Whole Wheat Amish Friendship Bread

I’ve always loved Amish friendship bread, so when a friend recently gave me some starter, I was excited to make some loaves!  I looked for some recipes without the pudding mix that is now called for (but hasn’t always been called for), and I ended up making this yummy whole-wheat version.

This “healthy edition” is quite delicious and still has that sweet, cinnamon flavor we all know and love from the original recipe!  I didn’t add any mix-ins this time (I love adding pecans, though!), so my loaves were a bit smaller.  The variations on mix-ins are seemingly endless!

If you don’t have any starter right now, you can make your own (yes, even if you’re not Amish) by following the directions here.

This is a great recipe for kids to help with since it just involves mixing (nothing complicated!).  And, you won’t believe how wonderful your house smells while it is baking!

Whole-Wheat Amish Friendship Bread
(original recipe found here)

2 cups whole wheat flour, freshly ground
1 1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 cup sucanat
1/2 tsp. sea salt
1 1/4 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1 cup Amish Friendship Bread Starter
2/3 cup coconut oil, melted
1 tsp. vanilla
3 eggs
1/2 cup applesauce (or mashed banana)
Optional mix-ins:  raisins, chocolate chips, berries, nuts

Grind wheat in the WonderMill.

Grease two loaf pans (I use olive oil).  Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

Combine all ingredients in a mixing bowl, stirring until blended.

Pour batter into pans, dividing evenly.

When oven is preheated, bake for 30-45 minutes until done.  (How to tell if it’s done:  top will crack, edges will darken slightly, and toothpick will come out clean.)

Cool for 10 minutes, then remove to cooling racks.

Makes 2 loaves.

Alternatively, you can bake one large loaf or a bunch of mini loaves (to give as gifts, etc.).

Enjoy!

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Whole Wheat Pancakes with Strawberry Sauce

Pancakes are a treat in our house, but when I make them, I make a bunch!  We don’t mind reheating the leftovers, and they freeze well also.  When I made these last time, I wanted to use my fresh strawberries to make a topping.  (Frozen strawberries also work just fine.)  The combination was so sweet and delicious!

Whole Wheat Pancakes
(adapted from Betty Crocker)

2 eggs
2 cups whole wheat flour, freshly ground
2 1/2 cups milk
2 Tbsp. sucanat (or sugar)
1/4 cup olive oil
2 Tbsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. Real Salt

Grind wheat in the WonderMill.

In a mixing bowl, beat eggs with a whisk.  Add in remaining ingredients, mixing well until smooth.

Heat griddle to 375 degrees or a skillet to medium heat.  When hot, pour pancake batter onto griddle (about 1/4 cup for each pancake).  Flip when first side is done.

Remove from skillet and serve with butter and strawberry sauce (see below).

Strawberry Sauce (also great on waffles, ice cream, and stirred into lemonade!)
(adapted from Our Best Bites)

2 cups fresh (hulled and washed) or frozen strawberries, chopped
1 tsp. almond extract
1/3 cup evaporated cane juice (or sugar)

In a saucepan, combine ingredients over medium heat.  Simmer for 5 minutes, stirring as needed to keep from scorching.  If desired, you can blend the mixture in a blender until smooth, or you can leave it in its “chunky” state as I did.

Drizzle strawberry sauce over warm pancakes, adding butter if desired (highly recommended!).

Enjoy!

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Ricotta Spelt Waffles

I am participating in current WonderMill Blogger Challenge which challenges us to make waffles, I have not used my waffle iron for about 8 YEARS! I tend to prefer pancakes over waffles, plus pancake recipes are usually lower in sugar and oil. But I decided to break from my pancake habits and work on a fun waffle recipe.

spelt-ricotta-waffles

I had some leftover ricotta cheese in my fridge from some other experiments I have been baking that needed to get used. I have seen many lemon ricotta pancake and waffle recipes out there so I decided to do something different than the traditional “lemon ricotta”. Why not just plain whole grain ricotta waffles? The ricotta cheese would give it a great texture and the whole grain flour will mellow-out the ricotta cheese taste, a little cinnamon helps too. Click here for the recipe that I based mine off.

WonderMill grain mill

I have also been trying to use more Spelt Wheat and KAMUT Wheat flours in my recipes. These two wheat types have not been genetically modified as the wheat used for whole wheat flour has been. I still store and use hard white wheat but I just want to use even healthier grains when possible.

