Tomato Sandwich

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Simple, delicious summer in a sandwich.  Who doesn’t love garden fresh tomatoes?  We’ve got several tomato plants growing in our square foot garden.  I’ve been a little disappointed because they haven’t produced as much as I wanted.  I’m not sure if it’s the weather (it’s been a cool, rainy summer) or our gardening abilities or a vile combination of both.  We have managed to get a few tomatoes off the vines and I turned one into a tomato sandwich for lunch.

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Olive Oil with Garlic and Italian Seasonings for Bread Dipping

I like to go to restaurants that serve warm bread and olive oil for dipping.  It’s easy to do the same thing at home to dress up dinner or tide everyone over until it’s ready.

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Depression Era Homemade Bread

Have you seen Clara of Depression Coooking with Clara on the news lately? She is 93 years old and has her own blog and several videos on youtube. With the downturn of the economy, people are very interested in being frugal. Clara shares recipes and stories from her own life during the Great Depression.

I watched her youtube video on making bread. I’ve altered it a bit, but not much. Clara says she uses 5 lbs of flour, 2 oz. of cake yeast and water.

Here’s what I used:

5 lbs. of flour – yes, the whole bag

yeast – I used 7 Tbs, but I think I could have gotten by with less. Maybe 4-5 Tbs.

salt – I used 8 tsp., thinking I would need about 1 tsp. per loaf. This was a bit too much salt. Next time I’ll go for about 6 tsp. Clara doesn’t mention salt, but I think the loaves would taste flat without it.

warm water – About 6 or so cups, but you need to go by what the dough needs.

I followed Clara’s direction to dump the flour in a large bowl. I then mixed in the salt. Make a well in the flour and put the yeast in. Start pouring warm water into the well. Mix the yeast and water with your fingers to dissolve. Start mixing in more flour with your hands, adding water as needed. You will eventually end up with a great big bowl of dough.

After I got all the flour mixed in and I kneaded it in the bowl for a bit, I dumped the dough on the counter and washed out the bowl.

I sprayed the bowl with cooking spray and put the dough back in, turning it to bring up the oiled side. I’m not sure how Clara handles this step, but it’s the way I like to do it. If I knew the dough wouldn’t stick to the bowl, I would have just left it in the bowl to rise without washing and oiling it.

Let the dough rise in a warm place. Cover it loosely with a clean towel while it rises to keep the dough from drying out. After it’s risen, punch it down and divide it up for loaves. I was thinking that this amount of flour would make about 8 loaves. Some of the loaves seemed a bit small though, so next time I may go with 6 instead. Also, I only have 7 bread pans. I liked how the loaf on the cookie sheet turned out though.

Cover the loaves with a clean towel again and let them rise a while longer. Place them in an oven at 350 degrees. I have speed bake (convection oven) and I baked mine for about 30 minutes.

I’ll try this again. Like I said, I need to cut back on the salt a little bit. I think that also might help the loaves rise a bit higher. The taste is good. We polished off 2 loaves in less than 24 hours! The rest went into the freezer for later.

As for cost:

$1.97 – flour

$1.00 – $1.50 for yeast, depending on how much you use and the cost of the jar

So, less than $3.50 for 8 loaves of bread. That’s pretty cheap! And no additives or preservatives, so healthier than store-bought. If you try this, let me know how it turned out for you.

Update:

I sometimes turn this into “Recession Era Bread” by adding a melted stick of butter to the warm water.

 

Banana Bread


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These bananas were begging to be transformed into Banana Bread. They were on the verge of yuckiness. Okay, they were already at the yucky stage and were heading toward the trash, when I finally got myself up off the couch and decided to deal with the suckers. I know I could have put them in the fridge or freezer days ago to keep them from continuing their slide toward totally decomposing, but black bananas in my freezer tend never to emerge again. Better to leave them on the counter where they taunt me until I finally give in.

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I like this recipe for banana bread because it is quick, easy and the ingredients are basic and I usually have them on hand. Because I had six yucky, overripe bananas I doubled the recipe. I’ll give the ingredient list for a single recipe.
First, mash the bananas. For some reason, I always use a pastry blender to do this job. You can use a fork or your hands even, but I think that’s kind of gross.
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Keep mushing until they are baby food smooshed. One recipe calls for 3 bananas.
Cream 1 cup of sugar with 1/2 cup shortening (I used butter, but you can use margarine or even Crisco, if you’re into that). Beat in 2 eggs and then add the mashed bananas. Add in 2 cups of flour, 1 tsp of soda and 1/2 tsp of salt. I know that you’re supposed to stir together the dry ingredients first, but I never do. I just dump the flour into the mixer bowl with the wet ingredients, then add the soda and salt, mixing it into the flour with the measuring spoon. I’m lazy that way.
The recipe calls for nuts, but that would cause my kids to have a spell so I leave them out. I do sometimes add a cup of chocolate chips, which causes my kids to jump up and down in delight. I’ve also added blueberries, but the flavor of the berries didn’t really come through, so I save my
berries for muffins instead.
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One recipe makes 2 loaves. I doubled the recipe and made 3 plump loaves instead of 4 regular loaves. Besides, I only have 3 matching bread pans.
This recipe packs up beautifully for snacking or breakfasting away from home. It also freezes well.
Banana Bread
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup shortening (butter, margarine, crisco)
2 eggs
3 bananas, mashed
2 cups flour
1 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
nuts or chocolate chips, optional

Cream the sugar and shortening with a mixer. Add the eggs and bananas and mix well. Add the dry ingredients and mix until well blended. Pour into loaf pans that have been greased. Bake 50 minutes -1 hour at 350 degrees. Take the loaves out of the pan while they still hot. Makes 2 loaves.

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