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Patticake around the World

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Most of these I typed up

a while back from my handwritten notebooks,,

being very fortunate to have international neighbors, and being a

butt-in-ski cook....

Some were collected online earlier and posted to another list. Flat

breads are easily made over a campfire, or in a small apartment

kitchen, so they often work better than a traditional raised loaf . All

recipes have been modified over the years to cut fat and non-plant

ingredients. Most handy for cooking is a heavy cast iron griddle or fry

pan. Wax paper works wonders to shpe the breads between, either by

patting by hand or rolling out. aobut half the recipes are batter

breads , the rest dough based, but all are good, and garanteed to have

the family wondering out for samples.

clear skies

lc carol

 

 

Ethiopian Injera-

 

This is the staple bread of Ethiopia. It is traditionally

made with teff, a very finely milled millet flour. Regular

millet flour from a health food store will work fine. Use

this bread to sop up the flavors of spicy stews.

 

1 tablespoon active dry yeast

5 cups warm water (110

degrees F/45 degrees C)

1 teaspoon syrup or agave necter

3 cups finely ground millet flour

1/4 teaspoon baking soda

 

 

Directions

1 Dissolve yeast in 1/4 cup of the millet water. Allow to

proof and add the remainder of the water and the flour. Stir

until smooth and then cover. Allow to stand at room

temperature for 24 hours.

2 Stir the batter well and mix in the baking soda.

3 Heat a large non-stick skillet over medium heat. Pour

about 1/3 cup of the batter into the pan in a spiral pattern

to cover the bottom of the pan evenly. Tilt the pan to

quickly even out the batter. Cover the pan and allow to cook

for about 1 minute. The bread should not brown but rather

rise slightly and very easy to remove. It is cooked only on

one side. This top should be slightly moist. Remove to a

platter and cool. Stack the cooked breads on a plate.

 

 

 

Indian Flat Breads

 

 

 

 

gleaned

from Laurel's kitchen--

Whole Wheat

Chapattis

 

Chspatti's

are unleavened dough, very similar to tortillas, except for the

encouraged "puffiness". An necessary accompaniment to any meal, or

great

just off the griddle with a little soy-gurt and chutney .

 

 

Mix

together:

 

 

2 cups

whole wheat flour (white flour works fine!)

 

 

1

teaspoon salt

 

 

about

3/4 cup warm water (enough for a kneadable dough)

 

 

 

 

Knead

the

dough, cover, and leave aside for at least 1/2 hour or, ideally, up to

2 hours. After about 1 hour (or right before rolling out), punch the

dough and knead again without any more water.

 

 

Make

10-12 1

1/2" balls; dip each one into dry whole wheat flour, and roll out into

thin, 6" circles. Place a flat, ungreased griddle on the stove at

medium-high heat. When hot, place a rolled-out chapati "right side"

down on the griddle. (The "right side" is the one facing you when you

roll it.) When bubbles are visible, turn over and cook until tiny brown

spots appear on the side facing the griddle.

 

 

If you

have

a gas stove, hold the chapati with a pair of tongs, and place it

directly over the burner flame for a few seconds, until the chapati

puffs up. Turn and repeat on the other side.

 

 

If you

have an electric stove, keep the chapati on the griddle. With a wadded

up paper towel to protect your fingers, press gently

all around the chapati. Flip the chapati and press gently around the

other side. This procedure should make the chapati puff up. (If you

press too hard, the chapati will become too crunchy.)

 

 

Remove

the chapati from the heat, and keep warm under a towel till served.

 

 

 

 

 

Some of

the

foods that are traditionally served with chapatis are Lentils with

Scallions, Spicy Mung Beans, eggplant dishes, green bean dishes,

spinach dishes, and zucchini dishes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DOSAS-

Dosa's are a fremented (sourdough) batter pancake, and can be made from any combination of grains or flours. Wonderful savory for breakfast!

