side dish

Bready or Not: Mini Muffin Irish Soda Bread

Posted by on Mar 4, 2015 in Blog, Bready or Not, quick bread, side dish | 2 comments

Irish soda bread is traditionally a big round. I took a shrink ray to it.

Irish Soda Bread Mini Muffins

Here’s the problem: standard recipes make way too much bread for the two of us to eat. I halved the recipe a few years ago, and that worked out better but it was still a lot. I got to thinking, what if I made it in a form that was a lot easier for my husband to take to work?

I searched online, and to my surprise, no one else had made Irish soda bread like that. Huh. So I resolved to try it, using a halved version of the same Irish soda bread recipe I posted back in 2012.

It turned out FANTASTIC. The bread cooked up in only ten minutes. It was already portioned out so I didn’t go bread crazy.

Irish Soda Bread Mini Muffins

My husband happily took the leftovers in his work lunches–plus, the mini bread froze and thawed and tasted just as good weeks later. This recipe produces very soft, tender soda bread–not dense like some recipes I’ve tried.

This is the only way I’ll make Irish soda bread from here on. If I need to feed more people, I’ll just use the old, full version of the recipe and pull out another mini muffin pan.

Be sure to come back next week when I feature my favorite corned beef recipe–cooked in the crock pot!

Irish Soda Bread Mini Muffins

Bready or Not: Mini Muffin Irish Soda Bread

Course: Side Dish, Snack
Cuisine: irish
Keyword: holiday, quick bread, st patricks day
Author: Beth Cato

Ingredients

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour don't overfill
  • 2 Tb cornstarch
  • 1 Tb white sugar
  • 3/4 ts baking soda
  • 3/4 ts cream of tartar
  • 3/4 ts kosher salt
  • 2 Tb butter
  • 3/4 cup buttermilk
  • 1 Tb butter melted, for tops afterward (optional)

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 385-degrees. Prepare mini muffin pan by applying nonstick spray in each well, though not all will be filled.
  • Whisk together all of the dry ingredients. Work the butter into mixture with a pastry blender or your fingertips until it resembles coarse crumbs; just as with making pie crust, you want those bits of butter in there.
  • Add the buttermilk and stir until just combined. Knead in the bowl until the dough just starts to come together and is still craggy and bumpy, adding more buttermilk if necessary. Don't over-knead or the bread will be tough and dense.
  • Use a tablespoon scoop or spoon to evenly dole out dough into the pan. Expect about eighteen mini muffins.
  • Bake for ten minutes. Use the toothpick test to check middle ones for doneness. Melt the remaining tablespoon of butter and brush it on the tops of the little rounds.

Leftovers freeze well, and are the perfect size to fit in lunches.

    OM NOM NOM!

       

      Irish Soda Bread Mini Muffins

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      Bready or Not: Buttermilk Biscuits

      Posted by on Jul 9, 2014 in Blog, Bready or Not, quick bread, side dish | Comments Off on Bready or Not: Buttermilk Biscuits

      I failed at buttermilk biscuits. For years. This grieved me. This recipe, finally, is the one that has repeatedly produced lofty, flaky, perfect biscuits.

      Buttermilk Biscuits

      This is an important heritage thing. My dad is from Alabama. He is of the firm belief that every meal should come with a side of bread, and buttermilk biscuits are about as good as it gets.

      Buttermilk Biscuits

      My husband’s family isn’t much different. Grandpa and Grandma Cato are Arkansas born and bred. We go to visit them, and we are fed an “Arkansas breakfast.” That means enough food to go out into the woods and chop down trees all day and not be hungry until dusk. That breakfast always, always, always includes buttermilk biscuits with sausage gravy.

      Buttermilk Biscuits

      Biscuits. Serious business.

      I found this recipe from Bakergirl and have modified it slightly; she in turn got it from Bobby Flay. I wish I could hug this recipe. You have no idea how pleased I am to have a biscuit recipe that works.

      Buttermilk Biscuits

      A few notes on this:
      – I do homemade sour milk for the buttermilk by mixing a tablespoon of lemon juice in with milk (I’ve also done a mix with half & half) and letting it curdle for 15 minutes before using it.
      – the recipe also works just fine if you happen to have buttermilk powder.
      – it produces more than a single cookie sheet of biscuits.
      – they are fabulous to bake and the freeze. It’s always nice to have some stashed in the freezer!

