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Conference back40::soapbox

Title:Soapbox. Just Soapbox.
Notice:No more new notes
Moderator:WAHOO::LEVESQUEONS
Created:Thu Nov 17 1994
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:862
Total number of notes:339684

25.0. "Bread" by MOLAR::DELBALSO (I (spade) my (dogface)) Fri Jun 23 1995 04:17

The staff of life.

Discuss.

T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
25.1BUT - NO banana bread, SVPMOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Fri Jun 23 1995 04:2726
Anybody know of any particularly good breads, either commercial or
via recipe?

Discussion with another noter indicates a general concurrence that most
of the mass-market breads aren't worth the yeast it took to raise them.

As an example, in New Hampshire, it's impossible to find a decent loaf
of Italian bread. It's a wonder how anyone responsible for baking what
they claim to be Italian Bread in New Hampshire can do so with a straight
face. It's clear that there's no way they've ever actually tasted a real
loaf of Italian bread.

Pumperknickel is another good example. Gerald may be able to concur on
this - in Syracuse there used to be a bakery on the east side (Fayette
Street) known as the Snowflake that made a loaf of Pumperknickel bread
the likes of which you've possibly never seen. The loaves were at least
a foot in diameter and six inches high - prolly weighed about 3 or 4
pound apiece. You could make the best corned beef sandwiches in the world
with a loaf of this stuff. Can't find anything like it in New England
as far as I know.

If you know of a source of good quality bread, if you have a good recipe
for quality bread, or if you have some opinions (silly question) on what
constitutes a good loaf of bread, let's hear it.

A loaf of bread, a bag o' blush, and thou . . . 
25.2Talk HardSNOFS1::DAVISMHappy Harry Hard OnFri Jun 23 1995 04:331
    Aussie Damper
25.3MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Fri Jun 23 1995 04:382
Tell us more, Martin.

25.4Talk HardSNOFS1::DAVISMHappy Harry Hard OnFri Jun 23 1995 04:544
    Well, it's bread you would make whilst bush-walking/camping. You can
    find all of the relevant ingredients amongst the bush tucker, exept
    for one....Beer.
    
25.5MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Fri Jun 23 1995 05:011
Bush tucker?
25.6Talk HardSNOFS1::DAVISMHappy Harry Hard OnFri Jun 23 1995 05:265
    errr, yeah, you know..... food found in the bush ! Basically, it's
    anything that's edible and you find growing or living in the outback.
    
    A lot of stuff out there is quite tasty....on the other hand a lot of
    it would make you wanna puke !!!!! :*)
25.7DOCTP::KELLERSpprt smlr gvt. http://www.lp.org/lp/lp.htmlFri Jun 23 1995 11:239
There is a good recipie for white bread on the back of bags of King Arthur 
flour (IMNSHO the only store available flour worth using [never bleached or
bromated]).  If you want really good flour contact Walnut Acres in PA ( a 
bit on the expensive side).

If you want recipies for other kinds of bread say the word and I'll post a 
couple of good ones.

Geoff
25.8DEVMKO::SHERKI belong! I got circles overme i'sFri Jun 23 1995 11:587
    
    I make my own bread, but I tend to the very simple white bread.  Don't
    mess around with the recipe much because it works, it doesn't dry out
    and i don't have to dispose of the bad experiments.
    
    ken
    
25.10IndianSMURF::WALTERSFri Jun 23 1995 12:505
    
    Indian nan, puri or chappati bread.  The dough is sold by Foods &
    Flavors in Nashua, Next to the Indan Village restaurant.  It's best
    cooked in a clay oven, but you can cook it on the grill over a pizza
    stone or on bricks.
25.11You think I live in "the city"....PERFOM::LICEA_KANEwhen it's comin' from the leftFri Jun 23 1995 12:529
    It's an amazing concept, Jack.  Kind of like in the old country.
    
    You walk out the front door, walk for about a mile, talk with wonderful
    people, share an espresso, they give you wonderful bread, you give them
    a bit of your money, you wish them good day, they wish you good day,
    and then you walk home with your child on your shoulders while he holds
    tightly on to the treasure.
    
