🍎 Rosemary Sourdough Bread (Gluten-Free)steemCreated with Sketch.

in #recipe7 years ago (edited)

Sourdough bread is the survival food of Eskimos and gold miners in the Yukon territory, during the 1800s, and its history reaches way back to the ancient Egyptian civilizations.

Rosemary Sourdough Bread

The Story

A few months ago, we started introducing more fermented foods into our family's diet, including kombucha, sauerkraut, and sourdough. Why? For gut health. According to my partner, these foods naturally contain probiotics, which repopulate the friendly gut bacteria. This can help with everything from digestion to sleep!

We're no experts on these subjects, but we're passionate foodies, learning through discovery. My first introduction to sourdough was through a friend, ten years ago, who gifted me a jar of his family's multi-generational, age-old, ultra-awesome sourdough starter, straight from the Yukon. I learned that sourdough bread is made from the "starter," which contains the culture, mixed with new flour and water. This culture expands as it is "fed," and so it lasts as long as it is maintained.

Sourdough is an everlasting "living" food that moves, breathes, and evolves over time, so I had the opportunity to see its subtle variances in texture, taste, and hue. Apparently, sourdough has a personality and preferences, e.g. water quality and room temperature, and in a worst case scenario it may turn pink and stinky–signs that the sourdough is unhappy. Somehow, this happened to my first batch, and I had to let it go. :(

This time, we found a fantastic source for gluten-free sourdough starter, called Cultures For Health, with products and resources about sourdough, along with kefir, kombucha, yogurt, and other cultured foods. We're a few months invested into our current brew of sourdough starter now, and we've had great successes with a pancakes and breads. We simply add equal parts water and brown rice flower every once in awhile, and the sourdough amplifies endlessly.


The Benefits

Sourdough bread is said to be superior in health benefits, compared to other breads! Here's an excellent article and video on this subject: Why Sourdough Is The Healthiest Bread - Explained. I mentioned the fact that sourdough bread sustained the Eskimos through cold winter weather in the 1800s. Also, the tangy, sour flavor is coveted by some of us as a pleasant taste along with a flavor enhancer, similar to the way sour tomatoes enhance salads, and sour lemons enhance ginger tea. Personally, I savor the flavor of sourdough.


The Recipe

Ingredients: 2 C sourdough starter (actively bubbling), 2 C flour (gluten-free, i.e. brown rice flour), 2 T coconut oil, 1 T cane sugar, 1 t sea salt, 2" sprig of fresh rosemary, and optionally <1 C water (warm).

Adjust the consistency of your "dough" with the water, aiming for a consistency is similar to cake batter, but not too watery!

Instructions: Coat your 9"x5" bread pan with 1 T coconut oil. In a mixing bowl, mix your sourdough starter with the gluten-free flour of your choice, such as brown rice four, and stir together with cane sugar and sea salt. Note: Examine the consistency of your mixture, adding water if necessary to create a cake batter consistency. Because the consistency of sourdough starter varies in every household, you'll want to be careful with the amount of water you add, because: (1) too much water will result in bread that is overly moist in the middle; and (2) too little water will result in bread that is overly dry. Cake batter is a good consistency to aim for. Pour your dough into the coated pan. In a skillet, gently sauté your rosemary sprig (green herb only) in the remaining coconut oil, achieving a nice crisp texture with the rosemary. Artistically, decorate the top of your dough with this rosemary/coconut drizzle.

Naturally, you're invited to make this bread your own, with your preferred selection of herbs, spices, sweeteners, etc.

Wishing you an incredible edible day!

–Cabe


This post contains 100% original content by @cabelindsay.

Sort:  

Waooo.. You guyz are absolutely amazing.. Nice informations and recepie is also yummyyyy.. Thnx for sharing

I’m gonna have to try this recipe! It looks awesome!

This looks great! I was just going to get a new gluten free sourdough going after killing my old one, so this is a great inspiration! thanks for sharing - I'll let you know how I get on with it....:)

Cool, yeah, let me know if you make any new discoveries! So much to learn.

well, what I have learned is 'don't leave it on the radiator'...so, that's my lesson 1 shared :D

This is from last year when the weather was getting cooler, I made a mistake on the thermostat... Now, I have a warming mat for mushroom cultivation that I'm going to dedicate to keeping my sourdough at-temp (living in England in Winter is not sourdough-on-the-worktop friendly)

:) Funny! Oh man, I'd love to know more about your mushroom cultivation experiences. Here in Austin area, we have an abundance of mushrooms growing in the wild, but I haven't braved the foraging yet because of my lack of knowledge. I'll have to check the local library for that book, Demystifying the Mushroom.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.18
TRX 0.16
JST 0.030
BTC 68227.33
ETH 2646.21
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.70