metawidget: a basket of vegetables: summer and winter squash, zucchini, tomatoes. (food)
metawidget ([personal profile] metawidget) wrote in [community profile] boilingwater2013-01-07 09:31 am

Basic Corn Bread

This recipe is adapted from The Vegetarian Epicure and is our go-to recipe for bread warm out of the oven. It's also very straightforward and doesn't require any particularly fancy ingredients.

Preheat the oven to 375° F.

1¼ cups
white flour (unbleached if possible)
¾ cup
cornmeal
2-3 tablespoons
sugar
5 teaspoons
baking powder
pinch
salt
1
egg
1 cup
milk
2 tablespoons
melted butter

Sift together the dry ingredients into a mixing bowl.

Beat the egg into the milk, add it and the butter to the dry ingredients (separately — you get butter globules floating in your milk if you add the butter to the milk-and-egg mixture).

Spread batter in a buttered 9-inch pie plate or oven-proof frying pan (e.g. a one-piece cast iron one) and bake 30-35 minutes, until the top starts to brown near the edges.

This bread is at its best right out of the oven with butter, but it will still be nice the next day. It is excellent with baked beans and coleslaw, or on its own for breakfast.

I've sprinkled grated cheese on it before sticking it in the oven, mixed garlic, roseamary and/or chopped onions in, and done it up plain; it's a good base for improvisation.

Cross-posts: [community profile] boilingwater, my journal

0jack: Closeup of Boba Fett's helmet, angular orange stripe surrounding a narrow window on a greenish metallic field. (Default)

[personal profile] 0jack 2013-01-07 03:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I was raised on the Texan version of this, a different ratio of cornmeal/flour and less baking powder but with soured milk to increase the rising. It's lovely.

The next day, it makes an excellent hot breakfast, if you're into that kind of thing. Break up a large piece in a bowl, drizzle with molasses or honey, and pour steaming-hot milk over top.

This bread is also used for half the bread in a traditional dressing made to go with turkey or chicken. It freezes well so if it gets a bit stale, keep a bag of it and bring it out later for the dressing which is basically a savoury bread pudding. (dry bread of varying kinds, sauteed onion/celery, stock, eggs, spices)
0jack: Closeup of Boba Fett's helmet, angular orange stripe surrounding a narrow window on a greenish metallic field. (Default)

[personal profile] 0jack 2013-01-07 05:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Anything with less gluten requires more lift, in general. Because the cornmeal itself doesn't rise, the wheat flour needs to do far more work. If one wants a lighter bread with a higher cornmeal content (or is making it GF entirely), egg whites beaten until they hold peaks, then gently folded in at the last, are useful. I am very used to the soured milk as I grew up with it. :)

The hot breakfast is a rather happy childhood memory for me. We didn't have a lot of money but it's hard to feel sorry for one's self with something so tasty to eat before school.
carolyn_claire: (Grater than)

[personal profile] carolyn_claire 2013-01-07 06:08 pm (UTC)(link)
We've used the Okie version of this for generations, with 1 C cornmeal (yellow or white) and 1/2 C flour, 1 tsp each sugar and salt, 3/4 tsp each baking soda and baking powder, 1 1/2 C buttermilk (or 1 1/4 C milk), 1 egg and 2 Tbl oil (though I usually use 1 Tbl). It has a firm texture but rises beautifully, especially in a divided cornbread pan; the important bit is to mix the dry ingredients VERY well before adding the wet. For a snack, we also eat it with a spoon, broken up in a glass of milk. We use it in stuffing, too, half and half with stale bread, sauteed in butter with onion and celery and sage, moistened with chicken or turkey broth and milk before baking. It's great with chili, and you can add diced jalapeno, too.