Salt-Raising Bread
Instructions
- 1
While getting breakfast in the morning, as soon as the tea-kettle has boiled, take a quart tin cup or an earthen quart milk pitcher, scald it, then fill one-third full of water about as warm as the finger could be held in; then to this add a teaspoonful of salt, a pinch of brown sugar and coarse flour enough to make a batter of about the right consistency for griddle-cakes.
- 2
Set the cup, with the spoon in it, in a closed vessel half-filled with water moderately hot, but not scalding.
- 3
Keep the temperature as nearly even as possible and add a teaspoonful of flour once or twice during the process of fermentation.
- 4
The yeast ought to reach to the top of the bowl in about five hours.
- 5
Sift your flour into a pan, make an opening in the centre and pour in your yeast.
- 6
Have ready a pitcher of warm milk, salted, or milk and water (not too hot, or you will scald the yeast germs), and stir rapidly into a pulpy mass with a spoon.
- 7
Cover this sponge closely and keep warm for an hour, then knead into loaves, adding flour to make the proper consistency.
- 8
Place in warm, well-greased pans, cover closely and leave till it is light.
- 9
Bake in a steady oven, and when done let all the hot steam escape.
- 10
Wrap closely in damp towels and keep in closed earthen jars until it is wanted.
- 11
This, in our grandmothers' time, used to be considered the prize bread, on account of its being sweet and wholesome and required no prepared yeast to make it.
- 12
Nowadays yeast-bread is made with very little trouble, as the yeast can be procured at almost any grocery.