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Monthly Archives: March 2010

Where Did "Corned Beef" Come From?

17 Wednesday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Anthropology of Food, Food, Food Trivia, Interesting Information, Trivia

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History of Corned Beef & Cabbage
Origin of Traditional Irish American St Patrick’s Day Recipe

Mar 3, 2009 Stephanie Jolly , Source: Suite101.com

While many North Americans associate corned beef and cabbage with Ireland, this popular St Patrick’s Day meal has roots in America, and is not traditional Irish food.

Corned beef, a salt-cured brisket, was traditionally packed and stored in barrels with coarse grains, or “corns” of salt. One of the earliest references to corned beef appears in the 12th century Gaelic poem Aislinge Meic Conglinne, where it references a dainty, gluttonous indulgence. By the 17th century, salting beef had become a major industry for Irish port cities of Cork and Dublin, where Irish beef was cured and exported to France, England and later to America.

Traditional Irish Recipes Contain Salt Pork Instead of Corned Beef
With the majority of Irish beef being exported, beef was an expensive source of protein and unavailable to the majority of Irish citizens. Cows, if owned at all, were raised predominately for their dairy products, from which butter, cheese and cream could be obtained, and were only slaughtered when they were no longer good for milking. Sheep were raised as a source of wool and hogs and pigs were one of the only livestock species raised by the peasantry for consumption.
Salt pork and bacon, therefore, became the commonly consumed meat protein of Irish tables. In Feast and Famine, Leslie Clarkson writes that “fat from bacon supplemented the lack of fat in the farmhouse diet” and Sir Charles Cameron states that he does “not know of any country in the world where so much bacon and cabbage is eaten.” Even today corned beef and cabbage appears infrequently in Irish pubs and restaurants, except for those in heavily touristed areas, and is much more likely to be replaced its traditional counterpart – an Irish stew with cabbage, leeks, and a bacon joint.

Corned Beef & Cabbage Eaten by Irish Immigrants After Arriving in America
After the Irish potato blight, or Great Famine, of the mid-19th century brought hundreds of Irish emigrants to the shores of America, the newly immigrated Irish Americans found corned beef to be both more accessible and more affordable than it was in Ireland. Both corned beef and cabbage were ingredients of the lower working class, and their popularity among the Irish population likely had little to do with similarities to the food of Ireland and more to due with the relatively inexpensive nature of salt cured beef and green cabbage.
For several decades following the Irish immigration, St Patrick’s Day was celebrated with music, crafts and revelry but banquets, while lavish, contained a scarcity of traditional Irish cuisine. However by the 1920s, corned beef and cabbage came to have an association with Irish American cooking, according to Hasia Diner in Hungering for America: Italian, Irish and Jewish Foodways in the Age of Migration and joined Irish bacon and greens as a food reminiscent of Ireland.

Corned Beef’s Association with St Patrick’s Day Has Irish American Origins
While both salted beef and green cabbage have historic connections with Ireland, the ritual of serving corned beef and cabbage for St Patrick’s Day is exclusively an Irish American tradition. The scarcity and high price of beef in Ireland prevented it from being consumed by the majority of the Irish peasantry until arriving in America, where corned brisket and cabbage were cheap and readily available to the poor. As the stigma of eating working class food faded and the celebration of Irish ancestry grew in popularity, corned

And from Foodtimeline.com, we have:

“Corned beef
While the process of preserving meat with salt is ancient, food historians tell us corned beef (preserving beef with “corns” or large grains of salt) originated in Medieval Europe. The Oxford English Dictionary traces the first use of the word corn, meaning “small hard particle, a grain, as of sand or salt,” in print to 888. The term “corned beef” dates to 1621.
“Emphasizing its long history in the Irish diet, Regina Sexton…points out that a similar product is mentioned in the 11th-century Irish text Aislinge meic Con Glinne many wonderful provisions, pieces of every palatable food…full without fault, perpetual joints of corned beef’. She adds that corned beef has a particular regional association with Cork City. From the late 17th century until 1825, the beef-curing industry was the biggest and most important asset to the city. In this period Cork exported vast quantities of cured beef to Britain, Europe, America, Newfoundland, and the W. Indies. During the Napoleonic wars the British army was supplied principally with corned beef which was cured in and exported from the port of Cork.”
—Oxford Companion to Food by Alan Davidson, [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 1999 (page 218)

