Hasn't anyone mentioned Cwm Rhondda yet? It must surely have the best bread.
The Bread Thread
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Last edited by ardcarp; 28-01-21, 19:01.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostOops sorry. Late to the party as usual.
Edit: May I partially redeem myself with Berlioz' instructions to the percussion in Symphonie Fantastique?
http://davidvaldespercussion.blogspo...s-deponge.html"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Padraig View PostYou're on a roll John. You are shaping up to be a contender for the Floury Farl Award and maybe an invitation from TV to compete in 'that competition'. Wouldn't it just take the biscuit?
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostSomebody gave me a jar of molasses, Padraig, so I put some in the loaves - seems to give them a lovely brown colour and sweetness. They turned out very tasty and looked good, and of course the smell circulating round the house is terrific. I don't experiment too much in my bread making, though I do a crackin' 'tear and share' loaf with olives and sun-dried tomatoes - a messy dough, but a fantastic taste. I also make a pretty good pizza dough, which is often in demand when the kids come to visit...not often this last year.
They're not - at least in the UK. In the US what the UK knows as treacle is called blackstrap molasses.
Anyway, I found this, which some might want to experiment with - https://cookieandkate.com/whole-wheat-molasses-bread/ I think that unless one particularly wants to have a sweet flavoured bread, for example for afternoon tea, it's probably best to add treacle or molasses in moderation instead of sugar - definitely not as well as.
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Interesting soda bread recipe here https://www.theguardian.com/food/202...nd-gingerbread
As a child I remember being quite puzzled by the use of 'treacle' for golden syrup among my friends at junior/secondary school. Both were cooking ingredients in our house, treacle for gingerbread/flapjack type things and golden syrup for steamed puds and the open tart others called treacle tart.
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostSomebody gave me a jar of molasses, Padraig, so I put some in the loaves - seems to give them a lovely brown colour and sweetness. They turned out very tasty and looked good, and of course the smell circulating round the house is terrific. I don't experiment too much in my bread making, though I do a crackin' 'tear and share' loaf with olives and sun-dried tomatoes - a messy dough, but a fantastic taste. I also make a pretty good pizza dough, which is often in demand when the kids come to visit...not often this last year.
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Originally posted by Padraig View PostSorry for the crummy jokes about your baking skills, John. I can see you're a specialist. Me - I make a fair round of toast.
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