Saturday, October 17, 2020

Weather It Is (Baking for the First Rain)

  Good Evening:

Low pressure dropping down from the northwest will most likely bring periods of rain (our first rains) as we move into the second half of this coming week.  

There is still a question about the timing of the arrival of the rains. The global ensemble forecast shows the rain possibly arriving on Wednesday, but also it may hold off until Thursday.  In any event, Wednesday should turn chiller and windier, with the coldest temperatures of the fall season to arrive Thursday and Friday.

After a brief warm up early next week, another fall rain may patter our shores and hills again.

With all this cool and possibly rainy weather on the way, some of you may want to turn to baking (if you haven't been baking already during the Coronavirus lockdown).   

Cooking, like chemistry, takes hard work, and often experimentation.  Here's supposed to be a perfect and delicious recipe for chocolate chip cookies (https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1021435-perfect-chocolate-chip-cookies; https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/16/dining/perfect-chocolate-chip-cookies-ravneet-gill.html?). 

I too like to experiment in the kitchen.  Sometimes, I just have an idea of my own, and other times I am encouraged (by the kids) to further adapt my own recipes.  You may have seen my recipe for Challah (which at the time I called the "Perfect or Best Challah Recipe").  It can be found at: https://www.jerusalem-herald.com/single-post/2018/09/18/WEATHER-Rolling-In-The-Dough-For-The-New-Year).  Some of my kids are a bit picky about their Challah, so I eventually found it a good idea to make it better than perfect, or even better than best (or as some of my Hebrew-English speaking kids might say: more best).

Here's the new set of ingredients.  You can see further detail on how to make it at the page above.

Blend together

1 cup water

1/4 cup sugar

1 TB honey

3 TBs canola oil

3 eggs (medium)

1 1/2 tsp salt

2 tsp yeast (fast acting)

Add, mix, and knead

2 cups white flour

1 cup whole wheat flour

1 cup Spelt flour

2 TB Gluten

P.S.  If you use large eggs, then another 1/2 cup of whole wheat flour.

Let rise about 1 hour (at 45 C).

It forms one round Challah (three strands) and seven or eight small Challah rolls (single strand).  I make the big one round so they all fit on the same cooking sheet.  I brush them with egg and olive oil mixed together, and sprinkle sesame seeds and/or poppy seeds on top (sunflower seeds are a good addition, too).

They should then rise the second time about half an hour at 45 C.

Turn the oven to 180 C, and set the timer for 33 minutes (assuming five minutes to heat the oven).

I and the kids usually eat some of them fresh out of the oven Friday morning.

Be well,

Barry Lynn


No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.