Tag Archives: bread

Recipe: Cheese Bread (aka Pão de Queijo)

Another recipe my friend and I worked on during the Bake-a-Thon was Cheese Bread… or more precisely: Brazilian Cheese Bread (aka Pão de Queijo). So how is this any different from a popover? Well in general:
Popover is a light, hollow roll made from an egg batter typically baked in muffin tins
Bread is prepared by cooking a dough of flour and water and often additional ingredients, such as butter or salt to improve the taste.

After sifting through plenty of recipes I settled on one that I found via AllRecipes.com.
cheesebread
Since there was no tapioca flour on hand traditional flour was used instead… what happened in the end was that our version of the about (though tasted fantastic) didn’t look like the picture. Hmm… How did ours look? Well from my friend’s Facebook Wall
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Recipe: Cheesy Popovers

One of the recipes that me and a friend of mine tried during the Bake-a-Thon in late January was the Cheddar Cheese Popovers. I found several recipes on the internet but the one I ultimately decided to try was from Food.com

From the original recipe below…
popovers
I naturally made changes… like what? Well…
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Recipe: Rum (Rhum) Cake with “Icing”


In late October my aunt from Kentucky brought up a few loaves of a soft kind of bread as a treat… I only had a slice, but I fell in love and immediately wanted the recipe.

A week later the recipe for the Rhum Cake popped up in my email inbox and I immediately set out to try the recipe… To more than stellar results.

Below is the original cake recipe that was sent to me:

INGREDIENTS for CAKE
3 eggs
4oz (approx 1/2 cup) oil
1 box yellow instant pudding (approx 3-1/2 oz)
1 box Butter Golden cake mix
4oz (approx 1/2 cup) self rising flour
10oz (approx 1-1/4 cups) milk
2oz (approx 1/4 cup) Rum
1 teaspoon vanilla

DIRECTIONS for CAKE
1: Turn on oven 325 degrees F
2: Mix all ingredients well for about 10 – 15 minutes.
3: Pour mixture into bread tins in the following sequence:
3a: 25 minutes at 325 degree F
3b: 10 minutes at 250 degree F
3c: Turn off oven, leave in oven for 10 more minutes

The first time I tried out the above, I followed the recipe to the tee and absolutely loved the results. In fact I loved them so much that I decided to change up the recipe using 5oz (approx 5/8 cup) of melted Stracciatella from the Lindt store in the Aurora Premium Outlet Mall.

So how did I adapt the recipe when I decided to add that particular ingredient?
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Recipe: Biscuit Bread (Adapted)

Over Labor Day weekend I wanted to clear out the fridge from any and all perishable items which basically means milk… so I decided to bake some biscuits per a GChat conversation I had with a friend a few weeks prior (paraphrased below):

Friend: so what are you doing after work today?
me: rehearsal, i ate this morning… so i’m fairly full at the moment
Friend: ah, ok. dinner out then? we’re thinking popeyes but not sure yet
me: i like popeye’s biscuits
Friend: i have been making my own biscuits lately so we usually skip it. it’s super easy takes about 5 min to prep and 10 min to bake
me: what recipe? i might want to try some of my own then
Friend: I don’t remember off the top of my head. but this is very similar to mine if not identical. http://blog.kitchenmage.com/2008/01/simple-flaky-bi.html
Friend: same ingredients, not positive about the ratio but looks about right. you can also sub milk with butter milk or add cheese and jalepenios whatever floats your boat
me: where do you get the buttermilk?
Friend: you can make it or buy it, a little bit of lemon juice in milk will apparently turn it itno buttermilk. if you are tired / lazy like me, i just put the whole thing in a pan and score it then break it up when it comes out so i don’t always make tiny little rounds. if it gets too wet then just do it this way: it will bake up fine, it’s very forgiving. if you are even lazier use self rising flour and skip salt and baking powder, it’s premixed with it. i know cuz i got the flour by accident and didn’t know what it was. oh…and no need for a food processor i just use a fork. for me to get the food processor out woudl be more work than i would like to do but i usually make a very small batch (4 biscuits) so I can manage with a fork quickly enough.
me: looks simple enough, and aside from the milk i have most everything else at home anyway
Friend: they are great b/c leftovers make great breakfast
me: lol

The things I bake / cook / whatever because of a simple conversation with friends. 😉 Anyway, so I figured why not give it a shot. I wanted to clean out the perishable items regardless and clean out the pantry so it would be easier to start fresh when I return from my trip… so let’s give it a shot.

