So, I’m keeping busy baking bread. If you think high altitude gardening is a challenge, try baking a yeast bread from scratch. Dry, thin air wreaks havoc on traditional recipes and Betty Crocker is not much help. Her high altitude recipes say ‘over 3,000 feet.’ I live above 7,000 feet so, with most recipes, I'm winging it.
I’ve learned...
- Rapid rise yeast is the proverbial recipe for failure. Breads rise faster at high altitudes. I have better luck with an instant active yeast, using less than the recipe calls for.
- A little extra water helps if the dough is too dry.
Seems silly, to me, to pay $3.50 for a loaf of artisan bread when the ingredients cost about 50 cents.
Here's a yummy French Bread Recipe to try the next time you're snowed in.
Rising time: approximately 1 hour. 350 degree oven, bake for 30 minutes.
1 1/4 cups warm water
(add more water, by tablespoons, until bread dough is moist)
1 packet active dry yeast
(less 25%, if you're at high altitudes of 5,000 feet or more.)
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
1 tablespoon shortening, melted
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
3 1/2 cups flour
* Brush loaf with beaten egg for a crispier crust.
1 comment:
You might want to spray the hot oven with water right before putting in the bread to bake, or chunk three or four ice cubes into a hot cast iron pan sitting on the oven floor before you close the door. Mmmm, good crusts.
Dave
Taos, NM
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