Corned beef was very popular in colonial America because it was an economical and effective way to preserve meat. The following corning directions are from The Virginia House-Wife by Mary Randolph, 1824, pages 22-23:
“To corn beef in hot weather
Take a piece of thin brisket or plate, cut out the ribs nicely, rub it on both sides well with two large spoonsful of pounded salt-petre; pour on it a gill of molasses and a quart of salt; rub them both in; put it in a vessel just large enough to hold it, but not tight, for the bloody brine must run off as it makes, or the meat will spoil. Let it be well covered top, bottom, and sides, with the molasses and salt. In four days you may boil it, tied up in a cloth, with the salt, &c. about it: when done, take the skin off nicely, and serve it up. If you have an ice-house or refrigerator, it will be best to keep it there.–A fillet or breast of veal, and a leg or rack of mutton, are excellent done in the same way.” “Some people wonder about the shared culinary/cultural heritage of the Irish and Jewish peoples when it comes to corned beef. The practice of curing meat for preservation purposes certainly dates back to ancient times. The use of salt was adopted/adapted by many peoples and cultures, and was widely used during the Middle Ages. Evidence suggests that both Irish and Jewish cooks were making corned (salt) beef independently, long before they met in New York.

“Corned beef comes in two versions: The Jewish special on rye, or the traditional Irish boiled dinner, aka New England boiled dinner. Tonight should be the big night for the Irish version.”
—Boiled dinner, The Boston Globe, March 15, 1990 (p.3)

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Rudy’s Food Trivia

16 Tuesday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Celebrations, Food Trivia, Rudy's Twin Falls, Things To Do

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And just for fun, again, here is the Food Trivia for the week of 15 March – The Ides of March! Enjoy!

This Week in the History of Food and Drink

March 15: The Ides of March

March 16: National Artichoke Hearts Day

March 17: Happy St. Patrick’s Day! According to many studies, this is the biggest day of the year for combined food and beverage sales in restaurants and bars.

March 19, 1925: ‘Tea for Two’ was recorded by Binnie Hale & the Palace Theater Orchestra

March 20: National Poultry Day (See Nichole’s “Rudy’s Pick”

March 21, 1984: A section of Central Park in New York is renamed ‘Strawberry Fields’ to honor John Lennon.

——————————

Food for Thought:

“Give an Irishman lager for a month, and he’s a dead man. An Irishman is lined with copper, and the beer corrodes it. But whiskey polishes the copper and is the saving of him.”
~Mark Twain, Life on the Mississippi

——————————

Irish Stew

We recommend using locally grown Lava Lake Lamb.

2lb Large Potatoes
3 Large Onions
½ White Cabbage
8 Large Middle Kneck Lamb Chops
Salt And Freshly Ground Black Pepper
1 Pint White Stock (Made From Unroasted Bones Or Vegetables)
1 Bouquet Garni (Bay Leaf, Parsley, Thyme Etc)
1 Tbsp Chopped Celery Leaves

Peel the potatoes and cut and trim into twelve even sized pieces. Put to one side in water and keep the trimmings.

Peel and thinly slice the onions, and place in the bottom of a large, deep, heatproof stewing pan. Shred the cabbage and place on top of the onion. Put the chops on top. Slice the potato trimmings and scatter over the chops. Season with salt and pepper.

Cover the vegetables and meat with the stock and add the bouquet garni. Bring up to the boil, cover with a lid and cook slowly for 1-1.5 hours on top of the stove.

