasts and 180 for thighs – remove bird, skin and save in one bowl. Strip (pull) flesh from bones and cartilage (which you save with the skin-bowl and return all to the bot but the cooked chicken to reduce (saved chicken fat is fine here, too, its rendering will give the reduced – and if you had some chicken legs which to toss into the pot at the start along with necks, hearts and gizzards you will get a jellied broth that can stand on its own on a soup plate with shaved radishes, thin-sliced onions and celery and carrot and still unpeeled now-sweet garlic rescued from the first cooking for a fancy somewhat consommé salad. The rescued from overcooking chicken loves fresh-baked bread (now cooled) with generous butter, fresh-ground black pepper and kosher or sea salt and some butter or romaine lettuce – all on both sides. The lemongrass and ginger stuffing tricks did keep the time-to-temp a bit high so I kept checking whilst opining the beer seemed in need of several quality control checks as well. When my wild garlic gets better established, the leaves will garnish the salad: commercial garlic leaves – much wider and softer – will float atop the soup. A sliced hard-cooked egg adds color and taste to the salad.)
grey dawn, cool breeze,
but we are promised no rain:
water tomorrow?
sounds like the long-awaited
return of soup-n-baked bread!
The multi-flour boule
sits with me outside before
its awe-full ‘baptism’
six-flour two-day bread:
multi-grain boule waits wake-up
from its fridge slumber!
Oh, that damn paddle
just wants attention again!
Bet it’s hiding there
With the bread machine cookbook.
Got News! I’ve still got two hands!
Hitch this crisp bacon
with butter, toast, tomato
and bower with lettuce?
butter, baguette, and
some thick-sliced cheddar for lunch:
now ask – beer or milk?
*Jacques Pepin relates his favorite after-school snack left by his mom: baguette, buttered (I think, but am not sure) with a chunk of chocolate – dark and bitter one hopes – and while I recall not if he had elementary-aged milk of course, I’d think a nice glass of red or a good dark ale. One day – Real Soon, Now – I will construct an experiment…but for now I must report someone keeps pilfering the bread, the butter, the beer and the chocolate. Oh, well, I’s wine with my cheese.