Plus, KAMUT and Spelt have a great taste too them. I decided to use Spelt wheat for this recipe, I ground my Spelt wheat on the fine setting of my WonderMill.

Ricotta Spelt Waffles
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
Makes about 4 Belgium waffles, double recipe as needed.
Author:
Recipe type: Breakfast
Serves: 2-3
Ingredients
  • 1¼ cup Spelt Flour
  • 2 tablespoons Powdered Buttermilk
  • 2 teaspoons sugar
  • 1 teaspoon Baking Powder
  • ½ teaspoon Baking Soda
  • ¼ teaspoon Salt
  • ½ teaspoon Cinnamon
  • ½ cup warm water
  • ½ cup Ricotta Cheese
  • 2 tablespoons oil
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 2 large Eggs
Instructions
  1. Pre-heat your waffle iron.
  2. Add all dry ingredients into a mixing bowl and whisk together.
  3. Add all wet ingredients into a 2nd mixing bowl and whisk together.
  4. Add dry ingredient mix to wet ingredient mixing bowl and whisk till it just comes together.
  5. Lightly spray your hot waffle iron with cooking spray.
  6. I used about a ½ cup measuring cup to scoop the batter into the waffle iron.
  7. Let the waffle iron run its course until golden brown, mine tells me when they are done.

 

spelt-ricotta-waffle

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Chicken Tenders and Healthy Honey Mustard Dip

2013-05-15 19.09.56Wait? What?

You may be wondering – “What on earth is a recipe for ‘Chicken Tenders’ doing on a website dedicated to baking whole grains?”…well, let me enlighten you to my way of thinking.

Freshly milled flour from our Wondermill – whole grain flour – has replaced almost ALL forms of flour in our home, even in the most small quantity.  Why bother using dead, tasteless flour on a tasty morsel just because it’s used only as a coating? Am I right? You know I am (: So that’s how this fits on this website.

We ‘oven fry’ our chicken to avoid the grease, but keep all the crunch!  So this is a healthier alternative to fried chicken tenders for more reasons than the whole grain flour!

Ingredients:

  • 1 Cup Freshly Milled Soft White Wheat
  • 1 Cup Bread Crumbs (such as Panko or crushed crackers/matzo or home made crouton crumbs – my favorite)
  • 1/2 tsp Garlic Salt
  • 1/2 tsp Paprika
  • 1/4 tsp Onion powder
  • 1 Cup Butter millk
  • 1 Egg
  • 2 TBS Coconut Oil
  • 2 TBS Butter

First step: Beat the egg into the butter milk in a large bowl.

Second step: Cut up the chicken breast into equal sized slices and soak in the buttermilk mixture.

Third Step: WASH YOUR HANDS…then mix all other dry ingredients together with a whisk or fork.  Now your work station is ready.  Time to prepare the baking pans.

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Fourth Step: Spray a Pyrex Baking Dish (or two) with non-stick oil and add to it the 2 TBS of each the Coconut Oil and the Butter (4 TBS all together, yes it is).  Put this in the oven as it heats to 400 degrees F.  Once it’s melted and starts to bubble – pull it out and work fast.

With one hand in the buttermilk mixture picking up wet chicken and the other in the dry (this helps you to avoid using the same hand and getting a giant “glove of dough”by the end)  coat the soaked chicken tenders in the dry coating and lay in the popping oil of the Pyrex pan.  2013-05-15 18.17.19

Do this until all tenders are in one layer across the bottom of the dish. 2013-05-15 18.17.28

Now pop these beauties in the 400 degree oven for about 20 minutes until the bottoms are golden brown.  Once they’ve browned well (like the photo below) take them out and gently turn over. The tops will still be dusty – but there should still be oil in the bottom of the pan to crisp them up on the next go round.2013-05-15 18.43.30

Place back in the oven after you’ve turned them over for about another 10 minutes.

Meanwhile combine the following in a bowl for a healthy Honey Mustard dipping sauce that has far less fat than the kind you buy at the store.

  • 1/2 C Plain Greek Yogurt
  • 2 TBS Course Ground Mustard
  • 1 TBS Yellow Mustard
  • 2 TBS Honey
  • 1/4 Cup Mayonnaise
  • Dash of garlic salt

Once the chicken is done, let it rest about 5-10 minutes to avoid burning anyone and serve with the dipping sauce.  EnJOY!