Put in the trimmed potatoes, and gently simmer for another 20-30 minutes until the potatoes and the chops are cooked. Take out the chops and whole potatoes, put into a serving dish and keep warm.

Remove the bouquet garni and purée the liquor in a food processor. Check for seasoning and consistency.

Pour the sauce over the meat, sprinkle with the chopped celery leaves, and serve.

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"The Perfect Reuben" – Not Yet, Part II

15 Monday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food, Food Prep, Food Trivia, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Restaurants, The Perfect Reuben

≈ 4 Comments


Yesterday, Pi Day, 3.14, Robin says, “The Plaza Grill” is having a Reuben special for lunch. That’s all I needed. Read about their Reuben, #7.

The Reuben Sandwich Challenge Scoring

Rated on 1 to 5-Stars, here is how we rate the several places in Boise that serve a Reuben Sandwich. 1-Star is enough for this year and a 5-Star is one that meets the criteria.

1. Barbaccoa – Big thick slabs of meat, no rye toast, they used bread, and soggy from an over abundance of kraut. No grilled onion. Rating: 1-Star

2. Donny Mac’s – Rye toast was weak on the rye, heavy on the 1000 Island dressing. Sloppy to eat because of the really wet kraut. The pastrami was good. Raw onions. Rating: 2-Stars

3. Cucina di Paolo – Yea! Russian Dressing. Good pastrami and not overly salty. Great kraut. Did not notice any grilled onion. Good rye toast, although it was Marble Rye. I would prefer a straight Jewish Rye, Deli Rye. I always like a good Jewish Kosher pickle with my Reuben. None of these places had that. Rating: 4-Stars

4. Seasons Bistro – Wow!! We’ve got a foot race. Homemade Russian Dressing, as was Cucina di Paolo. Good pastrami as was Cucina di Paolo. Great kraut that is special ordered and, in my opinion, better than Cucina di Paolo. Good rye, that I actually tasted the caraway seed, although it was the Marbled Rye!!! I told Rachael Hurn, Owner, that I really would like to give her the 5-Stars for this sandwich, but I couldn’t. She asked, “Why?” And I told her, “No Jewish Kosher deli pickle.” She said she would go get me one. Too late. But, Rachael does know – as did Paul at Cucina di Paolo – the difference between a Reuben and a Rachael Sandwich. She has both on the menu!!! Rating: 4½ – Stars

5. Westside Drive-In – I was disappointed. The pastrami was poorly heated. And the dressing was not Russian. I think it was 1000 with horseradish. The kraut was very good though. He also uses marbled rye. No pickle!!! And I’m really getting tired of the marbled rye. Why not a good deli rye? Sorry Lou.
Rating: 3½ – Stars

6. Willowcreek Grill – Most of their lunches that we’ve had here have been pretty good. Great salads and a good clam chowder. Sorry, but I can not say the same about their Reuben Sandwich. Where’s the pickle?? The taste just was not there. The pastrami was just OK. But the kraut at least perked it somewhat. The rye – mediocre marbled at best. The sauce – OK, but nothing to write home about. The cheese is hard to find. It looks impressive, but the taste is just not there. Sorry.
Rating: 3 – Stars

7. The Plaza Grill at the Owyhee Hotel Yea!!! Look at that green “thing” on the sandwich. A Pickle! Yea! And out of 7 Reuben establishments tried, this is the first pickle! But then, from their menu, “Grilled Reuben on Rye – Grilled on rye with cured lean corned beef, sauerkraut, Thousand Island dressing and melted Swiss cheese” $9.95. Did I see Thousand Island dressing? Sure did. Wrong dressing, remember? Should be Russian dressing. Too bad. And, I don’t think that the kraut was grilled long enough, either. It was still pretty runny. Can’t get rid of that Marbled Rye either. There’s got to be a bakery in Boise that makes their own rye bread – Deli Rye bread that tastes like rye or caraway. I was glad to see the pickle – but sad to see the Thousand Island dressing.
Rating: 3½ – Stars

Are we really closing in on “The Perfect Reuben Sandwich in Boise“? It looks like a difficult job, but someone has to find Boise’s Best. Or am I being a traditionalist? To coin a phrase, “It’s tradition!”, or so it’s been said. If I had a fiddle and if I could play it, I’d shout “It’s Tradition!” from the roof top. At this point in time, the Seasons Bistro (Eagle) and Cucina di Paolo (Boise) are taking the lead. They have set the bar pretty high. Cheers!

