One of the best biscuits you will put in your mouth.
My cousin, Totsy, had a recipe for this…wish I had hers.
Makes quite a few…wonder if you could half the recipe.
- warm buttermilk
- all purpose flour
- sugar
- baking powder
- baking soda
- salt
- shortening
- active yeast
This is a family tradition from my husbands side. They make it for Christmas morning breakfast…I make it for New Years Day morning. It is similar to a waffle/pancake/fried donut…Maybe an Indian Fry Bread?
- sugar in dough
- salt
- egg
- oil
- warm milk
- -
- sugar in yeast
- yeast
- warm water
- flour
- flour
- baking powder
- salt
- butter
- milk
- flour
- baking powder
- salt
- butter
- - 7/8 cup milk
PermaLink at: http://www.motherearthnews.com/real-food/easy-no-knead-dutch-oven-crusty-bread.aspx#ixzz2li7H3nB3
- active dry yeast
- warm water
- salt
- Cornmeal or wheat bran for dusting
MAKES 4 PIECES
This recipe worked best with a high-protein all-purpose flour such as King Arthur brand. Do not use nonfat yogurt in this recipe. A 12-inch nonstick skillet may be used in place of the cast-iron skillet. For efficiency, stretch the next ball of dough while each naan is cooking. This variation, which can be prepared in about two hours, forgoes the overnight rest, but the dough may be a little harder to roll out.
WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
We wanted a light and tender naan that approached the quality of the best restaurant naan, without the need for a tandoor. We started with a moist dough with a fair amount of fat, which created a soft bread that was pleasantly chewy, but the real secret was the cooking method. While we thought a grill or preheated pizza stone would be the best cooking method, we discovered that they cooked the bread unevenly. A much better option was a covered skillet. The skillet delivers heat to the bottom and the top of the bread, producing loaves that are nicely charred but still moist.
- ice water
- plain whole-milk yogurt
- vegetable oil
- large egg yolk
- sugar
- instant or rapid-rise yeast
- salt
Makes one 9‐inch crust
If the dough becomes too soft to work with when pressing it into the tart pan in step 3, let it firm up in the refrigerator for a few minutes.
WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS: We wanted to come up with a way to make a healthier tart crust. First, we swapped in 6 tablespoons of olive oil for the 8 tablespoons of butter a tart crust typically contains. Furthermore, we substituted whole-wheat flour for a portion of the all-purpose white flour, which gave the crust not only a healthful boost, but a heartier flavor as well. The dough is soft and cannot be rolled out, so we pressed pieces of the dough right into the tart pan. A sprinkling of Parmesan cheese over the crust admittedly doesn’t cut calories or fat, but it does add important flavor and provides a moisture barrier to a variety of savory fillings.
http://www.americastestkitchenfeed.com/bake-it-better/2013/04/secrets-to-olive-oil-tart-crust/
- sugar
- salt
- extra-virgin olive oil
- 4–6 tablespoons ice water
- sugar
- flour
- baking soda
- salt
- vanilla
- walnuts
- butter
- warm water
- sugar
- oil
- yeast
- salt
- egg
- flour
- pumpkin pie spice
- baking soda
- baking powder
- salt
- pumpkin puree
- brown sugar
- white sugar
- vegetable oil
- applesauce
- eggs
- vanilla extract
- packed brown sugar
- rolled oats
- oats
- flour
- all-purpose flour