2013-05-15 18.45.06

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Healthier Oatmeal Raisin Cookies (Gluten Free Option)

I decided to do this recipe in honor of: National Raisin Day!  Believe it or not, that is a real food holiday! So I put some of my favorite ingredients together and came up with this…more healthy version of Oatmeal Raisin Cookies.Most baked Oatmeal Cookie recipes call for shortening – which contains trans fats and hydrogenated fats which are so so SO bad for us.  But in this recipe, you get the richness of a healthy single chain mono-fat (coconut oil ) to replace it!  It also lends to the tasty flavor all the way around.

I’ve also heard the pleas of my gluten free friends to give options when available…so there is an easy substitution to make these gluten free treats marked with an Astrix below!

EnJOY

First do this…(:
IMG_1702
Then assemble these…(:
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Healthy Oatmeal Raisin Cookies

* Gluten Free Variations below

Makes approximately 20 cookies.
Ingredients:

*For gluten free option mill whole oat groats to replace the wheat flour and use certified Gluten Free Rolled Oats.

Instructions:
Heat Oven to 350 degrees F
Combine sugars & coconut oil in a mixing bowl.                            —————->
Image
With an electric mixer, beat sugars and coconut oil together until somewhat creamy ——-> Image
Again with an electric mixer, add eggs and vanilla, and beat well.
See the fluffy yellow difference —–>
In another bowl combine fresh milled flour of your choosing, baking soda, cinnamon and salt.
Mix well to combine thoroughly .   —–>
Now add the mixed dry  goods (not oats yet) to the beaten moist batter.
Combine until smooth.
Then…..
After that is blended, add the rolled oats, nuts and raisins.  It will look something like this  ————>
Roll into 1 1/2 inch balls and place on a very lightly greased cookie sheet. ————>
Bake for 10 to 12 minutes.
At 10 minutes check them and if they’ve not flattened any, slightly smash down with a fork and continue baking.
Remove to a cooling rack to cool.
Then pour some cold milk, plate and enJOY!
You can find all the items linked above on our every other month bulk order site. Please read the home page carefully or call if you have questions!
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Best Blessings!
Donna

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Homemade Pretzels in 30 Minutes

I’ve always had a hang-up with homemade soft pretzels… they can take ALL DAY to make!  I have seen so many recipes that require multiple restings/rise times that add up to about 3+ hours start-to-finish just for a pretzel!  BUT, this recipe is SUPER easy and only takes 30 minutes start-to-finish!

The resulting soft pretzels are more like rolls in texture than mall pretzels (since they’re not boiled), but they are totally delicious and make a great snack!  Kids can also help make them, which is fun too.

Homemade Pretzels in 30 Minutes
adapted from here

1 1/2 cups warm water
2 1/4 tsp. yeast (or 1 packet)
1 tsp. salt
1 Tbsp. sucanat or sugar
2 cups whole wheat flour, freshly ground
2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
additional flour for dusting surface
1 large egg
kosher salt or course sea salt for sprinkling

Grind wheat in your WonderMill.  Preheat oven to 425 degrees.  Line a cookie sheet with a silpat mat or parchment paper.

In a large mixing bowl, combine warm water and yeast and stir until dissolved.

Add salt and sugar; mix again.

Add flour one cup at a time, stirring well after each cup is added.

Add up to 1/4 cup extra flour if needed so that a nice ball of dough forms and bounces back a little when you poke it with your finger.

Turn dough onto floured surface and knead for 5 minutes, adding additional flour as needed to keep from sticking.

Cut dough in half, then cut each half into 5 equal sections, forming 10 balls total.

Roll each ball of dough into a long “snake” and form into a pretzel shape.  Place on baking sheet.

In a small bowl, beat egg.  Dip each formed pretzel into the egg wash, coating both sides.

Return to baking sheet.

Sprinkle pretzels with kosher salt.  Bake for 10 minutes, turning the oven to broil for the last few minutes to brown the tops nicely.

Allow to cool slightly (or to room temperature).

Serve with honey-mustard sauce, if desired.

You can also make sweet pretzels by sprinkling with cinnamon sugar instead of salt.

Enjoy!

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Home-made Bread Machine Soft Pretzels

Since Friday, April 26 was National Pretzel Day (yes, I’m not lying it really is/was a real food holiday) I decided I wanted to make some soft, chewy pretzels.  These are easier than one might think.