      Buttermilk Biscuits

      Bready or Not: Buttermilk Biscuits

      Classic southern-style buttermilk biscuits.
      Course: Bread, Side Dish
      Cuisine: Southern
      Keyword: quick bread
      Author: Beth Cato

      Ingredients

      • 4 cups all-purpose flour
      • 4 teaspoons baking powder
      • 1 teaspoon baking soda
      • 1 teaspoon salt
      • 12 Tablespoons unsalted butter cold, cut into cubes
      • 1 1/2 cups cold buttermilk or substitute sour milk

      On top:

      • 1/4 cup milk brush on tops before baking
      • 2 Tablespoons butter melted, to brush on tops after baking

      Instructions

      • Preheat oven to 450-degrees. Prepare baking sheets by lightly greasing them or using parchment or baking mats.
      • Combine the dry ingredients: flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Gradually cut the butter into the flour mix, using a pastry blender or forks until it resembles coarse meal.
      • Add the buttermilk and combine until it just comes together. Don't overwork it! The butter needs to stay in small lumps; that creates the flaky layers.
      • Lightly flour about a square foot of counter. Press the dough out to mostly fill the space, with the dough still about 3/4-inch thick. Use a 3-inch round biscuit cutter to punch out shapes and place on baking sheets. Brush a little bit of milk on the tops of the biscuits.
      • Bake for 12 to 15 minutes or until they turn golden brown. Remove from oven and immediately brush melted butter on the tops.

      OM NOM NOM!

        Buttermilk Biscuits

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        Bready or Not: Buttery Beer Bread

        Posted by on Apr 30, 2014 in Blog, Bready or Not, quick bread, side dish | 7 comments

        My husband loves beer. He recently decided to start collecting beer growlers from small breweries. I do not like beer. Therefore, he ends up with a sizable amount of artisan beer that needs to be consumed in a short amount of time.

        Buttery Beer bread

        “And this is a problem… how?” he asked.

        “Of course. Moderation and all.”

        “What? What do you think I could do with beer other thanĀ drink it?

        “I could make beer bread!”

        buttery beer bread

        He gave me one of those patented husband looks that says you would suggest I use this precious elixir for bread. But that’s exactly what I’ve done twice now, and you know what? He thinks it’s a pretty awesome thing because he loves bread, too.

        I have only made this using my Pampered Chef mini loaf pan. I love the size of those loaves! One is perfect for a meal or two, and they freeze fabulously. I just wrap them individually in plastic wrap, defrost in the breadbox, and then warm them with some butter.

        My breadbox gets a lot of use. [There’s a joke there that a few select people will get. The rest of you, just nod.]

        buttery beer bread

         

        Recipe modified from Veronica’s Buttery Beer Bread at Jenna’s Everything Blog.

        Bready or Not: Buttery Beer Bread

        Course: Breakfast, Side Dish, Snack
        Keyword: alcohol, beer, quick bread
        Author: Beth Cato

        Ingredients

        • 3 cups all-purpose flour
        • 1/4 cup white sugar
        • 1 Tb baking powder
        • 1 tsp salt
        • 12 oz beer
        • 1/4 - 1/2 cup unsalted butter 1/2 stick to 1 stick, melted (make as buttery as desired)
        • kosher salt or pretzel salt

        Instructions

        • Preheat the oven to 375-degrees. Prepare your big loaf pan or mini loaf pans by buttering lightly on the bottom (the sides will be well-buttered later on).
        • Sift together flour, salt, baking powder, and sugar. Stir in the beer. It may be sticky and need to be incorporated by greased hands.
        • Drop the dough into pan(s) and even out the top as much as possible. Melt desired amount of butter and pour over dough.
        • Using four mini loaf pans, it will bake for 30-35 minutes. The original recipe stated that a full-size bread pan needs to bake for an hour. Let it cool in the pan for about five minutes, and then because of all the butter, the bread should pop right out.
        • OM NOM NOM!
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