 

Plain

Dosas

Ingredients :

 

 

 

1 cup white

lentils,

3 cups long

grained rice, brown or white

Salt to taste,

 

Soak 1:3 proportion of

lentils to :

rice overnight or 6-8 hours. Using blender make into thick paste. Set

aside

6-8 hours or overnight in a warm place to ferment. Add salt and water to

make a batter of pouring consistency.

 

Heat skillet and thinly oil so batter won't stick to surface. Pour 1/3

cup batter onto to pan and using back of spoon spread the batter on the

pan

in circles in a thin layer (am I making any sense here??). Add about 1

tsp.

oil to the sides of the dosa. Flip over when it turns brown (Like a

pancake).

Serve with potato filing (recipe follows) or with some hot chutney.

 

 

Savory Wheat Dosas

Ingredients : Wheat Flour 2 Cups

Rice Flour 1/2 Cup

Drained crumbled tofu 1/4 Cup

Salt Acc to taste

Cumin 2 Tsp.

Green Chilies 5 Nos

Water

 

Methods :Grind Green Chilies to fine paste.

Mix Everything & let it rest for 3-4 hours.

Add water to make a dosa batter.

Proceed as in Dosa & enjoy with Chutneys

Cheater's Dosas =)

Using whole wheat pancake mix, (like Krusteaz), add water only, to make batter of pouring consistency. Add

some salt, chopped chile peppers (like jalepeno or serrano) and chopped

cilantro leaves. Chopped onions optional.

Pour on to oiled skillet and follow above directions.

Potato filling:

3-4 potatos, cooked till soft and mashed.

1 onion chopped

1 tsp. mustard seeds

1/4 tsp turmeric

chopped serrano peppers

lemon juice and salt to taste

chopped cilantro for garnish.

Heat castiron pan and add mustard seeds. When they start popping

add peppers and turmeric. Add a little water and saute onions. Add mashed potatos. Cook for

5-7 mts. (If mixture gets too dry, add a little bit of water). Add salt.

garnish with cilantro and lemon juice.

When each dosa is ready, spread a little bit of the potato filling in the

center of the dosa and fold over once.

 

 

 

NAN

Nan is the

traditional Nepali bread baked in a tandoor, or roasting oven. The

dough

is slapped onto the inside walls to bake and pried off when done.

Cooking in a conventional oven works just fine. For once, I would love

to try baking them in a tandoor, or maybe an adobe oven, something to

give the woodfired smoky flavor that the real Naan has...

 

 

 

 

 

Nepali

Naan

 

3 cups white whole wheat

flour, sifted

1/2 cup warm soy milk

1/2 cup warm water or as needed

1 cup tofu blended with 2T lemon juice

1 Tbls. yeast

1 Tbls. baking powder

1 Tbls. sugar

1 tsp. salt

 

 

In a small bowl, combine warm soy milk, water, sugar and yeast. Allow

the

yeast to reconstitute for about 30 minutes.

 

In a large bowl, combine the flour, baking powder and

salt.

 

Make a well in the center and add milk-water mixture and tofu-gurt,

mixing

it with the flour until a soft dough is formed.

 

Dust

kneading board with flour; place the dough on the board and knead for

ten minutes or so. Cover with plastic wrap and let rest for two hours.

The dough will have expanded by two folds. Knead the dough again for

another five minutes and allow resting for another half an hour. Divide

the dough into three-inch balls. Roll out the dough balls into

eight-inch circles. Cover with plastic wrap.

 

Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.

 

Place

nans on a lightly oiled baking tray. Lightly brush the top of nans

with soy milk. Bake in oven for 10-15 minutes until the nans have

risen and surface has turned slightly brown. Do not over bake nans.

 

Note that nans can also be baked in a hot tandoor which is commonly

used in Nepal.

 

Alternatively, you can also season nans with garlic, herbs, and other

spices.

 

Serve hot with vegetable or curry preparations.

 

Another basic Naan

recipe

-4 cups wheat

flour

-1/2tsp Baking powder

-1tsp salt

-3/3 cup soy Milk

-1tbsp Sugar

-2T ground flax

-

-1tsp

Nigella seeds (kalunji) (Seeds from love-in-a-mist flowers.) Black

sesame seeds or poppy seeds, or cumin are excellent substitutes.