From the recipe sent to me from Kitchen Mage

INGREDIENTS
All-purpose flour – 2-1/4 cups
Salt – 3/4 tsp
Sugar – 1 tsp
Baking powder – 4 tsp
Butter (very cold) – 1/3 cup
Milk (very cold) – 1 cup

INSTRUCTIONS
1: Preheat oven to 450°
2: Place flour, salt, sugar and baking powder in food processor and pulse for a few seconds to combine.
3: Cut butter into small pieces and add to food processor. Pulse half a dozen times and check for the size of the butter pieces. Repeat if necessary until the butter is in pieces roughly the size of peas.
4: Put flour mixture in a mixing bowl and add the cold milk. Toss together gently until barely combined. I use the little white plastic tool in the picture to lift the dough from the side of the bowl and dump it on top of the rest of the dough.
5: As soon as the dough holds together, turn it out on a lightly floured counter. Gently “knead” the dough a few strokes until it is a mostly a cohesive ball.
6: Roll the dough into a rectangle 1/2-3/4 inch thick, depending on how tall you like your biscuits. Cut into 2 inch circles, you should get ~6, and place on a parchment lined cookie sheet. (See note about leftover dough.)
7: Bake at 450° for 8-10 minutes. Butter and eat while still warm.

NOTES
– I use a food processor to cut up the butter for biscuits, pie crusts etc. If you don’t have a food processor, you can use a large fork, a pair of dull knives, or just rub the butter and flour gently between your fingers to create the same effect. Your hands will warm the butter a little bit, so if you have time to chill the dough briefly after doing this, do – your biscuits will be flakier.
– There will be some dough left over after you cut the biscuits. Unless you need all of the biscuits for this meal, smoosh it into a ball, wrap it in plastic and stick it in the refrigerator until the next morning. They will be a bit better than if the dough is rerolled immediately.
– I use one of those plastic cutting boards you can pick up for a buck or so because it contains all of the mess and makes cleanup a snap.

Obviously I have a penchant for changing up items and this recipe appears to have a bit of flexibility when it comes to adding / subtracting / substituting ingredients so I decided to finish off the remainder of my bread flour and used the all-purpose flour for the difference thereafter. Thus why I ended up calling my biscuit recipe the biscuit bread recipe. I even went so far as to put the dough into my tray of mini-loaves for good measure.

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Recipe: Beer Bread (w/ Pre-made Mix and from Scratch)

In honor of my pending trip out of country I am posting a favorite recipe of mine… not necessarily because I like to drink a lot or like alcoholic beverages… because I don’t drink (normally), but because my paternal grandmother’s favorite alcoholic beverage was a can of Heineken. I remember the few times I went to the old country and I would see a case of Heineken beer tucked underneath a massive cabinet.

So the last time I went to visit I made a point of baking a loaf of beer bread using a can of Heineken and she ended up sharing the loaf with the family around her.

Originally when I started baking beer bread I did is using the “Tastefully Simple” Beer Bread mix. In addition to the mix you only need:

12 oz. beverage (beer, soda or carbonated juice)
3 Tbsp. butter (optional)

As is my norm when creating / working on recipes, instead of butter I chose to use vegetable oil.

The result was good, but a bit of a cheat… especially since it was a pre-made mix and those are rarely healthy. So eventually I scoured the internet for a recipe that I could bake out of scratch and came across quite a few:
Food.com
AllRecipes.com
FoodNetwork.com
My Baking Addiction Blog

In the end I decided to try the recipe from My Baking Addiction…
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