Search Results (1,220 found)
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Chocolaty loaf of bread that's not too sweet. Great with peanut butter, toasted, and for breakfast. Kids LOVE it!
Chocolaty loaf of bread that's not too sweet. Great with peanut butter, toasted, and for breakfast. Kids LOVE it!
www.allrecipes.com
Let your bread machine do the work mixing these rolls made with honey, molasses, and chia seeds.
Let your bread machine do the work mixing these rolls made with honey, molasses, and chia seeds.
www.allrecipes.com
These are authentic Russian piroshki filled with ground beef and onion, seasoned with dill weed and deep fried. You could also add a little cheese in the filling as you are making them. They also may be baked.
These are authentic Russian piroshki filled with ground beef and onion, seasoned with dill weed and deep fried. You could also add a little cheese in the filling as you are making them. They also may be baked.
www.allrecipes.com
A traditional New Orleans-style recipe for their famous beignets! Grab a cafe au lait and you're set!
A traditional New Orleans-style recipe for their famous beignets! Grab a cafe au lait and you're set!
Ingredients:
yeast, water, sugar, salt, eggs, evaporated milk, flour, shortening, vegetable oil, confectioners sugar
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Cocoa and chocolate chips enhance this honey-sweetened wheat bread. And instant mocha coffee provides the java note.
Cocoa and chocolate chips enhance this honey-sweetened wheat bread. And instant mocha coffee provides the java note.
Ingredients:
water, cocoa, bread flour, whole wheat flour, milk, salt, vegetable oil, honey, yeast, chocolate chips, cappuccino
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This is a family favorite made easy. Preparing the dough in a bread machine saves time kneading the dough by hand. My grandmother used to make these when we would visit. Now I can make them for her.
This is a family favorite made easy. Preparing the dough in a bread machine saves time kneading the dough by hand. My grandmother used to make these when we would visit. Now I can make them for her.
cooking.nytimes.com
I love to sprinkle nigella seeds over the tops of these fragrant buns — they look great and the savory nigella contrasts well with the sweet dough (Sesame seeds would work, too.) Clotted cream is the perfect accompaniment, but if you can’t find it, crème fraîche or mascarpone would also be lovely — whether at breakfast or teatime.
I love to sprinkle nigella seeds over the tops of these fragrant buns — they look great and the savory nigella contrasts well with the sweet dough (Sesame seeds would work, too.) Clotted cream is the perfect accompaniment, but if you can’t find it, crème fraîche or mascarpone would also be lovely — whether at breakfast or teatime.
Ingredients:
plus, butter, superfine sugar, saffron strands, yeast, flour, bread flour, salt, maple syrup, cardamom pods, vanilla bean, maldon, sesame seeds, mascarpone cheese
cooking.nytimes.com
What’s called focaccia in Italy is fougasse in Provence Fougasse, though, is often shaped like a leaf, which is easy to do and very pretty The nutty, toasty whole grain bread is irresistible.
What’s called focaccia in Italy is fougasse in Provence Fougasse, though, is often shaped like a leaf, which is easy to do and very pretty The nutty, toasty whole grain bread is irresistible.
cooking.nytimes.com
American "deli rye" is descended from traditional breads in Middle and Eastern Europe, where rye and wheat grow together and "bread spice" (a combination of caraway, coriander, anise and fennel seeds) is common This kind of rye bread spread across the United States in the 20th century along with Jewish delicatessens, where it served as the perfect foil for rich fillings like pastrami and chopped liver -- not to mention tuna melts The sour tang and chewy texture of the original breads have largely been lost over time, because rye bread today is made mostly from wheat flour and just a scant amount of rye
American "deli rye" is descended from traditional breads in Middle and Eastern Europe, where rye and wheat grow together and "bread spice" (a combination of caraway, coriander, anise and fennel seeds) is common This kind of rye bread spread across the United States in the 20th century along with Jewish delicatessens, where it served as the perfect foil for rich fillings like pastrami and chopped liver -- not to mention tuna melts The sour tang and chewy texture of the original breads have largely been lost over time, because rye bread today is made mostly from wheat flour and just a scant amount of rye