    								-mr. bill
25.12COVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertFri Jun 23 1995 12:5512
John Covert's DAK Rye Bread

1 pkg yeast			1 T butter
2 cups bread flour		1 t salt
1 cup rye flour			2 t caraway seeds
1 cup whole wheat flour		1 egg white
2 T wheat germ			1 T molasses
1/2 cup oat bran		1 1/2 cups very warm water

Put all ingredients into the machine in the order listed; let the machine
sit for 5-10 minutes (top closed) to allow the water to moisten the dry
ingredients, and press start.
25.13CSLALL::HENDERSONLearning to leanFri Jun 23 1995 13:104


 Hey, how'd you get note 25?
25.14WAHOO::LEVESQUEMr BlisterFri Jun 23 1995 13:138
    >And for putting on weight in a hurry, you can't beat the Portugese
    >Sweet bread at Lucia's in Nashua, esp when it's warm out of the oven.
     
     I'm partial to their portuguese rolls. You don't even need butter. But
    there are no preservatives, so don't dally in eating them.
    
     My grandfather liked their rolls with linguica inside. 
    
25.15SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIZebwas have foot-in-mouth disease!Fri Jun 23 1995 13:4815
    
    Jack,
    
      Back in the "FOOD" note, I mentioned finding a Polish deli in
    Manchester. They ship in most of their stuff from Worcester and New
    York City, and have a really nice, dark rye that comes from
    wooster-way. It's from a new bakery there and is really tasty... Stuff
    is heavy, dense and has that nice, European taste...
    
      let me know if you need directions... or maybe we can shoot up there
    some Saturday morning...
    
    
     Andy
    
25.162434::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Fri Jun 23 1995 13:539
My wife makes great challah.  We get 50-lb bags of high-gluten flour from a
baker's supply place.

The best challah I've ever had is what they served at the now-defunct
Pelham Kosher Restaurant in Mt. Vernon, NY (of all places).  They gave
you a small wooden cutting board, a steak knife, and a challah about 6"
in diameter.  It was very rich -- they must have put _lots_ of eggs in it.
You could easily put away a loaf or two at a meal.  The rest of the food was
also pretty good, so you were in a quandary as to how much challah to have.
25.17SUBPAC::SADINWe the people?Fri Jun 23 1995 14:008
    
    
    	My mother used to bake LOTS of bread and other goodies when I was a
    young lad. Nothing better than walking in the house after a hard day
    and smelling the aroma of fresh bread. MMmmmmmmmmmmmm.....
    
    
    jim
25.18BIGQ::SILVADiabloFri Jun 23 1995 14:094

	I bet milady has a lot of neat ways to cook bread. I'm drooling just
thinking about it.... yum!
25.19CONSLT::MCBRIDEReformatted to fit your screenFri Jun 23 1995 14:193
    re: portuguese rolls
    
    Best bread for sammies IMO, beats a bulkie by a mile.
25.20WAHOO::LEVESQUEMr BlisterFri Jun 23 1995 14:201
    Help sharpen your teeth, too. ;-)
25.22CALDEC::RAHa wind from the EastFri Jun 23 1995 16:1010
    
    Noah's bagels, garlic. Dipped in garlic paste
    for good measure.
    
    Whole Foods 7 grain dark-as-earth bread
    slathered with WF house brand hummus.
    
    Vietnamese French-style bread, purchased 
    from a street vendor, containing small
    crunchy bits of, er, protein.
25.23NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Fri Jun 23 1995 16:201
Noah's bagels must be pretty stale by now.
25.25NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Fri Jun 23 1995 17:042
Electronic humor in the bread topic?  I Wonder if anybody has any rye remarks
about breadboards.
25.26MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Fri Jun 23 1995 17:062
Oh, stop trying to get a rise out of us. Even if it does give you a charge.

25.27MKOTS3::JMARTINI press on toward the goalFri Jun 23 1995 17:072
    Why is a loaf of Nissan 1.80 and a loaf of Shaws Oatmeal bread 99
    cents...and it tastes just as good?
25.28NETCAD::WOODFORDUSER ERROR::ReplaceUser/PressAnyKeyToCont.Fri Jun 23 1995 17:084
    
    
    I thought Nissan only made cars??? :*)
    
25.30NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Fri Jun 23 1995 17:091
It's because of the tariff that Clinton's slapped on Japanese luxury breads.
25.31Round or oblong?SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIZebwas have foot-in-mouth disease!Fri Jun 23 1995 17:091
    
25.32NETCAD::WOODFORDUSER ERROR::ReplaceUser/PressAnyKeyToCont.Fri Jun 23 1995 17:094
    
    
    <---- heeheehee  Good one! :*)
    
25.33MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Fri Jun 23 1995 17:124
>    Why is a loaf of Nissan 1.80 and a loaf of Shaws Oatmeal bread 99
>    cents...and it tastes just as good?

