I have always wanted to bake bread. Each time I went to a super store, I would see range of different kinds of breads and most of them were made by home chefs, and I would think, someday I will bake it too.
Many times I had even bought yeast, waiting for my moods, the yeast aged and I had to throw it away. Then this lockdown happened, I was not able to go to the store to select the loaf of bread that took my fancy, that’s when I decided that I would bake it.
The first one I tried was with just plain flour. I watched about twenty different videos on U tube, to understand the techniques. Baked the first one, it took me about five hours, it did come out good but plain flour bread is not my liking.
Then I decided to make multigrain bread and voila! It was just the type I wanted.
So, before I forget the recipe, I decided to write it down.
Just soaked 1 tbsp dry yeast with salt and sugar in warm water for 10 minutes for it to ferment
Meanwhile take 1 cup plain flour, plus 1/4 cup Wheat flour plus 1/4 cup Rajgira flour
Add 1 tsp of Fennel seeds, 1tsp Poppy seeds, 1tsp Cumin seeds, 1tsp Sesame seeds and a pinch of Baking powder
Mix it well and add the fermented yeast
Mix it well, it should be wet and sticky, transfer to the greased silicon baking dish...smoothen it with wet hands
Cover the dough with mixture of crushed almonds walnuts n pistachio.
Keep it for one hour..
It will rise to double its size
Bake it for 30 minutes, cool and cut into slices..store it in the freezer..
Although the bread tasted very good but I decided to make Mushroom pickle too so that I could toast this slice of bread and have it with mushroom pickle.
This is how I pickled it
Clean and blanch the mushroom and chop into thin slices.
Add crushed garlic, chilies, finely chopped dry fruits like walnuts almonds pistachio, veg cube, lime juice. Pour olive oil and keep it bottled for 2 days.
Mushroom pickle can be stored in fridge for 15days and I use it for topping pizzas, or add in fry rice or even with pastas. One spoon should be enough for one serving…
Better to pickle it rather than to let it go bad with neglect.
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