I will be honest and say that I don’t use 100% whole wheat in them because the texture is better with a little ‘white’ flour.  The ONLY white flour I use is Organic Gold-n-White.  I also use it very rarely, and only in a portion of the quantity called for in recipe to give the correct ‘white bread’ texture.  So please don’t judge me for using some dead bagged flour. The freshly milled flour best for this recipe is Prairie Gold Hard White Wheat milled in my Wondermill on the finest setting.

IMG_1700

Ingredients:

  • 1 tsp active dry yeast
  • 1 tablespoon brown sugar
  • 1 tablespoon butter, melted
  • 3/4 cup warm water (100 degrees F)
  • 1-1/2 cups freshly milled whole wheat
  • 1/2 cup dead bagged white bread flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon baking soda (not pictured)
  • 3 cups  of water (not pictured)
  • 1 egg (not pictured)
  • 1+ tablespoon coarse kosher salt (not pictured)

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Place the first 7 ingredients in the bread machine in the order given.  Turn it on to a short dough setting.  If you don’t have a short/quick dough setting – set to usual dough setting and stop after 45 minutes.

2013-04-29 11.36.57

 

Once the machine has done it’s magic it’s our turn!  OIL (not flour) a smooth surface and your hands then turn out dough.

2013-04-29 12.30.18 2013-04-29 12.33.36 2013-04-29 12.34.03 2013-04-29 12.34.30 2013-04-29 12.34.50 2013-04-29 12.38.45

 

Dividing dough into six equal parts and begin shaping.

 

 

 

Role out to about a 1/2 inch (diameter) ‘snake’.

 

 

 

 

Make an upside down “U”

 

 

 

 

Double twist the two free ends of the “U” to form this loop.

 

 

 

Lift up the ends and place them on what was the top arch of the upside down “U” and press each end into the curve to make it stick.

 

 

 

Repeat five more times.  This is fun isn’t it!? (:

 

Fill a large saucepan with the baking soda and about 3 cups of water.2013-04-29 12.31.53

 

Put on a burner and bring to a boil.

Meanwhile, prepare and gather the other utensils.  Parchment paper on a cookie sheet, spray or oil the paper.  A slotted spoon or metal ‘basket’ to handle the pretzels as they come out of the hot water.2013-04-29 12.42.19

One at a time, lower a pretzel into the water after it has reached a medium rolling boil.

Leave in for about 30 seconds on one side, flip and 30 seconds on the other side.

2013-04-29 12.42.59Remove to the oiled parchment paper.

2013-04-29 12.43.30

 

 

 

 

Preheat oven to 375-400 degrees F.

Once all are on the oiled parchment paper – brush with an egg wash (one egg & dash of water beaten) and sprinkle with coarse Kosher salt or Pretzel salt.2013-04-29 12.53.20

 

Bake on middle rack for 8 -12 minutes until golden brown.

2013-04-29 13.09.36

 

Cool on a wire rack.  Serve with mustard, cheese sauce or honey.

Other options are to dust with garlic salt and Parmesan for a savory pretzel or cinnamon and sugar for a sweet treat that’s good with cream cheese!

Sure hope you enJOY these!  I had fun making them. It reminded me of being a kid playing with play-doh.  It’s always very therapeutic to play with your food!

Blessings!

Donna

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Whole Wheat Buttermilk Biscuits

2013-04-01 18.35.12

The sight above is one of my favorites! Once I see that lovely stuff in the Wondermill flour hopper…I just know good things that are good for us are about to happen in my kitchen.

Today is no exception.  I’m about to make fresh-milled buttermilk biscuits!  Now I will be honest and tell you that at first this was a video in the making…then I remembered to take pictures *sheepish grin* – so if you want more details, please subscribe to my YouTube Channel – the video should be up soon after posting this blog.  And if perhaps you’re reading this much later, just go to the channel and put in the word ‘biscuit’ in the search field and you’ll get there (:

Now on with the joyful task at hand!  Being in the South, well biscuits are serious business!  No, I mean that literally.  You see for so long the only kind of wheat that grew in the South was soft wheat (which has less protein/gluten which is needed for good loaf bread) thus the biscuit became the ‘bread’ of the South.

It wasn’t until ‘bagged = dead’ flour that the all-purpose variety came to be used in making biscuits and aiding in their rise and fluff.  An all purpose flour can be made with 50% soft wheat and 50% hard wheat.  But traditionally the real, down home, old time (before dead-bagged flour) biscuits were all soft wheat and thus a tad bit lower on the rise.  This is how I like to make them.