You meant "just as lousy", did you not, Jack?
25.34MKOTS3::JMARTINI press on toward the goalFri Jun 23 1995 17:141
    Uhhhhh....yes.
25.35SX4GTO::OLSONDoug Olson, ISVETS Palo AltoFri Jun 23 1995 18:034
    Santa Cruz bakery "Alfaro's" does several good ones- my fave is the
    rosemary and garlic sourdough.  Stacey prefers their four-seed sour.
    
    DougO
25.36DASHER::RALSTONcantwejustbenicetoeachother?:)Fri Jun 23 1995 18:195
    Rubschlager
    
    I expecially like the "European Style Whole Grain Bread"
    
    ...Tom
25.37NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Fri Jun 23 1995 18:203
>    Rubschlager

Please.  This is a family conference.
25.39Works, too.GAAS::BRAUCHERFri Jun 23 1995 18:555
    
      "If you want a man to propose marriage, bake him bread."
    
                                      - My momma, over 40 years ago
    
25.40MPGS::MARKEYThe bottom end of Liquid SanctuaryFri Jun 23 1995 18:575
    >  "If you want a man to propose marriage, bake him bread."
    
    So. how many men have proposed to you?
    
    -b
25.41TROOA::COLLINSMy hovercraft is full of eels.Fri Jun 23 1995 18:593
    
    `Baby I'm-a Want You'
    
25.43DECLNE::SHEPARDIt's the Republicans' faultFri Jun 23 1995 19:071
Youre the only one who cares enough to bake for me
25.44and WonderBread will get rid of him...GAAS::BRAUCHERFri Jun 23 1995 19:0816
    
      Well, actually (this was very long ago), I grew up totally
     henpecked - three sisters, no brothers, with a stay-at-home
     Mom, and a Dad who travelled a bunch and died when I'd grown up.
    
      So I grew up with a lot of mother-daughter type advice, which I
     guess is a lot better than father-son.  I learned that later when I had
     three teenage sons.  Not only did my wife-to-be bake me scrumptious
     bread in great loaves, I made her a great crescent shaped peach
     strudel in return.  This was back before fill-o was common.  You had
     to stretch the dough extremely thin over the whole kitchen table.
    
      Love at first bite, so to speak.  Nowadays, they throw oat bran at
     you instead.
    
      bb
25.45now you're talkingOUTSRC::HEISERMaranatha!Fri Jun 23 1995 19:147
    My wife has an incredible recipe for stone ground whole wheat bread,
    but if I told it to you, I'd have to kill you.
    
    Actually I'll try to remember it on Monday.  Also have a good one for
    Canadian Brown Bread.
    
    Mike
25.46OUTSRC::HEISERMaranatha!Fri Jun 23 1995 19:157
>My wife makes great challah.  We get 50-lb bags of high-gluten flour from a
>baker's supply place.
    
    Gerald, please post it when you get a chance.
    
    thanks,
    Mike
25.47NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Fri Jun 23 1995 19:201
I'd post it if I could fit the bread into a scanner.
25.48DEVLPR::DKILLORANM1A - The choice of champions !Fri Jun 23 1995 19:257
>My wife makes great challah.  We get 50-lb bags of high-gluten flour from a
>baker's supply place.
    
    Wow!  That must be a H*!! of a loaf !
    
    :-)
    Dan
25.49BIGQ::MARCHANDFri Jun 23 1995 19:252
    
       Use hand lotion so you won't be so "crusty"
25.50MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Fri Jun 23 1995 19:321
I wonder if that lotion would work for callouses . . . 
25.51This is rather unforgettableMOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Wed Nov 08 1995 01:5532
	Tomato Bread

1 cup sour cream
1 egg
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 6-ounce can tomato paste
1/2 cup pitted black olives, well drained
2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1/2 cup whole-wheat flour
1/2 cup cornmeal
1 teaspoon sugar
2 cloves fresh garlic, pressed
1 teaspoon dried basil
1 teaspoon white pepper
1 teaspoon Salt
2 1/2 teaspoons active dry yeast

If you're using a bread machine, put the wet and dry ingredients in according
to the manufacturer's directions and run at "white" cycle according to crust
preference..

