I live with my Mom and Dad and their weimaraner "Spencer". My Dad has multi infarct dementia

We all come from Vermont and we grew up during the 60's and 70's. One of our favorite things is cooking and so we try and stay sane by writing about cooking. I have an old cookbook from Rutland VT called "Out of Vermont Kitchens that we are going to try and cook from and see what the food tastes like.

The cookbook has some prepared foods in some of the recipes. But we will try and adapt them perhaps to modern cusine.

We also try other recipes but will dive into our Vermont roots as often as we can.

Marion Ballou Smith
The daughter of Orris and Margaret (Mageen) Ballou, Marion Ballou Smith grew up in Rutland, Vermont, graduated from Mount Holyoke College (1914), and taught botany and mathematics. In 1927 she married Esme A.C. Smith, a businessman in Rutland. Active in local business and civic affairs, Smith was the co-compiler, with Alice Chaffee Bowker and Ruth Sutton, of a fund-raising cookbook entitled Out of Vermont Kitchens, published in 1939, to benefit the Trinity Mission of Trinity Church in Rutland, and the Women's Service League of St. Paul's Church in Burlington, Vermont.

2.21.2010

Sourdough Downhill

We make bread about once a week thanks to a sourdough starter I soured in our back closet a year ago. There is a jar filled with happy bacteria living in the back of our refrigerator and they love a weekly super-shot of flour and water to devour.

The weather plays a big part in baking bread. When the sun shines and the air is crisp, the bread rises so much better than at any other time. We spend time wondering what day to bake bread and how much longer to gamble the days and the sourdough's appetite by not baking it.

But even if we bake on an overcast days and the bread texture is denser, it still tastes good toasted with coffee in the morning. The toast is so good, you don't need butter on it.

When the weather is a little overcast, sometimes we bake rolls. My sister came home from Pennsylvania and brought Amish baked bread laced with pecans and brown sugar and cinnamon. So we tried them androlled the dough out into a flat pancake and scooped the brown mixture all over the pancake and then rolled it up and formed a jelly roll loaf or sweet rolls.

I'm trying some of the regional flours I found at Ludgate Farms in Ithaca, NY. The flours are from small regional mills. I hope the flour tastes better than the Wegmans or Wal-Mart flours.

We have been watching the Olympics together. Thank God for downhill events and hockey. The Olympics has become our babysitter throe much of this week. Dad sits quietly tapping his cane watching Bode redeem himself as a medal winner and the hockey games. He becomes confused when he figures out that many of the players are now women. Women hockey players do not make sense in my Dad's eyes.

1 comment:

Matt Sutkoski said...

The bread looks delicious. You're making me hungry