After long time having Norwegian bread

in Plant Power (Vegan)25 days ago

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Hello, friends! Community greetings to you all. As you know, we spent the entire winter in India, a busy time for us as we worked on many projects. While I was active on the Hive blockchain and making posts, that was mainly to help manage my stress and relax.

We did travel to a few small places, but I didn't spend much time making Indian food this time around. Although I prepared some nice dishes, it wasn't always easy to take photos and share posts. However, there are still some recipes I would like to share with you, friends. I will do it later.

Today’s recipe is very simple and Norwegian. While we were in India, our oven was quite small, making it impossible for me to bake our Norwegian wholemeal bread. Whenever we wanted bread, we ended up buying airy white bread from the bakery. After returning, we bought the breads from the supermarket. The varieties of breads we get here. But I still wanted to bake my own homemade wholemeal bread. I am sharing this recipe with you as a tutorial.

Ingredients
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2 cups of wheat flour (I use atta)
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp dry yeast
250 ml warm water
2 tbsp oil

Prepare the Dough:
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In a mixing bowl, combine the wheat flour, sugar, salt, and dry yeast.
Gradually add warm water to the dry ingredients, using a wooden fork to mix until a dough forms.

First Rise:
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Cover the dough with a clean cloth and let it rest until it doubles in size and shows bubbles, approximately 1 hour.

Punch and Fold
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Lightly punch the dough down and fold it, using oil on your hands to prevent sticking.
Return the dough to the bowl, cover it again, and let it rest for another half hour.

Second Rise
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After half an hour, the dough should have doubled in size again.
Wet your hands in cold water, punch the dough down again, and fold it from all sides. Cover it and let it rest once more.

Shape the Dough
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Once the dough has risen again, place it on a floured surface.
Very lightly fold the dough from all sides and shape it according to your desired form.

Final Preparation
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Cover the shaped dough and let it rest for 10-15 minutes while you preheat the oven to 220°C (428°F). Place the pizza stone inside the oven to heat.

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Spray some water on the bread.

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Make some fine cuts to secure the shape/avoid cracks.

Baking
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Carefully place the dough on the heated pizza stone in the oven.

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Bake for 15 minutes at 220°C (428°F).
After 15 minutes, reduce the temperature to 200°C (392°F) and bake for an additional 30 minutes or until the bread reaches your desired crispiness. The total baking time should be around 45-50 minutes.

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We enjoyed our freshly baked bread! After 4 months.
Thank you very much

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That bread looks great!

I was listening to a podcast about Indian cuisine, and back in like the 15C they say English and Indian cuisine was quite similiar! Crazy. It was when the english brought wheat, chillis and potatoes from South American to Indian that things started to change. I mean, I can't imagine an India without a tomato chilli style curry, but centuries ago, that wouldn't have existed! Imagine going back in time to like 1512 and asking for a hot curry - they wouldn't exist!

I was thinking about your comment, @rivelflows. Indian cuisine is vast, to finding a history of curry in different places, not easy. different styles and preparations. The introduction of tomatoes and potatoes from the West has made it easier workwise and increased the quantity of gravies. We primarily use stone-ground coconut paste, yogurt, rice flour, and ragi flour, Curry was existing, but not modern curry; it was spices like coriander and cumin and long pepper with coconut or yogurt, or sesame seeds, poppy seeds. stone-ground curry. Long pepper is often used instead of chili, adding more heat than black pepper.

Despite heavy modifications from the Columbian exchange, remnants of pre-Columbian Indian cuisine remain, especially in South India, where dishes are made without potatoes and tomatoes. In North India, also like dals can also be made without these ingredients. A traditional Indian meal typically involves rice with vegetables or meat, and many recipes don’t require potatoes or tomatoes. In Goan cuisine, there is more coconut and spices, no tomato or potatoes, or wheat.
It started after the Portuguese came to Goa. Thank you for asking, it is good work for my brain to remind me of my history of our food culture. HAPPY EASTER, DEAR 🐣🐣

You have such wonderful food. I have a craving now for a south indian curry. I'm upset my curry plant wasn't watered by the housesitters and died so I must get another one.

bread right from the oven is a real treat
!DUO
!BBH
!INDEED


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Thank you very much.:)

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Wow!!!! I can't even buy bread that looks so good. It is so amazing and beautiful. I would love a slice of that my friend. It must smell so good in your place. Yum yum.

Thanks for sharing. I hope it's nice weather there.😊💚

We just arrived and two days of very nice weather, but from Sunday, the temperature. dropped, cloudy, foggy, cold here, but after baking the bread, we forgot the outside weather and just enjoyed the lunch with warm aromatic bread. How are you, dear, and how is spring there? Have a nice Easter holiday, enjoy yourself :) hugs !AHUG

This looks and taste delicious. Good with a cup of coffee ☕️

thank you, friend.:)

Always beautiful 😻

This looks like a very delicious dish and you have mentioned every single thing that has been used in it, so we will try to get everything from the market and we will definitely try it once.

Thank you for stopping by. :)