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Sunday, September 14, 2008

The Payoff

I feel a little guilty. I was raised Catholic, so that's not surprising but, geez, all I did was pick up a sleepy young Englishwoman at the airport and give her a bed overnight, not nearly enough effort to deserve a gift of beautiful bread generously studded with raisins, moistly crumb-y in the center and flavored with spices.

Young Naomi has shared her mother Judy's recipe for the bread with us, first the official one that comes from some long-lost cookery book in England, then later her own tips: here goes!

Judy says: "Soak overnight 1 cup of leftover tea and 1 cup raisins (this bit is crucial for making the raisins really soft). Then add 1 egg, 2 cups of self-raising flour, spice and sugar to taste. Mix and scrape into small-ish loaf tin. Cook 300 degrees F for 1 hour."

Naomi adds: "I usually mix in a few more raisins, and sometimes some more tea, too, if I want a gooey consistency. I've found self-raising flour isn't always enough to make the bread rise, so often add a teaspoon of baking powder too. Usually just a couple of tablespoons max of sugar is sufficient. Normally I use just mixed spice, but for the one I made for you I didn't have any so instead combined some freshly ground all-spice, cloves and a dash of nutmeg. I find 1 hour is usually too long...instead I leave it in at a slightly higher heat (350) for 40 mins or so (check after 30).

Enjoy!"

I didn't feel so guilty that it kept me from gobbling up the lovely bread, of course! At this rate, I'm going to be meeting every flight from England, holding a sign that says "Bed and Breakfast in Return for Cherished Family Recipes."

7 comments:

  1. toasted or plain?
    with or without butter?
    Oh, and why can't I see your Mayo post?

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  2. Toasted! With butter!
    Oh, excuse me. This isn't my blog.

    That would make a good Christmasy near-pannetone.

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  3. Hmmm. I think I know what I will be attempting next weekend. The big decision will be what tea to use. Or maybe that will be the experiment. Make a few loaves with different teas. After all the folks at work will eat just about anything I bring in.

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  4. Greg, I'll keep that sign for when I'm panhandling outside the BART station.

    Morgan, Toasted! With Butter, of course! Mayo post coming in a day or so!

    Cookiecrumb, step right up - you answered just as I would! :-) In my view, this bread was even better than pannetone.

    Dagny, good point! I never thought about which tea but I expect she used English Breakfast Tea, since that's what Naomi brought me. I'll be interested to hear about your experiments!

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  5. If you make the bread with a gooey consistency, then it's great without being toasted too. And I recommend it warm with honey....

    I used Earl Grey tea, but only because that was all I had in the cupboard. I'm sure anything would work - might be interesting to see how choice of tea affects the flavor though!

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  6. Naomi, thanks for the additional tips and info. I guess my preference for virtually any bread is toasted and slathered with butter.

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