By hand, combine the two flours, cornmeal, sugar, dried basil, white pepper,
salt and dry yeast by hand in a bowl or on a board. Make a well in the center
and add the sour cream, tomato paste, egg, olive oil, olives,  and pressed 
garlic. Knead well until mixture is elastic, adding more all-purpose flour as
needed. Cover dough in a warm place or oiled bowl for an hour to rise (not
doubling in volume - this is a heavy dough). Punch down and allow to rise again
for 60-80 minutes. Bake for 35-45 minutes, depending on crust preference,
at 375 F.

Try making some toasted cheese sandwiches out of this, or spreading a toasted
slice with some anchovy fillets
25.52MKOTS3::JMARTINI press on toward the goalWed Nov 08 1995 13:526
    Baby I'm a want you.....baby I'm a need you....
    You're the only one I care enough to live about.....
    
    Lately I'm a crazy....but I just can't live withouuttt...
    
    Am I addressing this topic properly?
25.53NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Wed Nov 08 1995 13:553
re .52:

See .41.
25.54MKOTS3::JMARTINI press on toward the goalWed Nov 08 1995 13:561
    Sorry...it's been used!
25.55CSC32::M_EVANSruns with scissorsWed Nov 08 1995 17:369
    jack,
    
    Think I could use yogurt instead of sour cream?  
    
    I looks yummy and I have been looking for a bread recipe like this for
    a while, but I am always looking for ways to cut fat, and sourcream has
    gotten to be too rich, for the most part.
    
    meg
25.56SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIBeen complimented by a toady lately?Wed Nov 08 1995 17:396
    
    
    >I looks yummy
    
    Why don't you let us decide???
    
25.57MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Wed Nov 08 1995 17:423
I think the yogurt would work, Meg. It certainly would "lighten it up"
some. It's extremely rich.

25.58CALLME::MR_TOPAZWed Nov 08 1995 18:432
       No-fat sour cream is just about the only no-fat food that's a
       usually-acceptable substitute for the lotsa-fat version.
25.59CNTROL::JENNISONRevive us, Oh LordWed Nov 08 1995 19:264
    
    	in baked bread, perhaps, but I don't care for it in
    	dips or salads...
    
25.60POWDML::HANGGELILittle Chamber of Tootsie PopsWed Nov 08 1995 19:518
    
    I've had it on potato(e)s, and it's not so bad.  Also, the no-fat fake
    liquid creamer is just as palatable as the fatted version.
    
    The grossest thing in the WORLD is no-fat peanut butter.  I wouldn't
    feed that to my worst enemy.
    
    
25.61SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIBeen complimented by a toady lately?Wed Nov 08 1995 19:524
    
    
    the no-fat sour cream after-taste is to gak for....
    
25.62POWDML::HANGGELILittle Chamber of Tootsie PopsWed Nov 08 1995 19:565
    
    Izzit?  I didn't notice.  However, I must admit I added salsa to the
    concoction, and that'll kill any aftertaste 8^).
    
    
25.63SOLVIT::KRAWIECKIBeen complimented by a toady lately?Wed Nov 08 1995 19:5910
    
    >Izzit?
    
    Yep... tried to make a veggie dip with it and the after-taste still
    came through loud and clear...
    
     It might be different if used in baking and/or cooking, but as is,
    it's in the same category as Triple Bock...
    
    
25.64CALLME::MR_TOPAZWed Nov 08 1995 21:233
       Could be.  I mostly use it cooked, as a replacement for cream in a
       sauce. where it's masked by other flavors.  I guess it's mostly
       the texture/consistency that's comparable.
25.65CSC32::M_EVANSruns with scissorsWed Nov 08 1995 23:0810
    Mr Topaz,
    
    I haven't read the list of ingredients for fat-free sourcream
    substitutes, but if it is anything like the list of fat-free
    cream cheese-like products, I prefer something that is close to real
    food.  Also the amount of sugar in the fat-free cream cheese product is
    enough to shove my glucose levels all over the place.  Do they do that
    to the fat-free sour cream substitutes as well?
    
    meg 
25.66CALLME::MR_TOPAZThu Nov 09 1995 11:237
       re .65:
       
       I dunno.  Hth, but suspect that it might not, and further suspect
       that just maybe you could get the answer by reading the
       ingredients instead of bothering me with such questions,
       
       --Mr Topaz
25.67yum yum!BSS::PROCTOR_RA wallet full of onesWed Mar 06 1996 22:578
    cranked up Mr. Bread Machine.
    
    worked pretty good!
    
    vegetable bread all hot'n steamy. Ate it all (what I didn't share with
    the dogs)
    
    {belch!}
25.68MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Tue Mar 19 1996 13:5718
Discovered the "secret" of making a genuine loaf of Italian bread by machine 
last night. I don't have a clue as to why none of the many bread machine
recipe books that I've reviewed have ever included this recipe, other than
possibly because the authors wouldn't know a good loaf of Italian bread if
they got hit upside the head with it.