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Chicken Pot Pie

15 Monday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Main Dish, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young, Recipes, Things To Do

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No, it’s really not your everyday, customary dinner, made by Mom Chicken Pot Pie. But it could be. And if you want the original recipe, Click Here. In the meantime, I have posted the recipe here. Do enjoy!!

Here it is already to go into the oven. It looks good! But, it is not one of those little, preservative laden, store bought items.

And here is the Chicken Pot Pie plated with a nice Baby Spinach and Strawberry Salad. Serve this dinner with a delightful and old 1986 Rose Creek Idaho Johannesburg Riesling and you have an awesome and different dinner. Probably not one your Mom would make. Here … You try it. Let me know what you think. Cheers!!

Chicken Pot Pie

Author: Bob and Robin Young

Comments: We had this dish with a 1986 Rose Creek Idaho Johannesburg Riesling.
Degree of Difficulty: Easy
Oven Temperature: 350°F
Servings: 8

Ingredients:
2 9 in Pie crusts
2 lg Chicken breasts, cut into ¼” chunks
½ c Diced carrots
½ c Celery, diced
½ c Corn kernels
½ c Broccoli florets, cut into small pieces
1 med Shallot, diced
1 med Potato, diced
¼ c Madeira
½ c Chicken stock
½ c Heavy cream
¼ c Flour
3 T Butter
1 T Olive oil
¾ T Thyme
½ T Sage, dried

Directions:
1.) Cook off one of the pie crusts in a 9-inch deep dish pie plate at 450°F until it just turns brown. Remove from oven and let cool.
2). Dice the chicken into ¼” pieces. Roll in flour. Place 1 Tablespoon butter and 1 Tablespoon olive oil in 4 quart pot. Cook the chicken off until just done. Remove the chicken from the pot and set aside.
3.) In the same pot, add all of the diced up vegetables and the thyme and the sage. Add 1 Tablespoon butter. Cook through. Add the chicken stock and the Madeira. Bring to a boil. Add the cream. Bring to a slow boil and cook for 10 minutes.
4.) Add the cooked chicken. Bring to a slow simmer. Check for thickness of the sauce. If not thick enough add a little more flour.
5.) When the potatoes are cooked almost through, pour mixture into the pie shell. Break 1 Tablespoon butter into pieces and dot the top of the mixture. Place the top pie crust on top and seal along the edges. Puncture with a fork so steam will escape during cooking.
6.) When the upper crust turns a golden brown – about 45 minutes – remove from the heat and let cool for 10 minutes. Serve with a nice green salad.

Cooking Times

Preparation Time: 30 minutes
Cooking Time: 45 minutes
Inactive Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour and 25 minutes

——————————

Please do try this recipe. It’s fun to make and fun to eat! Cheers!

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"The Perfect Reuben" – Not Yet!

13 Saturday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Photos By: Bob Young, The Perfect Reuben, Willow Creek Grill

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We have been teaching at the Arts West School in Eagle, so for lunch, we don’t travel to far. We went to the Willowcreek Grill to try their reuben. Most of the lunches we’ve had there are pretty good. Read about their Reuben.

The Reuben Sandwich Challenge Scoring

Rated on 1 to 5-Stars, here is how we rate the three places in Boise that serve a Reuben Sandwich. 1-Star is enough for this year and a 5-Star is one that meets the criteria.

