Monthly Archives: November 2016

WTFork is Pumpernickel Bread?

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Pumpernickel is a dark bread that taste similar to rye bread but it has a soft crust and is a little moister and a little sweeter sometimes seasoned with other flavors. I think Pumpernickel is  great with egg salad, chicken salad or just whipped sweet butter. I don’t see much real rye bread around Phoenix AZ and I almost never see any Pumpernickel Bread here so I started to research Pumpernickel before I try to bake one.

There are many different styles of Pumpernickel Bread.

German Style Pumpernickel

This bread looks like German Style Pumpernickel (note how it looks like a pressed brick)

Pumpernickel Bread was invented in Germany. A German Style Pumpernickel Bread uses a sourdough starter with course rye berries and often old leftover soaked rye breads and crumbs from leftover breads that are usually rye. The dough gets baked in covered tins and a low temperature that you slowly drop for up to twenty four hours. The German Style Pumpernickel gets it’s dark color from the slow low cooking time.

American Style Pumpernickel doesn’t use a sourdough starter. American Style Pumpernickel gets it’s dark color from cocoa and molasses and gets baked like regular loaves of bread.

Got an recipe for Pumpernickel Bread from a very old American Cookbook called The Settlement CookBook. This recipe includes cornmeal, shortening and two cups of mashed potatoes with Rye Gram Meal ( ground rye berries), Wheat Flour and Caraway Seeds.

Russian Style Pumpernickel also called sometimes as Borodinsky Bread is made of Wheat Flour, Rye Flour, Rye Malt, Pressed Yeast, Salt, Sugar, Molasses, Coriander and Cumin.

I use to work for a bakery that sold baked goods and breads and among the breads they sold were rye bread, pumpernickel bread and what they called black Russian Pumpernickel. The regular pumpernickel was similar to rye bread but a little darker with a soft crust. I remember that the Black Russian Pumpernickel  was much more flavorful than the regular pumpernickel. It was a black soft bread so I’m guessing coffee and or cocoa might have been in the ingredients so it seems that there are endless variations of Pumpernickel Bread.

References

www.RusExplorer.com

www.TheKitchn.com

www.HuffingtonPost.com

www,TheBreadKitchen.com

www.WiseGeek.com

The Settlement CookBook

My first attempt at Rye Bread came out pretty good so I will attempt a Pumpernickel Bread sometime in the near future.

That was a little Forking Truth about Pumpernickel Bread.

 The Forking Truth

The Forking Truth

Non-Traditional Pumpkin Mole Recipe

 

Non-Traditional Pumpkin Mole

Non-Traditional Pumpkin Mole

Moles come in various flavors and colors. Many recipes for mole are out there but the common ingredient is Chili Peppers. Classic Mole Sauce is called Mole Poblano that may be dark red or a brown color and is usually served over Chicken, Turkey or Pork. Usually Mole is made of Chili Peppers, Spices, Seeds, Nuts, Fruit, Toasted or burnt Bread and or Tortillas and a little chocolate. Traditional Mole Sauce can take a few days to prepare and usually will contain FOURTY or more ingredients. I added a few non-traditional ingredients to my Mole and that is why I’m calling this mole Non-Traditional Pumpkin Mole. I used fresh roasted Pumpkin and dates in addition to other usual Mole ingredients. I took liberties with the cinnamon and the anise seeds since they accent pumpkin so well.  Only two things that I would do different are that I’d put the sesame seeds in a food processor or spice grinder next time so they’d be smooth. You do need to know that mole doesn’t have to be smooth….I just prefer the smooth style. The other thing I might do different is to add mulato chili pods to the recipe. I didn’t have them so I went without but I assure you that I added plenty of peppers. I can’t say for sure how I’d change up the other ingredients if I used mulato chili pods so your on your own if you add mulato. I’m very pleased with the way it came out. I thought it went well with chicken but I think the sauce actually popped more when I served it over turkey breast that I pan fried in a pan. I served it very heavy over the chicken pictured because one of my favorite Mexican Restaurants serves it that way. They serve it that way with rice and tortillas on the side.