 

Method:

-Sift the flour,

salt and baking powder into a bowl and make a well in the middle.

-Mix the sugar, milk, ground flax in a bowl.

-Pour this into the center of the flour and knead adding water if

necessary to form soft dough.

-Add the remaining oil, knead again, then cover with damp cloth and

allow the dough to stand for 15 minutes.

-Knead the dough again and cover and leave for 2-3 hours.

-About half an before the naan are required, turn on the oven to

maximum heat.

-Divide the dough into 8 balls and allow rest for 3-4 minutes.

-Sprinkle a baking sheet with nigella seeds and put it in the oven to

heat while the dough is resting.

-Shape each ball of dough with the palms to make an oval shape.

-Bake the naan until puffed up and golden brown.

-Serve hot.

 

 

 

 

 

Akki Hittina Roti

 

Rice flour flatbread

 

Ingredients

 

4 cups fine rice flour

 

1/2 cupgrated dried orfresh unseetened coconut

 

1T. finely cut green chilis(optional)

 

1 cup finely bell Pepper (or carrot or cabbage)

 

1/4 cup cooked thick split peas

 

1 t.oil

 

2 t. salt

 

Directions:

 

Mix rice, salt and oil to a batter . Add other ingredients.

Prepare 4 round balls. Grease a large flat non-stick pan or fry pan and

place one ball. Lightly hand press dough on pan to cover the full

surface. Lightly roast, covering the batter adding 1 table spoon of

oil. Cover while cooking, but do not turn. Done when a little dry on

top. Repeat other 3 balls. Serve.

 

 

 

 

Chinese Double-Luck Pancakes

 

Served with Green onions and Peking duck

 

From Ken Homm

 

Ingredients

275g/10oz plain flour, plus extra for dusting

250ml/8fl oz very hot water

2 tbsp ground toast seeds

 

 

Method

1. Put the flour into a large bowl. Gradually stir in

the hot water, mixing all the while with chopsticks or a fork until it

is fully incorporated. Add more water if the mixture seems dry.

2.

Turn the dough out and knead it with your hands for about 8 minutes or

until it is smooth, dusting with flour if necessary, as it may be quite

sticky at this point. Put the dough back into the bowl, cover it with a

damp tea-towel and let it rest for about 30 minutes.

3. Remove the

dough from the bowl and knead it again for about 5 minutes, dusting

with a little flour if it is sticky. Once the dough is smooth, form it

into a roll about 45cm/18in long and 2.5cm/1in thick. Cut the roll into

18 equal pieces and shape each one into a ball.

4. Take 2 of the dough balls. Dip one side of one ball into the sesame

seeds and place the dusted side on top of the other ball.

5.

With a rolling pin, roll the 2 pancakes simultaneously into a circle

about 15cm/6in in diameter. You can flip the double pancake over and

roll on the other side as well.

6. Heat a frying-pan or wok over a

very low flame. Put the double pancake into the pan and cook it for 1-2

minutes, until it has dried underneath; there may be brown specks. Flip

it over and cook the other side until dried as well.

7. Remove from

the pan and let it cool slightly. When it is still warm, but cool

enough to handle, peel the 2 pancakes apart and set them aside. Repeat

this process until all the dough balls have been cooked.

 

 

 

Rieska- Finnish Flat Rye Bread

 

from recipe zaar

 

1 cup oatmeal

1 cup rye flour

3 cups white or whole wheat flour

4 teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon salt

3 teaspoons sugar

2 cups soy milk soured with 1T lemon juice

1/2 blended tofu)

 

Combine all ingredients, as if you were mixing for a pie crust.

Dough will be soft.

Roll out to about 1/2 inch thickness.

Bake for 10 minutes at 475 degrees.

