Monday, October 11, 2010

Amish Friendship Bread!

Dave's mom came to visit us this weekend, and she brought with her a coveted Amish Friendship bread starter. I had made the bread earlier in the summer, but, due to travel, was not able to keep the cycle going. I will try to keep up with it this time, and even if I fail, I now have the recipe for the starter.

Note: I have yet to test the starter recipe, so if it bombs, please let me know.


To start:

1 package (2 ¼ tsp) active dry yeast

¼ cup warm water (110 degrees f)

1 C flour

1 C sugar

1 C warm milk (110 degrees f)


2 non-metal bowls

non-metal spoon

clean kitchen towel

1 gallon-sized Ziploc bag


Instructions:

Day 1

Combine the yeast and water in one bowl. Set aside for 10 minutes to activate the yeast. In the other bowl, thoroughly combine flour and sugar.

Slowly add the milk and yeast to the flour and sugar mixture while stirring. Cover the bowl with kitchen towel.

Let sit at room temperature until it is bubbly. Pour into the Ziploc bag and seal it. Store it at room temperature – DO NOT refrigerate. Don't worry, this is safe, the yeast just needs to grow.

Day 2

Mash the bag.

Day 3

Mash the bag.

Day 4

Mash the bag.

Day 5

Mash the bag.

Day 6

1 C flour

1 C sugar

1 C warm milk (110 degrees f)

Add flour, sugar and milk to the bag, mash.

Day 7

Mash the bag.

Day 8

Mash the bag.

Day 9

Mash the bag.


Day 10

1 ½ C flour

1 ½ C sugar

1 ½ C warm milk (110 degrees f)


non-metal bowl

4 gallon-sized Ziploc bags


Pour contents of bag into non-metal bowl; add flour, sugar and milk. Stir thoroughly.


Measure out 4 separate batters of 1 C each into the Ziploc bags. Keep a starter for yourself and give three to friends along with a copy of this recipe. (Note: if you keep a starter, you will be baking every 10 days.) You should have 2 C of the batter remaining to bake with.


Be sure to tell your friends what day the starter is on when you pass it along, so they know where to pick up the instructions.


Final baking:

3 eggs

½ C milk

½ tsp salt

2 tsp cinnamon

½ tsp baking soda

1 large box instant Vanilla Pudding

1 C oil

1 C sugar

½ tsp vanilla extract

1 ½ tsp Baking Powder

2 C flour


2 large loaf pans

½ C sugar

1 ½ tsp cinnamon


Preheat oven to 325 degrees f.


Add ingredients to the starter in the order given, stirring thoroughly after each.


Grease loaf pans. In a bowl, mix an additional ½ C sugar and 1 ½ tsp cinnamon – dust the inside of the pans with half of the cinnamon-sugar mixture.


Pour the batter evenly into the pans. Sprinkle the remaining cinnamon-sugar mixture on top.


Bake bread for one hour, or until pick comes out clean. Cool until bread loosens from pan to turn onto serving plate.


Enjoy!


7 comments:

  1. Daughter Dear,

    On day six, how much flour, sugar and milk should I add to the bag?

    Dad

    ReplyDelete
  2. If I give the starters to people, how do I know what day it's on... that part confuses me.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Day 10 is when you bake the bread, and it is also Day 1 of the new starters. So if you give the starters to people 2 days after you baked, that means the starters are on Day 3.

    ReplyDelete
  4. You just added that, you rascal. By the way check this out. Science in the kitchen:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/20/dining/20Harvard.html?src=dayp

    ReplyDelete
  5. I just added what, the amounts you are supposed to add on day six? I most certainly did not, you just missed it. Also, I told you like, nine times.

    ReplyDelete