Hearty Rustic Bread

Serve this hearty, chewy bread with steamy bowls of homemade soup for a meal that will warm you up and fill you up!

Hearty Rustic Bread

2/3 cup whole milk
1 tablespoon sugar
1 ounce fresh active yeast
5 cups flour
Coarse sea salt



In a small saucepan over medium heat, heat 1 cup water, milk and sugar until just warm (90 degrees F.). Remove from heat and stir in yeast until dissolved. In a large bowl, combine flour and 1 1/2 tablespoons course sea salt.  Pour in yeast mixture and mix with hands until a soft dough forms.  (If dough is dry, add more water.  If dough is sticky, add more flour.) On a lightly floured surface, knead dough for about 5 minutes.  Place dough in a large lightly floured bowl, cover with a clean towel, and let rise in a warm, draft-free area until doubled in size, 50 to 60 minutes. (The oven is a good place to rise dough.)

On a clean surface, punch down dough and form into a 10 by 7 inch rectangle about 2 inches thick.  Place loaf  on a parchment-lined baking sheet, cover with a towel and let rise again in a warm, draft-free place until doubled in size, 50 to 60 minutes.

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.  Using your finger, press indentations into the top of the loaf.  Drizzle surface with 1 tablespoon olive oil and sprinkle with 1 teaspoon coarse seat salt.  You can sprinkle with herbs if you like, such as rosemary or basil.  Bake until loaf is golden and sounds hollow when tapped, about 30 minutes.  Transfer loaf to a wire rack and let cool.  Slice to serve.

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Planning and Hosting a Ladies Tea

My grandmother had a collection of china tea cups.  You know how those things happen . . . you show interest in something, acquire a couple, and all of a sudden everyone you know buys them for you as gifts.  I admit I remember buying one for her myself.  She kept them in a beautiful china closet that had belonged to her mother, my Swedish great-grandmother, "Mormor."  When my grandma passed away, my mom inherited both the china closet and the china tea cups, and she displayed them in her dining room as well.

My mom has since passed away, and I inherited Mormor's beautiful antique china closet and Grandma's tea cups..  I wanted to share them with the women in my family, but instead of asking them if "anyone wants any of Grandma's tea cups," I decided I would host a Ladies Tea so that we could enjoy them together before dividing them among us. I sent out the invitations and then got to work planning and getting ready for our "Tea."

How to Make Tea Cup Candles


What a beautiful combination--delicate china tea cups and warm glowing candles.  You can easily turn tea cups into candle holders to grace your table for a Ladies Tea. The possibilities:  set a votive candle inside a cup; turn a cup over on the saucer and set a votive candle on top of the cup; set a small candle holder with a taper candle inside a cup; or fill a cup with melted wax and a wick.

Quick and Easy Recipes for a Ladies Tea


You have set a beautiful table for your Ladies Tea and you want to serve food that is beautiful to look at too.  Beautiful doesn't have to be difficult.  These recipes are quick and EASY to make but are delicious and look wonderful!

Menu
Scones with Raspberry Jam and Clotted Cream
Chicken Salad Sandwiches
Cucumber Sandwiches
Bacon and Broccoli Quiche
Coconut Macaroons
Petit Fours
Cream Wafer Cookies
Chocolate Dipped Apricots

Homestead Bloggers - Old-Fashioned Mingles with Modern


My farm-style kitchen boldly reveals my appreciation of that which is old (or old-fashioned) and that which is modern and convenient. I have no problem mixing the old with the new.  In fact, I love that. The plank flooring and farm sink give a nod to the past, and the Hoosier cabinet and marble top dresser are authentic antiques.  At the same time, the appliances and white wall units are brand new and up to date.  When I'm cooking or baking, I often have my lap top computer sitting on the counter so I can read recipes online or from my cookbook software, but my approach to homemaking is old-fashioned.  I'm canning and freezing foods, and I make a lot of food from scratch.  More and more, I'm using less and less processed foods.

Egg Laying Breakthrough


We had an egg-laying breakthrough at Maple Grove this week!  Four out of the six chickens that were hatched in April are now laying.  Just when I thought that the three delayed layers were going to hold off until after winter, Henny Haha pulled through seven weeks behind the three who were already laying. We still have two who are not laying, but we're currently getting four eggs a day from six chickens. In the middle of November, we're very happy with that!

If you're still waiting for your spring chicks to lay, don't give up yet.  The tell-tale signs of them being ready hold true, so watch for them.  A couple of days ago, I saw Henny coming out of the nesting box, and yesterday she squatted for the first time when I approached her.  Today she joined the big girl club and laid her first egg.  Yeah, Henny--way to go!  You can read more about signs of hens about to lay in my post on Egg Laying Training Week


Thanksgiving Remembrance


I rarely show pictures of my family members on my blog, but last Thanksgiving was so special, I just had to share this idea--because you might want to do this too!  We were hosting Thanksgiving dinner for our family at Maple Grove, and we passed the word around that it would be special to remember the early American natives and settlers.  (I ought to interject here that our family looks for ways to impose a theme on any and every occasion.  We just don't like life to be dull.)

Real Home (stead) Cooking


This is what I call REAL home cooking.  Not just home cooking, but homestead cooking.  It gives me so much joy and satisfaction to be able to prepare meals this way -- homemade spaghetti noodles made with fresh eggs from my own flock; tomato sauce and diced tomatoes that I canned from fresh picked-that-day-on-the-farm tomatoes; herbs grown in my own herb garden and preserved in the freezer, and meatballs prepared from ground beef bought from our locally-raised-meat market.

Homesteading takes some time, there is no doubt about it.  But the efforts are so worth it when you benefit from the quality of your food--quality in nutrition, and quality in taste.

Bon appetit!


Aunt Mil's Cranberry Salad


My Great-Aunt Mildred made a delicious molded cranberry salad for Thanksgiving every year.  It is a family favorite, and I have taken on the tradition of making sure it is on the table.  You will need a grinder for this recipe, either a hand grinder or an attachment for your electric mixer.  The aroma of oranges and cranberries fills the air as your hear the teasing "pops" and "snaps" of the cranberries being squeezed through the grinder. And you know it's Thanksgiving!  Here's the recipe . . .

Don't Get Frazzled Over Holiday Meal Planning!


Whether you're expecting a large crowd for Thanksgiving dinner or just a few family members, you always want the meal and the day to be extra special.  It can feel overwhelming.  The planning alone can really frazzle your mind.  Here are a few suggestions for how to make everything go smoothly!