Ingredients for about Eleven Servings

3 oz guajillo chili pods (washed off, soaked a few minutes, stem and seeds removed)

2 oz pasilla chili pods (washed off, soaked a few minutes, stem and seeds removed)

non- stick spray ( canola or vegetable )

1/4 cup peanuts

1/4 cup pepitas

1/4 cup sesame seeds

3/4 teaspoon anise seeds

3/4 teaspoon cinnamon

1/4 sweet onions – chopped fine

1 cup dates – chopped – small

2 cup pumpkin – cooked and mashed

1/4 cup chipotle chiles in adobo

1 lb poblano peppers – (about 4 large) – roasted -remove stem and seeds and chopped small

4 garlic cloves chopped fine

2 Tablespoons tomato paste

1 Tablespoon coriander

1 Tablespoon + 1 teaspoon chili powder

1/4 cup masa

2 cup vegetable stock

1/4 teaspoon cloves

1/4 teaspoon allspice

1 teaspoon salt

1 oz Mexican Chocolate

Directions

Set your oven to 400 degrees F on roast.

Spray your baking sheet(s) and in a single layer lay out the guajillo and pasilla chilies. leave in oven until very fragrant (the peppers I had got that way in eight minutes)

After eight minutes they were very fragrant

After eight minutes they were very fragrant

Remove the pods from the baking sheet and boil them in water. (just use enough water to cover the chilies)  Then reduce to a simmer for about an hour.

Use immersion blender and blend them up as smooth as you can. Then strain the mixture. Use a spoon to squish out everything you can get out of it.

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Set the strained mixture to the side and throw out the stuff left behind in the strainer.

In your sauce pot on medium heat and toast up the nuts, seeds, spices for about three minutes or until the pepitas and sesame seeds turn toasted looking. Put them on the side.

In your pot add onions and garlic and sauce till lightly browned.

add pumpkin, poblanos, tomato paste.

Add the seeds and nuts back to the pot.

Start blending.

Add masa.

Blend

Add stock

Blend

Stir and Blend….stir and blend…after about 1/2 an hour add the chili pod mixture. Stir and blend for about ten minutes and reduce the heat to simmer.

When you think it’s about done add the chocolate.

Stir and blend some more.

Take off heat and enjoy! Freeze leftovers.

Non-Traditional Pumpkin Mole

Non-Traditional Pumpkin Mole

Complex flavors with heat that you don’t get at first. Great for pouring over chicken, turkey or pork. I think it goes especially well with turkey breast.

 The Forking Truth

The Forking Truth

 

 

2016 Halloween Candy Usage

 

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I love Halloween. I love the colors, the fun decorations and candy. It’s fun to see what people come up with for their costumes. I really like the home made creations like when a kid wears a box that they make look like a tv. This year I saw some very good pirates, a few cheerleaders, some goblins and one really odd looking smily face….I just love it!   I don’t know if Halloween Candy melts..here when kids go Trick or Treating…….maybe the candy does melt…..?…….wow that would suck! This year they predicted the weather to be around 92 degrees F for Halloween. I don’t think it got that hot because it felt more like the mid 80s……but we did have a recording breaking  HOT  October and had most of the days at 90 degrees or above.

Halloween 2014 I gave out 92 Full Size Candies

Halloween 2015 I gave out 121 Full Size Candies

Would I give out less candy for Halloween 2016 since it runs on a Monday school night this year instead of a weekend????????

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I am very stocked up on candy and I threw in a few packs of seaweed to see if anyone would take seaweed over the candy just for fun.

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Well The Monday Night didn’t seem to affect the number of children out on Halloween. 2016 I gave out 124 pieces of full size candy. I do note a few little monsters did grab two pieces.

This year I gave out 50 Pixy Stix (children were screaming when I ran out)

25 Hershey Bars

9 Candy Necklaces

7 Snickers

7 Plain M&M’s

5 Peanut M&M’s

4 Skittles

4 Twix

4 Milky Way

3 Three Musketeers

3 Starburst

3 Packs of Seaweed (The few children that took seaweed screamed with joy)

It seems that Pixy Stix (large sticks that hold flavored sugar) is a favorite candy by far for the majority of American Children.

 The Forking Truth

The Forking Truth

P.S. Since moving to Arizona I no longer dress Dogs for Halloween. It’s too hot in Phoenix AZ to dress a dog up for Halloween.