 

 

 

 

Civil War Hardtack Recipe

by Kathy Kleiman

from 20th Maine home site

 

Hardtack is the most famous American Civil War staple food. Hard

as a rock, this cracker was easily made by large contract baking

companies to the bane of many a Civil War soldier. As Mike Bilbo

states, it is more aptly called "digestible leather". It was also

affectionately known by the men as "angel cakes, teeth dullers or ammo

reserves". But it was also issued, and stored by the men for

marching. Carrying a piece of hardtack around in your haversack would

serves as a good living history discussion piece for the public. Rumor

is, some hardtack made during the Civil War was re-issued and used

during the Spanish American war almost 35 years later!

 

 

 

6 parts flour

1 part water

 

Knead dough until thoroughly mixed. Roll out on a floured surface

until about 1/8 inch thick (or there abouts). Cut into squares--there

is an actual size piece of hardtack pictured in Hard Tack & Coffee

by Billings (p. 114 in my edition), seems to be about 2 3/4 by 3 1/2

inches. His piece of hardtack was small and I've seen larger ones.

Probably due to whatever

contractor made the hard tack.

 

Pierce the hard tack 13 times with the tip of a knife, making sure

hole goes all the way through the dough. The Tinsmiths sutler makes a

hardtack "cookie" mold that is just great for this. They advertise in

the CW News.

 

Bake at 325 for at least an hour, turning over the hard tack once.

Check to see that it is cooked through completely. Take out & let

cool overnight to get that real hard & dry feeling. Some people

bake at 300 for a couple of hours, just to get it real dry. The

finished hard tack will still look pale.

 

 

 

 

Southern Buckwheat Pancake

 

 

Make these pancakes the night before.

INGREDIENTS:

 

1 cup buckwheat flour

1/2 cup all-purpose flour

3 tablespoons granulated sugar

1 1/4 teaspoons salt

1 teaspoon active dry yeast

2 cups warm water

1/4 cup bacon drippings or butter

1/4 teaspoon baking soda

PREPARATION:

 

In large mixing bowl stir together flours, sugar, and salt.

Dissolve yeast in warm water then stir into flour mixture. Stir in

bacon drippings.

Let stand at room temperature 1 hour, then cover

and refrigerate overnight. The next morning stir in baking soda. Drop

by tablespoonfuls onto hot greased griddle. Cook each pancake until

bubbles form around edges of top, then turn and brown the other side.

Serve hot.

 

Makes about 18 pancakes.

 

 

 

Arab Pita Bread-

 

 

 

2 C. warm water (115-115 degrees)

 

1 T. sugar

 

1 T. active dry yeast

 

5 1/2 C. to 6 1/2 C. whole wheat bread flour

 

1 t. salt

 

If you work away from home during the day or even if you work at

home, you can make up a sponge, with about half the flour. Dissolve the

yeast and sugar in the warm water. Add 1/4 cup of the all-purpose

flour. Stir with a whisk and let sit for 10 minutes to give the yeast a

chance to get going.

 

When you get back to the sponge later on, add the salt and enough

flour to make a dough that is a bit stiff, one that you can easily

knead by hand. Turn the dough out of the bowl onto a floured surface

and knead it until it is smooth and bouncy, adding only enough more

flour to keep it from sticking to the board or you. Give it a rest for

about 5 minutes to relax the gluten and make it more cooperative about

being shaped.

 

Divide the dough into 8 pieces. Flatten each piece with your hand

and then roll each piece with a floured rolling pin, or a pin with a

cover, on a floured surface into a circle about 6-inches in diameter

and 1/8-inch thick. You may need to let the pieces rest occasionally to

relax the dough.

 

Sprinkle baking sheets with cornmeal, and place two circles on

each. Or place circles on pieces of parchment paper. Let the dough

circles rest here for at least 15 minutes while you preheat your oven

to a hot 500°F. When the pita circles have finished resting, place the

baking sheet on the oven bottom or, if this is not possible, on the

lowest rack. If you're using a baking stone, make sure it's on the oven

floor, or on the lowest rack. Use a peel to transfer the

pitas-on-parchment to the stone. Close the oven door and keep it shut

for 1 minute. Don't peek or the pocket may not form. It's this

initially fast, hot searing of the outside dough of the pita that makes

it separate from the inside. The carbon dioxide gas created by the

yeast expands inside and accentuates the separation until the pita

blows up like a balloon and the pocket is created.