The Secret? Pretty simple actually. I just remembered what the paper bag
used to say when I'd buy bread at the Columbus Bakery on Pearl Street on
the North Side of Syracuse years ago -

	Ingredients: Flour, Water, Salt and Yeast

3 1/2 cups, 1 3/8 cups, 1 tsp and 2 1/2 tsp respectively on the French
Bread cycle for Light crust and I was rewarded with an absolutely perfect
loaf of crusty, airy, chewy, Italian bread which will rival anything
you can get in the North End. So much for that crap on the supermarket
shelves.

25.69SOLVIT::KRAWIECKITue Mar 19 1996 14:027
    
    
    Hmmmm.... maybe I shoulda asked you to bring a loaf of that Saturday
    rather than the box of donuts!!!
    
     :) :)
    
25.70DECWIN::JUDYThat's *Ms. Bitch* to you!Tue Mar 19 1996 14:315
    
    
    	Thanks Jack!  We just got a bread machine from Shane's folks
    	so I'm printing that recipe up and give it a whirl!
    
25.71CNTROL::JENNISONJoin me in glad adorationTue Mar 19 1996 14:478
    
    	AARRRGGHH !!
    
    	Now I really want a bread machine :-(
    
    	Unfortunately (fortunately?), my husband has already
    	purchased my birthday gift.  Jewelry ;-)
    
25.72WAHOO::LEVESQUEcontents under pressureTue Mar 19 1996 15:333
    >	Now I really want a bread machine :-(
    
     God supplied you with one.
25.73SMURF::WALTERSTue Mar 19 1996 15:341
    I'm still waiting for god dough.
25.74NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Tue Mar 19 1996 15:351
Bread machine.  Didn't James Brown do that one?
25.75LANDO::OLIVER_BTue Mar 19 1996 15:371
    .73  agagagagagagag
25.76CNTROL::JENNISONJoin me in glad adorationTue Mar 19 1996 16:154
    
    	doc, what are you ibsenuating ?
    
    
25.77WAHOO::LEVESQUEcontents under pressureTue Mar 19 1996 16:202
    Look at the ends of your arms (the ends that aren't attached.) There's
    the "bread machine."
25.78NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Tue Mar 19 1996 16:241
Doctah, how does your manual bread machine bake the dough?
25.79SOLVIT::KRAWIECKITue Mar 19 1996 16:266
    
    
    1.) Hold dough
    2.) Insert hands into oven @ 400 degrees F.
    3.) Bake for 30 minutes
    
25.80POWDML::HANGGELILittle Chamber of Full Body FrisksTue Mar 19 1996 16:293
    
    4.)  Rush to emergency room
    
25.81SMURF::WALTERSTue Mar 19 1996 16:301
    3.5)  Phone HMO for permission.
25.82CNTROL::JENNISONJoin me in glad adorationTue Mar 19 1996 16:307
    
    	Yeah, doc, I had dreams of being a purist, too, until I realized
    	that if I wait until I actually have time to make bread from
    	scratch (sans machine), it'll be years before there is home-baked
    	bread in my house :-(
    
    
25.83SMURF::BINDERManus Celer DeiTue Mar 19 1996 16:345
    We use a Kitchen Aid stand mixer, the big one.  It does a very nice job
    of mixing and kneading the dough, two loaves at a time.  Into the oven,
    and they come out great.  We toyed with the idea of a bread machine but
    rejected it - another appliance, not a small one at that, and one whose
    features are severely limited (to making a single small loaf of bread).
25.84BUSY::SLABOUNTYDon't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448Tue Mar 19 1996 16:373
    
    	5) Buy loaf of Wonder on the way home
    
25.85SMURF::WALTERSTue Mar 19 1996 16:431
    6) Keep gun in other hand
25.86MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Tue Mar 19 1996 16:4412
I finally broke down and bought the bread machine last fall only because
it was impossible for me to bake a decent loaf of bread any other way.
I haven't a conventional oven in my home, having only a combination
microwave-convection oven. Using it as a convection oven is fine for roasting
and baking most things, including cakes. However, it fails miserably when it
comes to bread baking because the hot air currents tend to dry the surface of
the dough during what should be the critical last rise that takes place during 
the first ten to fifteen minutes of baking. The result is that the convection 
oven produces only dense, low-risen loaves. The bread machine allows me to
make excellent loaves of bread without requiring me to build an addition on
my house in which to put a conventional oven.

