"real " sourdough zucchini bread?
Too much zucchini!
Apparently making bread from it is a way to process the abundance.
I tried finding recipes, two pasted below, one with sourdough.
Well, looking at this, I'd call it more cake recipes, but anyway.
Joan Ross uses the sourdough as a taste enhancer and drives it with
baking powder/soda.
I wonder...
going the cake route, with eggs, sugar, oil
or (my type) bread style, maybe frying the zucchini to get some more
taste in the style of potato bread
with sourdough fermentation/rising, leaving the baking powder/soda and
brandy out when doing the cake style.
Has anyone tried this or can estimate what the eggs, sugar and oil in
those amounts would do to sourdough fermentation?
Samartha
from Chris Behrens Nov 13 1992, 8:45 am:
> ZUCCHINI BREAD
> - ---------------------------
> 3 cups prepared zucchini puree
> 3.5 cups flour
> 2 tsp baking soda
> 1/2 tsp salt
> 3 tsp cinnamon
> 3 tsp nutmeg
> 2 tsp ginger
> 3 cups granulated sugar
> 1 cup salad oil
> 2/3 cup brandy (or water, but I recommend brandy!)
> 4 eggs
>
>
> To prepare the zuchini, cut the zuchini into pieces about
> 3 inches long and then quater them lengthwise. Cut out seeds and
> and cook zuchini meat in 1/4 to 1/8 inch of boiling water, turning
> until tender. This could take 15-20 minutes. Drain off water and
> puree. Now you may either make the bread or freeze the puree - it will
> keep for a LONG time, and can be thawed in the microwave. I usually
> use freezer bags and divide up the puree into 3 cup increments. Oh,
> and remember to leave the skin ON THE ZUCHINI!!
>
>
> To make the bread: Mix the puree and other ingredients
> together for for minutes with a mixer. Pour the results into 3 loaf
> pans and bake for 50-60 minutes at 350 degrees Fareinheit.
>
>
> Pumpkin Bread
> - ---------------------------
> One suggestion: roll up the dough to place in the pan;
> the circular grain comes out very nicely indeed.
>
>
> Pumpkin - 2 cups (Libby's canned or similar)
> Flour - enough (just keep adding until consistency is right)
> Yeast - 2 Tblspns dry in 1/2 cup of 110 degree water
> Salt - 1 Tblspn
> Oil - 2 Tblspns
> Molasses - 1/3 to 1/2 cup
> Apple Cider - 2 cups (fresh cider is best, unfiltered apple juice okay)
from Joan Ross Aug 31 1999, 1:00 am
> Thought some may like this quickbread recipe for both leftover
> culture and summer's end zucchini
>
>
> Sourdough Zucchini Bread
>
>
> 1/2 cup oil
> 1 egg
> 3/4 cup white or brown sugar
> 1/2 cup sourdough starter
> 1/2 cup milk
> 1 cup grated zucchini
> 2 cups flour
> 1/2 tsp baking powder
> 1/2 tsp. baking soda
> 1/2 tsp salt
> 1 tsp cinnamon
> 1/2 tsp cloves
> 1/4 tsp raisins -> 1/4 cup!
> 1/4 cup nuts
>
>
> Mix oil, sugar,egg and starter and milk. Stir until sugar is well
> dissolved. Stir in zucchini. Combine dry ingredients and mix into
> zucchini mixture just to blend well. Fold in raisins and nuts. Grease
> and flour a pan that will hold mixture about 2/3 full. Bake 325 F,
> one hour or tested done. Cool in pan 5 minutes before removing. Remove
> and cool on rack completely. Wrap and mellow overnight before cutting
> for best texture and flavor.
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