Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Day 78: More Spelt in Our Food

I tried out the spelt again. Someone kindly sent me Dreena Burton's Peanut Butter Cookie recipe. She mentioned that she had use spelt instead of the flour called for in the recipe. So I did too but I didn't add the extra spelt flour as she recommended, and I suppose I should have because they didn't hold together too well. I also left out the molasses because we don't have that here. I only used ½ dl maple syrup (I couldn't make myself use more, it's so expensive) and ½ dl of regular syrup. We didn't notice the maple syrup, so I'll try just regular syrup next time and leave out the sugar. I made 8 cookies but they were so big that I'll try making 16 next time.

I made cinnamon raisin bread. I substituted 1 dl of spelt flour for the regular flour and next time I'll try 2 dl. Taking the bread out 5 minutes early wasn't enough because it was a bit burnt on top.

I need to get outside more!

Friday, July 21, 2006

Day 74: Banana Loaf

Not much to report. SS is still going here and there, so he hasn't eaten at home very often, and I'm just eating sandwiches and leftovers.

I used the spelt again. SS's grandmother sent home 2 bananas. She likes them almost starting to spot whereas I like them just turning completely yellow. By the next day they were quite spotty and I had no desire to eat them. So I made a banana oatmeal spelt loaf. I'm still using white wheat flour as we ease into using the spelt. I took my trusty old high school home ec banana loaf recipe and adapted it. Turned out quite well.

This week's journey step is not eating more than one row of chocolate a day. Will be difficult to remember!

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Day 68: Experiments

I finally bought some spelt flour. I have been wanting/waiting to try it. I made some carrot bread in my bread machine but I only used 1.5 dl of spelt because I haven't used the machine for so long and I wasn't sure how it would work. And even though the breadpan fit and looked the same as the original, who knows what could have happened. The bread turned out great, but, as you can see in the picture, the crust was quite crummy. I stopped the machine 4 minutes earlier, but I'll have to experiment how much earlier I need to stop it. We didn't notice the taste of the spelt or the carrot for that matter.

I made some homemade margarine (1 part butter, 1 part oil and 1 part water). It was edible but I don't know how versatile it is. I also tried to make a homemade cheese spread (the one with the knife) from quark. I think it is too dilly and SS thinks it tastes too much like quark. I will keep experimenting with it.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Day 66: Strawberry Jam

I can't even remember if I went to the market last year but a friend was going to buy strawberries and I asked if I could go with. I thought that if I bought a box it would be much easier to bring them home by her car rather than on the back of my bike. I ended up buying a 5 kilo box.

We aren't big jam eaters. A jar can easily be in the fridge until the best before date has long gone. I had planned to just cut up what we didn't eat and put them in the freezer. But I had a bag of jam sugar that I didn't use last year when I was going to make black currant jam (which we eat on our peanut butter sandwiches). I wouldn't have made that either but the owner of the bushes didn't want the berries to go to waste because her freezer was broken and the berries were ripe.

Anyway I decided to make some jam. Only half of the recipe (1 kilo of berries) because I didn't know how it would turn out or if we would like it or eat it. And look what I got. It was still quite liquidy at this stage but after being in the fridge overnight it thicken up well and tastes great. Next year I will consider making the whole recipe if the jam survives being in the freezer.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Day 64: Nuts

SS hasn't been home very much, so I've been trying to eat up bits and pieces and things that he doesn't want to eat anymore (cheese spreads, etc.) so I don't need to waste them by throwing them away.

We both need more vegetable fat so I'm going to add 5 walnuts and 5 almonds each day to our diets. That is if I can find walnuts and they are a reasonable price.

Thursday, July 6, 2006

Day 59: Look What I Bought

I have been meaning to repair my bread machine pan (either get the bread pan seal in myself but if it didn't work then buy a new one) but I was sure that if I try to find someone who stocks parts for this old machine that they would be expensive. I don't like kneading and have used the bread machine for that also.

I was at the recycling centre, looking for a glass lid for 2 of my casserole dishes that have never had lids, when what do I see on the floor? It looked like the correct size and felt like the same weight. They don't have prices on things there, so I went to ask. The man looked at it for a while and then asked what it was. After I told him he looked at it for a long time and I was thinking €€€€. Then he said € 0,30. Can you believe that! That's about 38 cents American and 43 cents Canadian and the tax is included. When I got home I looked up the price for a breadpan seal and one site had them for $USD 17.99. Repeat JUST FOR THE SEAL! Doesn't take much to make me happy! Of course I'm left with the extra pan, but I might need it too.

This week's step is to stop buying blue cheese. I don't even know why I really buy it because, though I like the first few bites each time, the rest of the package tastes so strong