 

At the end of the minute, place the sheet on a rack higher in the

oven and continue baking anywhere from 3 to 7 minutes, until the pitas

have blown up into balloons and are lightly browned. If the pitas baked

right on the stone, you'll probably want to transfer them to a baking

sheet, which is already in place on the oven rack, for this second part

of their baking.

When they're done, remove the baking sheet from the

oven, slide the pitas off and let them cool. They will probably deflate

somewhat after cooling. Once they're thoroughly cool you can press more

air out of them so they take up less storage room.

 

 

 

 

Norwegian Lefse--Potato griddle cakes

Ingredients

 

5 cup hot mashed potatoes

 

1 teaspoon sugar

 

1 teaspoon salt

 

4 T. blended tofu

 

 

2 cup flour

 

Directions:

 

Mix ingredients except flour while mashed potatoes are hot. Let

cool. Add flour and mix until you have stiff dough. Pinch off portions

the size of an egg. Roll paper-thin on pastry cloth, using as little

flour as possible. Bake in electric fry pan or griddle until top is

light brown. Turn over. Remove and stack between paper towels. To

serve, sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar.

 

 

 

 

 

Mexican Tortillas- whole wheat

 

Ingredients

 

 

2 1/2 cups whole wheat

bread flour

2 tablespoons vegetable

oil

2/3 cup very warm water

 

 

 

Directions:

In a mixing bowl, combine

flour, a little salt, oil and water and process until it gathers into a

ball. Add more water or flour as needed (if it is dry more water, if

too moist more flour). Form into little balls (should be about 12).

Using either your hands, a tortilla press or the bottom of a glass

flatten out the dough into tortilla shape. Make thinner for thinner

tortillas, thicker for thicker ones. toast on a dry-greased griddle or

frypan for a few minutes on each site till a little brown and somewhat

bubbly and dry looking. As all fresh baked goods, there are miles ahead

of store-bought in flavor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amaranth or Millet Tortillas

First one just off the griddle, these are wonderful!

Amaranth gets a nice nutty flavor. I pulled the millet recipe off of

the FF Vegetarian Cooking site and used Amaratnth flour instead.

 

 

Ingredients

 

 

 

2 cups Amaranth or Millet Flour

1 1/4 water

wax paper

 

 

Directions:

1. In a mixing bowl combine flour and water. Knead mixture until

dough is firm but moist (if necessary a small amounts of water or flour

to achieve consistency). Let dough rest for 15 minutes.

2. Divide the dough into 12 equal portions and shape each portion

into a ball.

3. Use a rolling pin or a tortillas press, flatten each ball between

2 pieces of waxed paper into a 6-inch circle. (I just used my

hands, worked fine! CW)

4. Carefully peel off top sheet of waxed paper. Place tortilla,

paper side up, on a medium-hot, ungreased skillet or griddle. Peel off

top paper. Cook, turning occasionally, for 2 to 2-1/2 minutes or until

tortilla is dry and light brown (tortilla should still be soft). Wrap

tortillas in cloth if using immediately. Makes twelve 6-inch tortillas.

 

Serves: 12 6" tortillas

grabbing a rag to get the flour off the keyboard...

Enjoy!

Carol

 

 

And these to recipes are from Thrifty Cooks list

 

Chewy Flour

Tortillas

These tortillas have real body and taste; they are perfect for

gorditas, fajitas and eating out of hand.

 

2 C All-purpose flour

1-½ t Baking powder

1 t Salt

¾ C Lukewarm milk (2% is fine)

 

Stir together the flour and baking powder in a large mixing

bowl. Add the salt and vegetable oil to the lukewarm milk and whisk

briefly to incorporate. Gradually add the milk to the flour, and work

the mixture into a dough. It will be sticky. Turn the dough out onto a

surface dusted with flour and knead vigorously for about 2 minutes

(fold and press, fold and press). The kneading will take care of the

stickiness. Return the dough to the bowl, cover it with a damp cloth,

and let it rest for 15 minutes. (This dough will not rise, but it needs

a rest.)