1. Barbaccoa – Big thick slabs of meat, no rye toast, they used bread, and soggy from an over abundance of kraut. No grilled onion. Rating: 1-Star

2. Donny Mac’s – Rye toast was weak on the rye, heavy on the 1000 Island dressing. Sloppy to eat because of the really wet kraut. The pastrami was good. Raw onions. Rating: 2-Stars

3. Cucina di Paolo – Yea! Russian Dressing. Good pastrami and not overly salty. Great kraut. Did not notice any grilled onion. Good rye toast, although it was Marble Rye. I would prefer a straight Jewish Rye, Deli Rye. I always like a good Jewish Kosher pickle with my Reuben. None of these places had that. Rating: 4-Stars

4. Seasons Bistro – Wow!! We’ve got a foot race. Homemade Russian Dressing, as was Cucina di Paolo. Good pastrami as was Cucina di Paolo. Great kraut that is special ordered and, in my opinion, better than Cucina di Paolo. Grilled onions. Good rye, that I actually tasted the caraway seed, although it was the Marbled Rye!!! I told Rachael Hurn, Owner, that I really would like to give her the 5-Stars for this sandwich, but I couldn’t. She asked, “Why?” And I told her, “No Jewish Kosher deli pickle.” She said she would go get me one. Too late. But, Rachael does know – as did Paul at Cucina di Paolo – the difference between a Reuben and a Rachael Sandwich. She has both on the menu!!! Rating: 4½ – Stars

5. Westside Drive-In – I was disappointed. The pastrami was poorly heated. And the dressing was not Russian. I think it was 1000 with horseradish. The kraut was very good though. He also uses marbled rye. No pickle!!! And I’m really getting tired of the marbled rye. Why not a good deli rye? Sorry Lou.
Rating: 3½ – Stars

6. Willowcreek Grill – Most of their lunches that we’ve had here have been pretty good. Great salads and a good clam chowder. Sorry, but I can not say the same about their Reuben Sandwich. Where’s the pickle?? The taste just was not there. The pastrami was just OK. But the kraut at least perked it somewhat. The rye – mediocre marbled at best. The sauce – OK, but nothing to write home about. The cheese is hard to find. It looks impressive, but the taste is just not there. Sorry.
Rating: 3 – Stars

We really are closing in on “The Best Reuben Sandwich in Boise“. At this point in time, the Seasons Bistro (Eagle) and Cucina di Paolo (Boise) are taking the lead. They have set the bar pretty high. Cheers!

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Sun Valley Harvest Festival September 2010

10 Wednesday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Local Harvests, Wine and Food, Wine and Food Festivals

≈ Leave a comment


I just received this information about the Sun Valley Food and Wine event in September 2010.

Bob.
Let me introduce ourselves. Heidi Ottley and myself – Ed Sinnott – have recently taken over and rebranded the Sun Valley Food and Wine Festival. We now call it the Sun Valley Harvest Festival. As an avid foodie in the Treasure Valley, we thought you would be interested in our event. If so, we will provide you updates and information as we get nearer to the Harvest Festival.

Ed Sinnott

Here is a link to our web site: Sun Valley Harvest Festival.

This could be a lot of fun, especially if they keep the harvest local. Get on their email list for updates by going to their web site. Cheers!

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Gardens

10 Wednesday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Interesting Information, Local Farmers Markets, Local Markets, Spring Plants

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No, it’s not too early to be thinking about your garden for this year. You should have some starts going right now. But I thought that some of you might be interested in this following article and resource. They do an awesome job with refugees coming to Boiseboth in growing their own garden products and selling their products at the Boise Saturday Market.

I like your “foodie” blog. I don’t know who your audience is, but maybe you want to help us advertise our CSA? We could still use some members. You can see the details at Community Supported Agriculture Or, let me know how you want to help. I’m happy to add you to our volunteers email list and put you to work in the garden if that’s what you want.

Katie Painter
Refugee Agriculture Coordinator
Idaho Office for Refugees
1607 W Jefferson St
Boise, ID 83702
208-336-4222

OK, so there you have some information. Do you have some spare time? Energies? Resources? Let them know. Cheers!