25.87POLAR::RICHARDSONAlrighty, bye bye then.Tue Mar 19 1996 16:511
    You could put it in the garage, no?
25.88SOLVIT::KRAWIECKITue Mar 19 1996 16:532
    
    Not unless he likes wet bread...
25.89BROKE::ROWLANDSTue Mar 19 1996 17:5923

Before I decided to buy a bread machine, I figured I'd do it by hand
to see how easy/hard it was. 

It is extremely easy. On a Sunday morning we usually make 4 loaves
with a total of 1/2 labor. (+Couple hours waiting for it to rise 
and cook)

My daughters have a blast, forget silly puddy. Flour and
dough everywhere 

They are getting older and clean-up is taking longer but wouldn't
trade the experience for a bread machine.









25.90DECWIN::JUDYThat's *Ms. Bitch* to you!Tue Mar 19 1996 18:3213
    
    
    	I'll admit it, I'm lazy.  With working full time (and come
    	May the part time job will start up again) and going to
    	school two nights a week, making bread from scratch isn't
    	high on the priority list.
    
    	I love my bread machine.  Throw all the ingredients in, hit
    	a couple buttons, two hours later I have fresh bread.  Good
    	enough for me!  =)
    
    	JJ
    
25.91some breads not easyGAAS::BRAUCHERWelcome to ParadiseTue Mar 19 1996 18:346
    
      Besides which, the crusty French kind is HARD to make !  I've
     spent mucho effort trying to replicate it, but I think I might
     hae to build a stone or brick oven.
    
      bb
25.92SMURF::BINDERManus Celer DeiTue Mar 19 1996 18:518
    .91
    
    You do not need a stone or brick oven.  What you need is a pan of water
    in the bottom of your oven.  That's what makes the bread develop a
    thick crust.  Been doing it that way for years with my round peasant
    loaves (the old flour, water, salt, yeast trick).  Only problem with
    the peasant loaves is that they go stake quickly because there's no oil
    in them.
25.93POLAR::RICHARDSONAlrighty, bye bye then.Tue Mar 19 1996 19:002
    Where does one purchase scratch? Beyond the biblical reference of
    course.
25.94NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Tue Mar 19 1996 19:011
Start with itch.  Scratch just naturally happens.
25.95BIGQ::SILVAMr. LogoTue Mar 19 1996 19:049
| <<< Note 25.86 by MOLAR::DELBALSO "I (spade) my (dogface)" >>>


| The result is that the convection oven produces only dense, low-risen loaves. 

	I know some people this description could fit. :-) 



25.96SOLVIT::KRAWIECKILord of the Turnip TruckTue Mar 19 1996 19:5914
    I thought this was apropos for the topic. It came out of a
    classified_ads note.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        For Sale.
    
    Rabbit Hutches. My daughter had a rabbit for just under a year when she
    decided to give it to the local bunny man to use in his breading
    program. So we have some things to sell:
    
    Outdoor Hutch approx 3'*3' run and attached bedroom. Stands approx 2'
    from the ground. Both run and bedroom are shingled. cost May 95 $115.00 
    asking $60.00
    
    Indoor run approx 2'*2'. cost $40.00 asking $15.00
25.97BIGQ::SILVAMr. LogoTue Mar 19 1996 20:083

rabbit bread....yum
25.98NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Wed Mar 20 1996 12:461
Nonono!  It's breaded rabbit cutlets.
25.99CONSLT::MCBRIDEKeep hands &amp; feet inside ride at all timesWed Mar 20 1996 12:491
    Yum!
25.100Bready snarfCBHVAX::CBHMr. CreosoteWed Mar 20 1996 13:080
25.101MOLAR::DELBALSOI (spade) my (dogface)Wed Jun 12 1996 02:203
Dijon (mustard) rice-rye bread with butter and a bit of cheddar cheese 
melted over it.

25.102BIGQ::SILVAI'm out, therefore I amWed Jun 12 1996 11:491
<----that sounds soooooo delicious!