Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Extra Moist, Sky-High Sweet Cornbread

I was so incredibly happy with how this recipe turned out.  It comes out very tall and impressive.  The texture is superb.  Honestly, its better than eating cake- and that's saying something.
Ingredients
  • 1 c. cornmeal
  • 1 c. all-purpose flour (I used unbleached organic to help me feel better for using white flour)
  • 2 c. white whole wheat flour
  • 2/3 c. Splenda baking mix
  • 2 Tablespoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • Dashes of cayenne & cinnamon (to kick it up a [little] notch!)
  • ⅔ cup coconut oil
  • 5 Tablespoon melted butter
  • 2 Tablespoons honey
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 3/4 c liquid egg whites (or 3 egg whites)
  • 2 cups whole milk (yes, I know, its bad-- but its the secret ingredient!)
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees and grease a 9×13 inch baking dish with additional coconut oil.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt.
  3. In a small bowl, microwave the coconut oil & butter for a few seconds until melted
  4. Use a spatula and pour into flour mixture
  5. Add the honey, beaten egg, egg whites, and milk, and stir just until moistened.
  6. Pour the batter into the greased baking dish and bake in 350 degree oven for 45-60 minutes. Watch the cornbread towards the end, you want it to be turning golden and starting to show some cracks.  
          It will be very moist, so don't think its not done cooking, just because it feels so dense and moist compared to most cornbreads.  Bake until a tester comes out clean.  It took mine nearly an hour before I was satisfied with its doneness.

        No joke, this recipe is a keeper.



Adapted (and changed significantly) from a recipe on the blog Daily Dish.

Lemon Poppyseed Soda Bread (& a salad)

So a while back I was at a bulk natural foods store, the kind where they just have the products in nondescript 1/2 pound and 1 pound clear plastic bags.  In the odds & ends section, where you never really know what they are gonna have bagged up, I found a whole big bag of chia seeds (one of my favorites!) for super cheap!  I couldn't believe my luck!  I hurried up and purchased them before the store could decide they had been priced so low by mistake-- those litter buggers are pricey!

 Then I got home I realized I'd just bought a pound of poppyseeds.

(sigh)

In the spirit of my Irishness and because today was a snow and I'm just looking for anything to celebrate at this point in the dreariness of winter, I decided to put a twist on good old Irish Soda Bread.  Secretly, this was all inspired by the lonely 3/4 cup of buttermilk I had in my fridge, just begging to be used.  I made pancakes for Sunday breakfast, and I hate to see good buttermilk (or anything, for that matter --poppyseeds included-- go to waste).

I based my clear-the-cupboards creation (very) loosely on Ina Garten's Soda Bread recipe--

Ingredients
 

~2 cups white whole wheat flour  (in retrospect, it would have tasted better if I used 1/2 regular white pastry dough.  Unfortunately, white flour is just not my style outside of my own birthday cake.)
~1/2 teaspoon baking soda  --> I've always thought something called "Soda Bread" really ought to have more baking soda than that!

~3/4 teaspoons kosher salt

 ~2 tablespoons (1/2 stick) cold unsalted butter, diced into tiny pieces


~3/4 cups cold buttermilk, well-shaken

~1 egg white, lightly beaten
~Juice & grated orange zest from 2 lemons

~3 tablespoons honey




 

Directions

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Line a sheet pan with parchment paper or foil & rub down the center with coconut oil.

Combine the flour, baking soda, and salt in the bowl and whisk together. Add the butter and mix with a fork, pastry cutter, and/or your fingers until the butter is mixed into the flour in little split pea-sized pieces.

With a fork, lightly beat the buttermilk, egg, and orange zest together in a measuring cup.  Slowly add the buttermilk mixture to the flour mixture with a spatula. 


 My consistency was normal enough that I skipped the whole usual "roll out on floured board" situation.  I just plopped it right onto the prepared sheet.  You can gently make score marks on the top if you're feeling fancy.

Bake for 30 to 45 minutes, or until a cake tester comes out clean. According to Ina, when you tap the loaf, it should have a hollow sound.  But I go for golden brownness myself to determine when to pull the plug.

Cool on a baking rack. Serve warm or at room temperature-- mine was good in a bowl drizzled with kefir and honey.

~~~~

Continuing with my impossible task of using a pound of poppy seeds before I die, I also made this nice little salad...

INGREDIENTS

-2 Granny Smith apples, cut into long, thin slices
-2 heads of radicchio,  roughly chopped
-2 T crumbled fat free feta cheese

-1 lemon, zested & juiced
-1 leftover jar of marinated artichoke hearts (all the hearts were gone, I was just using the jar for mixing and the residual marinade as a dressing base.  You can also just use from water, oil, and vinegar + mild spices of your choice)
-Splash of extra apple cider vinegar
-1-2 T Splenda making mix
-1-2 T poppy seeds
-Salt & pepper


DIRECTIONS 

The main ingredients--green apples, radicchio, lemon-- are all bitter.  So I made a nice sweet dressing to go over the top and temper it.  Shake together all the dressing ingredients in a jar, to taste.  It should be sweet.  Drizzle just enough on the salad and gently mix together.

I brought mine to work for lunch in a tupperware lined with parchment.  Even though it was pre-dressed, it held up very well.  Not wilty at all.  Yum!