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The Buzz – "Varietals of the World"

10 Wednesday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food, Main Dish, Photos By: Bob Young, Wine and Food, Wine Dinners

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09 March 2010 the Buzz held another wonderful dinner and wine tasting! The theme this month was Varietals of the World: Marsanne and Roussane. If you missed this one, you can redeem yourself next month on Tuesday 13 April or Wednesday 14 April. On the 27 March, there will be a quarterly dinner and tasting and the wines will be from Zonin. Reservations are necessary so call the Buzz! Make your reservations and join in on the fun and festivities. You won’t be disappointed.

But for now, here are some photos from the dinner. See what you missed?

Open up with these delicious Vegetable Spiral Sticks and

Savory Crescent Bites and Salmon Tartlets.

Add a delicious Butternut Squash Bisque (sorry for my sloppiness!) and a

Fresh Irish Pub Salad and you have some delightful “Good Eats”.

And now a wonderful Shepard’s Pie. Yum-O!

And then top the evening off with a Bailey’s Chocolate Chip Cheesecake and you have complete contentment!

But, believe it or not, that was not all. We had some wonderful wines to go with everything. My score is in ( ) out of 20.

2006 Rosenbkum Fess Parker Roussane – (17). 14.6 alcohol. Very golden color with hints of mint and green grass. Shellack. A sharp taste. Meant to be aged.
2008 Lineshack Roussane – (18). 14.5% alcohol. This one too is meant to be aged. Not quite as sharp as the first one. No shellac.
2007 Guigal Cotes du Rhone Blanc – (18). 13.5% alcohol. Clear color. Earthy and grassy on the nose. Mellow.
2008 Arancio Nero d’Avola – (19). 13.5% alcohol. Nice red. Deep and rich. (The first three were whites) Chocolate frosting on the nose. Used in Marsala.
2007 Zonin Nero d’Avola – (19). 13.0% alcohol. Very dark red and full of plums.
2006 Principa Buttera Nero d’Avola – (20). 13.0% alcohol. Very fruity red. Big, but not overbearing like a Zin. Bold, yet soft and succulent. An awesome wine.

So there you have our evening. Hope to see you next time. Cheers!

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Rudy’s Food Trivia

09 Tuesday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food Trivia, Rudy's Twin Falls, Thought For The Day, Trivia

≈ 1 Comment


Many thanks to Rudy’s – Cooks Paradise in Twin Falls for sending the food trivia. Lots of fun!

This Week in the History of Food and Drink

March 8: National Farmer’s Day

March 9, 1839: The Great Pastry War ended this day. A conflict began on November 30, 1838, between Mexico and France caused by a French pastry cook who claimed that some Mexican Army soldiers had damaged his restaurant. The Mexican government refused to pay for damages. Several other countries had asked the Mexican government for similar claims in the past due to civil unrest in Mexico, without any resolution. France decided to do something about it, and sent a fleet to Veracruz and fired on the fortress outside the harbor. They occupied the city on April 16, 1838, and through the mediation of Great Britain were promised payment of 600,000 pesos for the damages. They withdrew on March 9, 1839.

March 10, 1867: Lillian D. Wald was born. She was a scientist and nurse, and among her activities, she helped initiate the enactment of pure food laws in the U.S

March 11, 1853: Self rising flour was invented by Henry Jones.

March 12, 1894: Coca Cola was first bottled by Joseph A. Biedenham of Vicksburg, Mississippi. Before that it was only mixed to order at the soda fountain. On the same date in 1929: Asa Griggs Candler died. In 1887, Asa Candler, a wholesale druggist, purchased the formula for Coca-Cola from John S. Pemberton, an Atlanta pharmacist, for $2,300. He sold the company in 1919 for $25 million.