Ingredients:

  • 2 Cups Freshly Milled Soft Flour (or 50/50 hard/soft if you prefer a high biscuit)
  • Extra flour for dusting/kneading
  • 4 tsp of baking powder
  • 1/4 tsp of baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp sea salt
  • 1 oz chilled butter (salted – if using unsalted up the salt quantity above to 3/4 tsp)*
  • 2 oz chilled coconut oil (shortening may be used, but it’s not the healthiest choice)*
  • 1 Cup low fat buttermilk

*If you do not have coconut oil and still prefer not to use shortening you can use a total of 3oz of chilled butter.

Pre-heat your oven to 400 degrees F.

Mix together all the dry ingredients (other than the dusting flour) with a fork or whisk in a large bowl.

Sorry, no pastry cutters allowed in real Southern Buttermilk Biscuits. Y’all are  gonna get your hands messy and you’re gonna love it. Trust me. It’s therapy…….Using your fingertips rub the chilled butter/coconut oil into the dry goods until the mixture looks like a coarse meal or crumbly.  If you are hot-handed, be sure these are practically frozen and move fast.

Make a well in the center of the crumbly mixture and the pour in the lovely tangy buttermilk.

Mix with a large spoon just enough to combine everything.  Then dust your hands and knead inside the bowl until all the flour has been picked up.

2013-04-01 18.24.14

Flour your surface with the extra flour and turn out the dough.  Fold the dough over on itself then knead – repeat, fold, knead, repeat – for 20 times or approximately 30 seconds until the dough appears smooth and softer.

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Press the dough to be a 1 inch thick and dimple the top.  Now using a large biscuit cutter cut (no twisting) each biscuit until you can cut no more circles.

2013-04-01 18.29.56Transfer to a baking dish (sadly mine were all packed while making this – metal works best) not quite touching each other.

Ball up your scrap dough and repeat until no more dough.  Left over biscuit dough can be frozen.

2013-04-01 18.35.02I like to butter the tops of our biscuits before baking.

Bake 15-20 minutes.  Turn out the lovely little gems in to a towel lined basket and cool for a little while before tackling with butter, apple butter, jam or molasses!  YUM!

2013-04-01 19.00.14

Side note, remember my biscuits are all soft wheat, thus flatter and I do tend to make a thinner circle for cutting out. Mine was closer to 1/2 inch.  So if you want taller, fluffier, higher biscuits – use 50/50 fresh milled hard/soft and 1 inch thickness.

Hope you enJOY these and treat yourself to some home-made goodness soon!

Please subscribe to my YouTube Channel for more details (and some other fun stuff) and come by our Facebook Page and see what else is going on in my kitchen!

Best Blessings!

Donna

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Overnight Cranberry Orange French Toast Bake

I made this recipe for Easter weekend and I loved how it turned out!  It’s not a “quick” recipe, per se, since there are steps spanning a two days, but the hands-on time is minimal and the result is worth it.  I love being able to make a nice breakfast for overnight guests without spending much time in the kitchen that morning (read: more time with my guests!).

You start by making the cranberry orange bread, which Drea’s adaptation of my Foolproof Whole Wheat Bread recipe.  Then you cube the bread, add some milk & eggs, and leave it in the fridge overnight.  The next morning, bake it and enjoy a lovely warm breakfast!

This would be a great Mother’s Day breakfast.

Overnight Cranberry Orange French Toast Bake

For the bread:
3 1/2 cups freshly milled whole wheat flour (hard white)
1 cup warm water
2 tsp. yeast
2 Tbsp. honey or sucanat (both work well)
1 1/2 tsp. sea salt (I use Real Salt)
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1/2 cup freshly squeezed orange juice
zest from 1 orange
dried cranberries (I used around 1/2 cup, but it’s up to you)

For the French toast bake:
4 eggs
1 cup milk
1 tsp. vanilla extract (I use homemade)
additional cranberries for sprinkling

(For photos of the bread-making process, see this post.
Using your WonderMill, grind slightly more than 2 1/2 cups wheat berries to yield 3 1/2 cups of flour. In the base of a stand mixer, combine warm water, yeast, honey, sea salt, olive oil, orange juice, and orange zest.  
As always, with measuring flour, spoon flour into a measuring cup and level off the top using the flat side of a knife.  Dump the flour into the bowl of the mixer as well. Set mixer to knead (on mine, “2”) and let it do it’s thing for a few minutes.  You’ll know it’s finished with this step when everything is thoroughly combined.  Dough may be sticky.
Cover with a towel and let rest for 45 minutes.After the dough rests, sprinkle flour onto the counter and knead the dough until you can easily shape it into a loaf.  Add a little flour, since it may be sticky, but be careful not to add too much.
Add cranberries to the dough as you knead it, working them through the dough.  Shape dough into a loaf and place in a greased loaf pan.