Divide your dough into 8 balls of equal size, cover them,

and let them rest again for about 20 minutes. Avoid letting them touch,

if you don't want them to stick together. Dust your work surface with

flour. Working one at a time, remove each piece of dough and pat it

into a 5-inch circle. With a rolling pin, roll out the tortilla,

working from the center out, until you have a 7- or 8-inch tortilla a

little less than ¼-inch thick. Transfer the tortilla to a hot, dry

skillet or griddle. It will begin to blister. Let it cook for 30

seconds, turn it, and let the other side cook for 30 seconds. Remove

the tortilla, place it in a napkin-lined basket and cover with aluminum

foil. Repeat for the remaining tortillas. Although flour tortillas,

like corn tortillas, are best if eaten right after they are made, these

tortillas will freeze well. Wrap them tightly in plastic, and they will

keep, frozen, for several weeks. To serve tortillas that have been

frozen, let them thaw and come to room temperature, then wrap them in

aluminum foil and heat them in a warm oven. Microwaving tends to

toughen them. Here are some tips as to technique:

Do not use bread flour. You want flour with a low gluten content.

 

You

don't want to over-flour your work surface, but you don't want your

rolled-out tortilla sticking to it either. I found that the dough

adhered less to an unvarnished wood surface (like an old cutting board)

than any other surface I tried.

A flat dough scraper, known in

baking parlance as a "bench knife", is very efficient in removing the

rolled-out tortilla from the work surface.

When rolling out

tortillas, dust your rolling pin with flour, and don't be afraid to

apply pressure. Flour tortilla dough is pretty sturdy; but not to the

point of rerolling. You don't want tough tortillas.

 

The Border Cookbook recommends the use of a tortilla

roller (similar to a short piece of broomstick), rather than a rolling

pin.

Rolling

out tortillas in perfect circles is harder than it sounds; the dough

wants to draw up. So if perfectly circular shapes are important, you

can trim away the excess with a sharp knife.

Once again, I believe

a cast-iron skillet or griddle is practically indispensable for making

any kind of tortilla. A dry cast-iron utensil, unlike most other

materials, can take high temperatures over a sustained period of time

without being adversely affected, although you may have to do a

reseasoning afterwards.

 

Once you get a rhythm going, you can roll out a tortilla,

put it on to cook and, while it cooks, roll out your next tortilla.

Seems like an arduous process but, with this method, I could produce 8

tortillas in about 10 action-packed minutes. Be sure to rewrap your

fresh tortillas each time you add another to the stack. If you like,

you can substitute one cup of whole wheat flour for one cup of the

all-purpose flour. My personal preference is for plain tortillas but,

if desired, you can spice up this recipe by adding

A tablespoon of chopped fresh herbs (like oregano or rosemary)

A teaspoon or so of dried herbs

Freshly ground black pepper

A tablespoon of minced jalapeños

A

little garlic powder (or substitute garlic salt for the salt) If you

choose to experiment with seasonings, mix dry spices with the flour

mixture and fresh or "wet" seasonings with the milk. My results with

the above recipe were outstanding -- chewy, delicious, irresistible. My

experience with the Sonoran variety, however, was less than

spectacular. Sonoran cooks have turned tortilla making practically into

an art form. Their tortillas are large (some are pizza-sized), thin and

delicate.

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Nice collection of recipes from C. Widger – all appropriate

except for Southern Buckwheat Pancake which lists a quarter cup of bacon

drippings or butter. ;-)

 

~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~

(my signature) from Maida

Please sign the petition to allow pets, link in upper left

at www.petsincondos.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Nice collection of recipes from C. Widger – all appropriate

except for Southern Buckwheat Pancake which lists a quarter cup of bacon

drippings or butter. ;-)I would think the fat in that recipe could be replaced easily by pureed tofu or pureed beans. And if you wanted it, a couple drops of liquid smoke could simulate the bacon flavor. I don't have any buckwheat flour on hand or I'd give it a try and report back.~MarthaMaida Genser <maidawg Sent: Tuesday, October 7, 2008 11:43:41 AM Re:Patticake around the World

 

 

 

Nice collection of recipes from C. Widger – all appropriate

except for Southern Buckwheat Pancake which lists a quarter cup of bacon

drippings or butter. ;-) ~.~.~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~ (my signature) from Maida Please sign the petition to allow pets, link in upper left

at www.petsincondos. org

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Woops, my bad, I didn't edit that one

out. I occasionally use baco bits for that one.