March 13, 1764: Charles Grey, 2nd Earl and British Prime Minister was born. He reputedly received a gift, probably a diplomatic perquisite, of tea flavored with bergamot oil, taken from bergamot, a citrus fruit typical of Southeast Asia, now grown commercially in Italy. The tea has since been called ‘Earl Grey Tea’.

March 14: ‘Tequilla’ by The Champs is # 1 on the music charts.

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Irish Soda Breads

06 Saturday Mar 2010

Posted by Bob and Robin in Food, Food Prep, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young

≈ 1 Comment


St Patrick’s Day is a little over a week away, 17 March. But you must be thinking of something to go with that Corned Beef. How about some Soda Bread. Here is some interesting information on Soda Bread. Information and recipe from European Cuisines.

Irish soda bread: a brief history
A little soda bread history

Irish baking over the centuries has been affected by two main factors. The first is our climate. The influence of the Gulf Stream prevents either great heat in the summer or cold in the winter. As a result, hard wheats, which need such heat and cold, don’t prosper. Those wheats make flour with a high gluten content that responds well to being raised with yeast. But soft wheats do grow well here.

The other factor has been the abundance of fuel. Ireland’s various medieval overlords could never exercise the tight control over forest land that landowners did in more populous, less wild areas, like England and mainland Europe. This meant that Irish people had less trouble getting their hands on firewood. Where there was no wood, there was almost always heather, and usually turf too. As a result, anyone with a hearthstone could bake at home whenever they wanted to, rather than needing to use a communal bake-oven to conserve fuel.

These two factors encouraged the Irish householder of the past two centuries to bypass yeast for everyday baking. The primary leavening agent became what’s now known here as bread soda — just plain bicarbonate of soda, to US and North American users. Hence the name soda bread. But for a long time, most bread in Ireland was soda bread: “bakery bread” was only available in big cities. Soda bread was made either in a pot or casserole over the fire, or else baked on a bakestone, an iron plate usually rested directly in/on the embers. From these two methods are descended the two main kinds of soda bread eaten in Ireland, both north and south, to the present day.

About soda bread varieties

Cake style brown soda bread: In Ireland, “plain” soda bread is as likely to be eaten as an accompaniment to a main meal (to soak up the gravy) as it’s likely to appear at breakfast. It comes in two main colors, brown and white, and two main types: cake and farl. People in the south of Ireland tend to make cake: people in Northern Ireland seem to like farl better — though both kinds appear in both North and South, sometimes under wildly differing names.

Cake is soda bread kneaded and shaped into a flattish round, then deeply cut with a cross on the top (to let the bread stretch and expand as it rises in the oven). This style of soda bread is normally baked in an oven.

These days we’d normally bake it on a baking sheet / cookie sheet. But in earlier times, before ovens were commonplace, cake was routinely made in deep, lidded iron casseroles, hanging over the open fire or sitting right in it — the casserole lids being concave to hold coals or burning turves from the fire on top, so that the bread would bake evenly in radiant heat from all sides.

The cake style of soda bread can of course be eaten hot. But it’s more usual to let the loaf cool down before eating it (it’s a little easier to handle then). It’s also a lot easier to slice, and that’s the way it’s normally seen in supermarkets and convenience stores country-wide, in both brown and white versions.

White soda farls: Farl is rather different. When making farls, the soda bread dough is rolled out into a rough circle and cut all the way through, crosswise, into four pieces or farls (“farl” is a generic term for any triangular piece of baking), and usually baked in a heavy frying pan or on a griddle, on top of the range or stove rather than in the oven. It’s a flatter bread than cake, and moister after the baking’s finished. Each farl is split in half “the wide way” before eating. It’s best when eaten hot off the griddle, but it’s also allowed to cool and then grilled or fried as part of other dishes, especially the famous Ulster Fry.

One important note: In the US and North America generally, there’s tendency to think of soda bread as something with fruit in it. This is not the case in Ireland. While people have for many years sometimes added fruit to the basic dough as a treat or for a change of pace, this is not usually referred to as soda bread, but as tea bread, fruit soda, tea cake, and by many other names. We have recipes for these below as well. But everyday soda bread in Ireland does not contain fruit.

