Ninja Fruit Season
Thursday, October 9, 2008 at 12:00PM I'm a horrible baker. The only two presentable products that come out of my oven are cheesecakes and quick breads. Cheesecakes because I needed an angle with women in college and quick breads because they're significantly easier then said women. Banana [nut] bread pleases most crowds but I'm finding it to be old, boring and cliche. To find a new quick bread flavor I went to the local grocer to peruse produce. What did I find that is fresh and in season? Cranberries- the ninja fruit.
Fresh cranberries are giving me the chance to finally try one of of Grady Spear's mouth-watering recipes from The Texas Cowboy Kitchen, Cranberry-Peach Bread. I'm sure frozen cranberries could work decently, but the closest grocery doesn't carry them. Frozen cranberries also lack love, the most important ingredient in baking [duh].
- 1 Cup All-Purpose Flour
- 1 TBL Baking Powder
- 1/2 TSP Salt
- 1 TSP Ground Cinnamon
- 1/2 TSP Ground Nutmeg
- 1 Cup Whole Wheat Flour
- 1/3 Cup Packed Brown Sugar
- 1/2 Cup Chopped Pecans
- 1/2 Cup Mashed Fresh Peaches (If canned, drain well)
- 1 Cup Buttermilk
- 1/4 Cup Vegetable Oil
- 1 Egg, Beaten
- 1 TSP Peach or Vanilla Extract
- 1 12-Ounce Package Fresh Cranberries
- Preheat the oven to 375 F.
- Sift the flour, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg into a large bowl.
- Add the whole wheat flour, brown sugar, and pecans, and mix well.
- Make a well in the center of the mixture and set aside.
- In another bowl, combine the peaches, buttermilk, oil, egg, and extract and mix well.
- Add to the dry mixture, stirring just enough to moisten ingredients.
- Carefully fold in the cranberries.
- Spoon the mixture into a greased Bundt or loaf pan and bake for 45 to 55 minutes, or until a tester inserted into the middle comes out clean.
- Cool the pan on a wire rack for 15 minutes. Remove from the pan and serve warm with softened cream cheese, if you like.
I'm well aware there are a bunch of original thinkers out there.
They're thinking, I only have one kind of flour in my pantry, so I'll
just double it. After all, flour is flour. This substitution will
ruin the recipe. Non-wheat flours are heavier than wheat. If we were
measuring the amount of flour needed by mass instead of volume, the
substitution may be easier made. However, due to this difference in
weight, the amount of leaven will need to be increased, by up to three times. But then again, maybe original thinkers like to eat bricks- I don't
know.
Second order of business- you can't buy a single cup of buttermilk at the store. Since buttermilk has 'milk' in the word, this should be another original thinker's substitution. This substitution will ruin the recipe. Buttermilk contains acid that your Dean's chug doesn't. One of the leavening agents in the recipe is baking soda. Baking soda needs acid to be activated. No acid equates another brick, but we're not making fruitcake.
I hate waste and I'm not going to buy buttermilk unless I know I'm making a huge batch of waffles for an army. The substitute I use is to fill the one cup measure with one tablespoon of cider vinegar, then fill the rest of the cup with the milk I have on hand. Let the mixture sit for two minutes, get curdled, get gross, and it's ready to be used. Lemon juice and other acids can substitute the cider vinegar as well- I find cider vinegar to be more neutral tasting than lemon juice, and it is always in my pantry.
That's a lot to remember- thank god I don't bake.
Bread,
Cranberry,
Grady Spears,
Pecah,
Quickbread,
Texas Cowboy Kitchen in
Recipe 

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