A bag of brown rice was delivered at my dad’s place by his
friend a few months back. In spite of ill health his friend remembered dad’s
love for brown rice and carted personally all the way from his farm in the
interior hills. Home grown in the salubrious Himalayan clime and packed with
love, the rice was indeed precious and price less.
There is an element of simplicity in people who live close
to nature. Those living in the interior hills, away from the modernism are
selfless, pure and humble. Perhaps it is the influence of the nature that makes
them so exalted. My dad’s friend has all these qualities that make him a great
human being.
Half of the brown rice was passed on to us by my dad. We
savoured every bit of it. Last week, some brown rice was left after lunch. I
did not want the birds to feast on it which is generally the case with the
leftover food in our home. Rice had to be used while it was fresh and the only
way I could think of using it was to bake bread. I had never baked brown rice
bread before. Most of the brown rice bread recipes that I found did not prove
to be of much help. I got some help here and for the rest, used my generic
recipe for simple bread. I let the bread rise in a pot. I wasn’t too sure of this
bread that was being baked without a tried recipe, mainly, to salvage brown
rice. But the bread turned out to be a stunner. It rose exceptionally well. It
was soft and mildly sweet with occasional grains of rice in the crumb making it
chewy.
Our Indian gooseberry (Amla) tree promises a bumper crop
this year.
Bael (Wood apple) too, promises a good produce.
Here is my recipe for Brown Rice Bead in a Pot.
You may use leftover brown rice or cook some especially for
the purpose. Mash the rice well, and then measure it. I used a pot, but I
recommend baking bread in a bread pan.
Brown Rice
Bread in a Pot
Ingredients
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 cup all purpose flour
½ cup brown rice (cooked and mashed)
1 ½ tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 ¼ teaspoon instant yeast
½ cup warm water.
Method
Dissolve sugar in warm water. Add yeast. Cover and let it
rest for 15 minutes.
In a kneading plate whisk whole wheat flour, all purpose
flour and salt.
Add olive oil and mix well.
Add brown rice and mix well so that the mashed rice is
distributed evenly in the flour mix.
Add water and knead for about 10 minutes to get soft
dough.
Cover the dough and leave it for 20 minutes.
Transfer the dough to the counter, oil your palms and
knead for 6 to 8 minutes. By the end of kneading, the dough should be smooth
and supple, Soft but not sticky.
Grease a bread tin (7 inch
x 3 inches).
Now shape the loaf. Stretch the dough to form a rectangle,
now wider than the loaf pan you are using.
Roll the dough towards you, tightly. Pinch seams to seal.
Place the roll in the greased loaf tin with the seam side
down. Cover and keep it to rise for 1 hour or till double in size.
Bake in a pre heated oven at 190 Degrees for 35 to
minutes or till the top turns brown and the bottom sounds hollow when tapped.
Remove from the pan after 10 minutes and cool in the
rack.
Sending to Vegan Thursdays conceptualized by Priya and Yeastspotting
Sending to Vegan Thursdays conceptualized by Priya and Yeastspotting
Oh my and now you are creating such amazing originals..stunned with the idea and the execution. Loved a peep into your amla and bael tres :)
ReplyDeleteI have never baked bread with rice before. I have a bag of brown rice in the cupboard and was contemplating a curry meal but I always end up with leftover rice that sits in the fridge and doesn't get eaten and now you have solved the problem. This bread looks delicious and frugal at the same time. Another "problem solver" of a bread where we can make the most of what we have. Thank you for being so clever Namita and for being willing to go the extra mile to use up your leftovers :) I am also extremely interested in your fruits! We don't even see them here and they look incredibly interesting :)
ReplyDeleteOmg, fantastic bread, love the shape of the bread..
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious. I've used cooked rice in bread before and just love the dimension it adds.
ReplyDeleteI tried this out y'day, the bread was good! Good use of the left over's rice off lunch! :-)
ReplyDeleteI am happy that your bread came out well. Thanks!
Deletenice blog happy to follow you .. can visit my also at http://savorindian.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteWow! you are really a great baker Binu :)
ReplyDelete