Carol

 

Maida Genser wrote:

 

 

 

 

Nice collection of

recipes from C. Widger – all appropriate

except for Southern Buckwheat Pancake which lists a quarter cup of

bacon

drippings or butter. ;-)

 

~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~

(my signature) from Maida

Please sign the petition

to allow pets, link in upper left

at www.petsincondos.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Blended tofu works well in place of the

fat in many of these recipes. They don't come out as "rich", but that's

a GOOD thing!

clear skies!

lc Carol

 

Martha wrote:

 

 

 

Nice collection of

recipes from C. Widger – all appropriate

except for Southern Buckwheat Pancake which lists a quarter cup of

bacon

drippings or butter. ;-)

 

 

I would think the fat in that recipe could be replaced easily by pureed

tofu or pureed beans. And if you wanted it, a couple drops of liquid

smoke could simulate the bacon flavor. I don't have any buckwheat flour

on hand or I'd give it a try and report back.

 

~Martha

 

 

 

 

-----

Original Message ----

Maida Genser <maidawg

 

Tuesday, October 7, 2008 11:43:41 AM

Re:Patticake around the World

 

 

 

 

Nice collection of

recipes from C. Widger – all appropriate

except for Southern Buckwheat Pancake which lists a quarter cup of

bacon

drippings or butter. ;-)

~.~.~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~

..~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~

(my signature) from Maida

Please sign the petition

to allow pets, link in upper left

at www.petsincondos.

org

 

 

 

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my great grandmother, strict vegetarian back in the day (i grew up in

the south, in the 70s) made buckwheat pancakes without butter or

bacon. since she never wrote anything down recipe wise i don't know

how she made them. and only eaten with molasses or her home-canned

cane syrup (which tastes nothing like you think it will) (grandaddy

grew sugar cane), we weren't allowed " log cabin " & back then you

couldn't find real maple syrup in the store where we were. she

probably wouldn't have used that either anyway.

we were not allowed to waste or eat between meals. although my brother

and i would sneak eating the veggies or fruit she told us to pick for

her. i tell you what though, after a buckwheat pancake breakfast my

brother & i had a lot of energy! she had awesome pesticide free

gardens, composted, vermi-composted. she gardened every day and lived

a long life. really a corner stone of our family. i don't know if she

knew (or maybe she does now:)) how she has influenced our lives now.

sorry, i kinda got ot there but buckwheat pancakes will *always*

remind me of her!

sanQ

 

> Martha wrote:

> > Nice collection of recipes from C. Widger -- all appropriate except

> > for Southern Buckwheat Pancake which lists a quarter cup of bacon

> > drippings or butter. ;-)

> >

> > I would think the fat in that recipe could be replaced easily by

> > pureed tofu or pureed beans. And if you wanted it, a couple drops of

> > liquid smoke could simulate the bacon flavor. I don't have any

> > buckwheat flour on hand or I'd give it a try and report back.

> >

> > ~Martha

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > Maida Genser <maidawg

> >

> > Tuesday, October 7, 2008 11:43:41 AM

> > Re:Patticake around the World

> >

> > Nice collection of recipes from C. Widger -- all appropriate except

> > for Southern Buckwheat Pancake which lists a quarter cup of bacon

> > drippings or butter. ;-)

> >

> >

> >

> > ~.~.~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~

> > .~.~.~.~. ~.~.~.~.~ .~.~

> >

> > (my signature) from Maida

> >

> > Please sign the petition to allow pets, link in upper left at

> > www.petsincondos. org <http://www.petsincondos.org/>

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

>

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