Well this is it! I took the jump and applied for culinary classes and will be starting them January 17th, 2012. I am really excited. I honestly can't tell you how excited I really am.
I am also hoping that with these classes I will get new insight and will start this blog back up. While I think I was doing really well, I felt I was missing something. Along with the new start up, new recipes will come in. Not just the homemade recipes, but some exotic ones as well.
So Happy New Year!
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Monday, October 17, 2011
Chapati: The Bread Spoon
Chapati is an unleavened (no yeast or baking powder) flat bread and a staple food among the people of East Africa, similar to the American Indian fry bread. Chapati is normally served with other foods like vegetable and meat dishes. Tearing off pieces of a chapati and using it to pick up other foods is the norm. Chapati is a bread and a utensil. I think it goes great for thick stews and chilis!
Ingredients:
2 cups white flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
oil
water
Directions:
Mix dry ingredients well. Add 1 tablespoon of oil to the flour mixture and mix in with your hands until flour feels a little bit like sand. Add enough water to form an elastic dough. Divide the dough into 4 equal parts.
Roll out 1 ball into a circle and spread 1/2 teaspoon oil over it. Roll the circle up, like a jelly roll, then roll it up again. It should resemble a snail shell. Do the same for the other three balls.Let the dough sit 20 minutes to 8 hours, depending on when you make them. Roll out into circles 10 to 12 inches in diameter. Melt a bit of shortening in a frying pan and wait until it is hot to cook the chapati. Cook rapidly and watch them bubble up.
Makes 4 chapatis.
Recipe doesn't really work with doubling due to the fact that it's easier to work this recipe when the portions are smaller, but they are quick and easy to make.
Notes:
Spread some butter or margarine on the warm chapati and sprinkle some cinnamon sugar on it for breakfast.
Healthy Substitutions:
*Use 1/2 white flour and 1/2 wheat flour or all wheat flour to make a healthier chapati.
*Skip the oil used when rolling up the chapatis.
*Cook the chapatis on a dry skillet or frying pan.
Ingredients:
2 cups white flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
oil
water
Directions:
Mix dry ingredients well. Add 1 tablespoon of oil to the flour mixture and mix in with your hands until flour feels a little bit like sand. Add enough water to form an elastic dough. Divide the dough into 4 equal parts.
Roll out 1 ball into a circle and spread 1/2 teaspoon oil over it. Roll the circle up, like a jelly roll, then roll it up again. It should resemble a snail shell. Do the same for the other three balls.Let the dough sit 20 minutes to 8 hours, depending on when you make them. Roll out into circles 10 to 12 inches in diameter. Melt a bit of shortening in a frying pan and wait until it is hot to cook the chapati. Cook rapidly and watch them bubble up.
Makes 4 chapatis.
Recipe doesn't really work with doubling due to the fact that it's easier to work this recipe when the portions are smaller, but they are quick and easy to make.
Notes:
Spread some butter or margarine on the warm chapati and sprinkle some cinnamon sugar on it for breakfast.
Healthy Substitutions:
*Use 1/2 white flour and 1/2 wheat flour or all wheat flour to make a healthier chapati.
*Skip the oil used when rolling up the chapatis.
*Cook the chapatis on a dry skillet or frying pan.
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