Baking Wishlist: Sprouted Barley Bread

There’s a jar of barley sprouting on top of my refrigerator, and it is destined to be part of my first foray into sprouted bread. Manna, also called “Essene” bread is some pretty ancient stuff that apparently dates back to biblical times. I did an image search and came up with the enticing picture above, blogged by someone walking the Silk Road through Turkey and Kyrgyzstan.

Manna is usually made with wheat berries, but I am partial to barley lately, and am hoping that it will turn out like the barley rusks I loved to eat in salads in Greece. There were entire bakeries there devoted to making these dried bread rounds. Rusks are dark, like pumpernickel. The salad was called Dakos and is similar to the Italian panzanella in that you wait for the bread to dry out, and then serve it as a base for or crumble into the salad. It then soaks up all the juices from the vegetables and simple dressing of lemon and olive oil.

My favorite meal in Greece: Bread Salad.

Both rusks and manna bread are baked at low temperature, around 200 to 250 degrees. (Think I’ll try mine in the dehydrator!) Neither one contains yeast or leavening of any kind. Sometimes dried nuts and fruit are ground along with the grain to add flavor and richness. Dates and almonds are my current pick.

Since I learned how to sprout a few months ago–and even made my own sprouting jar, I have found it to be so easy. Mung beans, lentils, chickpeas…I put them on salads, in sandwiches, or just eat out of hand for a snack. Now it’s time to take it to the next level!

The past few weeks have been all about yoga and dark leafy greens for me as I focus on improving my physical state (It’s working!). Manna bread is just what I’m craving to replace traditional baked wheat bread, of which I have been consuming less. I’m curious to know: do you find yourself eating less bread lately? What do you use to replace it?

Food Q&A: Where Can I Buy Raw Cashews, Cheap?

Good enough for me. Imposter 'raw' cashews from Trader Joe's.

This was from a friend of mine, a fellow Brooklynite, who is trying to eat well on a budget. I am a huge fan of that so I did the best I could recommending some local, NY sources.

Anita,

I bought a fancy juicer to do a homemade variant of the BluePrint cleanse, and I want to make the cashew nut milk to drink at night (it’s super good). I took your advice and used a touch of coconut oil to make it super smooth, but [the recipe] uses A LOT of raw cashews. Where do you buy yours? They’re pretty pricey when you’re buying small amounts at the supermarket.

Daniel

Daniel,

If you use a touch of coconut cream it is even better! I have three sources for cashews. The fast & easy one is Trader Joe’s. You can get a one pound bag of raw cashews for $5.50. Read more…

Food Q&A: Can I Melt Raw Chocolate?

I have recently become addicted to answering food questions on foodpickle.com. Then, yesterday, I was psyched to get two food questions directly from friends. This is something I want to do a lot more of, so please, keep them coming! Here is the answer to one.

Hi Anita,

So I bought this amazing organic raw chocolate and I was wondering if you knew any recipes for it. I tried melting it with confectioner’s sugar and agave and it’s delicious, but it didn’t really melt. The texture is like if peanut brittle and a rice crispie treat had a baby. It’s weird. How do I make it melt?

xo, Jocelyn

Jocelyn,

If it is what I think it is, it is mostly made of cacao nibs (the “crispie” part). Those don’t melt because raw chocolate doesn’t have any of the emulsifiers, sugar or added cocoa butter that make regular chocolate melt.

I have two solutions for you. Read more…