Cover the loaf pan with plastic wrap and place in the fridge for a cold rise for 2 hours.  Remove the loaf from the fridge after 2 hours and let it sit on the stove while the oven preheats to 350 degrees. Remove plastic wrap and bake loaf for 35 minutes at 350 degrees.  Allow to cool in the pan for 5 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool completely.

When bread is cool, slice into thick (1″) slices, then cut each slice into 9 cubes.  

Place the bread cubes in a greased baking dish (I used a smaller baking dish and two little ramekins for “personal size” bakes, but a 9×9 would work great).  

In a mixing bowl, beat together 4 eggs.  Add 1 cup milk and 1 tsp. vanilla.  

Pour egg mixture over bread cubes in baking dish.  Sprinkle with additional cranberries. 

Cover with plastic wrap and leave in the fridge overnight.

In the morning, preheat the oven to 350 degrees.  Bake French toast for 25-35 minutes, or until set (check at 25 minutes) and golden brown.

Serve with 100% pure maple syrup.


Enjoy!

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Easy Bread Machine Whole Wheat Bagels

IMG_1303Before milling at home, we used to buy bagels by the case!  It was one thing that actually kind of ‘scared’ me when I wanted to switch to the fresh milled flour.

How on earth was I going to make a BAGEL!?

The recipe below is so simple and so easy to make for variations that my desire for an ever lasting bagel variety has been satisfied at home!   Onion, cinnamon, raisin, date, blueberry, honey wheat and more are all back on the menu!  And the ease, quietness and convenience of using the Wondermill has opened more and more flavor options as I play with my food!

Before starting, be sure to mill 3 cups of Hard Wheat (white or red) in your Wondermill

Whole Wheat Bagels
Makes about 8 Bagels

Ingredients:

  • 1 Cup warm (100-110 degree) water
  • 3/4 tsp salt
  • 1/4 Cup Organic Evaporated Cane Crystals (sugar)
  • 3 Cups Flour (Freshly milled hard white whole wheat)
  • 1 ½  tsp Instant Yeast

Boiling Ingredients:
3 quarts of water (to boil them in)
3 TBS Honey
2 tsp Sea Salt

Finishing Touches:
1 egg  beaten with 1TBS melted butter
1 TBS corn meal

Directions for bread machine:
Place water, sugar (Eco Sweet), salt, flour and yeast in the bread machine pan per manufacturer instructions. Set on ‘dough’ setting.

Options: During kneading or at ‘add-in’ beep you can add any dry fruit of your choice…cranberries, raisins, dates, figs, etc. or a savory choice of onion flakes, chives, rosemary or other dry spices.

Bring 3 quarts water, 3 TBS Honey and 2 tsp salt to a boil.
Dust a cookie sheet with cornmeal. Have it handy.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees and place rack in the middle.

Shaping, boiling & baking Bagels:
When first rise is finished weigh dough into 8 equal. Slightly flatten in the palm of your hand. Using thumb and middle finger poke a hole in the center while turning around your thumb until bagel is formed.  Set on lightly floured surface when done with crinkled, side down, smoothest side up. Repeat until all are shaped. Cover with clean towel and let rest/rise for 3-5 minutes.

Now, float each rested/risen bagel (max 2 at a time) in boiling bath. Cook 30 seconds one side, flip, 30 seconds other side. Remove with slotted spatula and place on cornmeal dusted pan. Brush with egg white mixture.

Once the egg mixture is on, if you’d like top with special toppings.  Pictured above are toasted onion flakes.  Other options are poppy seeds, sun-flower or sesame seeds, strussle topping, cinnamon & sugar…the variety is practically limitless.

Bake in preheated 375 degree oven for 18-22 minutes on middle rack, until browned.

Once cooled, slice to store as frozen or store whole for fresh or refrigerator storage.

 IMG_1304

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