——————————

Here’s the basic recipe for white soda bread. All these measures are approximate. The flour’s volume and liquid-absorptive capabilities, in particular, will vary depending on the local humidity.

Ingredients:
•450 g / 1 lb / 3 1/2 cups flour (either cake flour or all-purpose)
•1 teaspoon sugar (optional: you can absolutely omit this if you prefer sugar free soda bread)
•1 teaspoon salt
•1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
•Between 200-300 ml / 8-10 fluid ounces buttermilk, sour / soured milk, or plain (“sweet”) milk, to mix

Directions:
Sift the dry ingredients together at least once or twice to make sure the bicarbonate of soda is evenly distributed. Put the sifted dry ingredients in a good big bowl (you want stirring room) and make a well in the center. Pour about three-quarters of the buttermilk or sour milk or whatever in, and start stirring. You are trying to achieve a dough that is raggy and very soft, but the lumps and rags of it should look dryish and “floury”, while still being extremely squishy if you poke them. Add more liquid sparingly if you think you need it. (You may need more or less according to conditions: local humidity and temperature, the absorptiveness of the flour you’re using, etc.)

Blend quickly (but not too energetically!) until the whole mass of dough has become this raggy consistency. Then turn the contents of the bowl out immediately onto a lightly floured board or work surface, and start to knead.

The chief concern here is speed: the chemical reaction of the bicarb with the buttermilk started as soon as they met, and you want to get the bread into the oven while the reaction is still running on “high”. Don’t over knead! You do not want the traditional “smooth, elastic” ball of dough you would expect with a yeast bread. You simply want one that contains almost everything that went into the bowl, in one mostly cohesive lump. You should not spend more than half a minute or so kneading… the less time, the better. Fifteen seconds may well be enough, because you don’t want to develop the gluten in the flour at all. If you do, you’ll get a tough loaf. So don’t overdo it! Don’t be concerned if the dough is somewhat sticky: flour your hands, and the dough, and keep going as quickly as you can. There is a whole spectrum of “wetness” for soda bread dough in which it’s possible to produce perfectly good results: farl in particular sometimes rises better if the dough is initially wet enough to be actively sticky. You may have to experiment a few times to come to recognize the right texture of dough.

Put the cake’s baking sheet into the preheated oven. Handle it lightly and don’t jar it: the CO2 bubbles in the dough are vulnerable at this point of the process.

Let the bread alone, and don’t peek at it! It should bake for 45 minutes at 400-450° F. (One of our Irish neighbors suggests you give it the first 10 minutes at 450°, then decrease to 400°. Also, if you have a fan oven, use temperatures 10° lower or so, as fan ovens have a tendency to run hot.) At the end of 45 minutes, pick up the loaf and tap the bottom. A hollow-ish sound means it’s done. For a very crunchy crust, put on a rack to cool. For a softer crust, as above, wrap the cake in a clean dishcloth as soon as it comes out of the oven.

——————————

Irresistible Irish Soda Bread

By: Karin Christian
“A very easy, very good tasting bread. Best if made the day before, or several hours before serving.”
Original Recipe Yield 1 – 9×5 inch loaf

Ingredients:
• 3 cups all-purpose flour
• 1 tablespoon baking powder
• 1/3 cup white sugar
• 1 teaspoon salt
• 1 teaspoon baking soda
• 1 egg, lightly beaten
• 2 cups buttermilk
• 1/4 cup butter, melted

Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (165 degrees C). Grease a 9×5 inch loaf pan.
2. Combine flour, baking powder, sugar, salt and baking soda. Blend egg and buttermilk together, and add all at once to the flour mixture. Mix just until moistened. Stir in butter. Pour into prepared pan.
3. Bake for 65 to 70 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the bread comes out clean. Cool on a wire rack. Wrap in foil for several hours, or overnight, for best flavor.

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