I think you'll find that adding honey (which alone in proper form doesn't spoil), dilutes the honey, and allows stuff to grow on it, unless it's kept in very very low humidity. :shocked2:
LD
LD
Kansas Jake said:I tried eating one and it was hard as a rock, but went well after a dip in hot coffee with small bites. k.
Soft summer wheat has less protein/gluten than hard or winter wheat, so that is a good choice......
Often ships biscuits were made from low quality flour.....We might think that they were just being cheap.....But it may have been intentional.
satx78247 said:Once we get settled in our new place, one of the first things that I plan to do is build a Latin-American style earthen oven/BBQ in the back garden.
yours, satx
RIGHT!If you take that basic recipe and add baking powder then you have a great breakfast biscuit, if baked normally in a hotter oven. We eat them every morning for many years now.
I've half a mind to start a Cornbread recipe thread here, I'd expect there are some opinions on this subject.
But I'd hate to be thought of contributing to rancor and dissension amongst the muzzleloader comminity. I think we could all agree it should be baked in a cast iron skillet, but after that, I'm not sure on how much agreement there would be.
We have had some already.
It sounds like you're talkin' about the cornbread that uses 50/50 wheat flour/corn meal and an egg, salt, (maybe a lil' bit of sugar) as well as some baking powder or soda, and some milk or water... in a greased cast iron skillet...
However, you might indeed not get a consensus on what to bake the cornbread in, nor what it should look like as it's a tad different when it's all corn flour (not to be confused with corn meal) without any wheat flour, nor milk, and when there isn't any baking powder nor soda used..., a la the 18th century on The Frontier.
Masa harina hoe cake? Maybe reinvent the comal cooked corn tortilla, only thicker? Sounds delicious, would be great with some campfire cooked posole or menudo! Con mucho gusto!We have had some already.
It sounds like you're talkin' about the cornbread that uses 50/50 wheat flour/corn meal and an egg, salt, (maybe a lil' bit of sugar) as well as some baking powder or soda, and some milk or water... in a greased cast iron skillet...
However, you might indeed not get a consensus on what to bake the cornbread in, nor what it should look like as it's a tad different when it's all corn flour (not to be confused with corn meal) without any wheat flour, nor milk, and when there isn't any baking powder nor soda used..., a la the 18th century on The Frontier.
LD
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