Marianne
Super Self-Sufficient
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2011
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- Location
- rural Abilene, KS, 67410 USA
I'm trying to juggle what I can eat between the anti-inflammatory diet, the arthritis diet, the COPD diet and what I'm not supposed to eat because of a blood test for food sensitivity... now, what? hahahaha
Anyway, I still love to bake and found this recipe:
Sprouted Lentil Bread
One loaf, kneaded in the bread machine, baked in the oven.
2 days before baking, rinse 2 T of lentils to sprout in a mason jar. Soak overnight, rinse twice and pour off water. From then on, rinse twice a day. They don't have to be in the sun. They're ready when they have little tails.
Add to your bread machine:
1 cup warm water
2 T sugar
1 T yeast
2 T soft butter
3 cups flour
1 tsp salt
Hit the 'dough' cycle button. While that's working, rinse the lentils again and spread them out on a towel. When your dough is ready, pat it out and sprinkle a handful of lentils over it. Fold it over, knead a bit and repeat, adding more lentils as you go. For me, 3/4 cup to 1 cup of sprouted lentils is enough.
Place the dough in a greased bread pan and allow to rise no more than 1" above the pan. Heat oven to 400 degrees. When preheated, cut a deep groove down the center of the dough, then brush the top gently with water. Bake it 15 minutes, then lower the heat to 350 degrees. I usually open the door for several seconds to get the heat closer to 350 faster. Bake an additional 15 minutes. Cool 10 minutes, remove from pan.
This bread is very moist and has a chewy crust, plus it keeps well.
If you have your own favorite bread recipe, use that and just add the sprouted lentils. The lentils take on the texture and taste of sunflower seeds (kernels? What's the correct term?) I've used lentils that had short tails, long tails, one time green leaves on tails - I could definitely taste the 'green', on those but the guys couldn't.
Anyway, I still love to bake and found this recipe:
Sprouted Lentil Bread
One loaf, kneaded in the bread machine, baked in the oven.
2 days before baking, rinse 2 T of lentils to sprout in a mason jar. Soak overnight, rinse twice and pour off water. From then on, rinse twice a day. They don't have to be in the sun. They're ready when they have little tails.
Add to your bread machine:
1 cup warm water
2 T sugar
1 T yeast
2 T soft butter
3 cups flour
1 tsp salt
Hit the 'dough' cycle button. While that's working, rinse the lentils again and spread them out on a towel. When your dough is ready, pat it out and sprinkle a handful of lentils over it. Fold it over, knead a bit and repeat, adding more lentils as you go. For me, 3/4 cup to 1 cup of sprouted lentils is enough.
Place the dough in a greased bread pan and allow to rise no more than 1" above the pan. Heat oven to 400 degrees. When preheated, cut a deep groove down the center of the dough, then brush the top gently with water. Bake it 15 minutes, then lower the heat to 350 degrees. I usually open the door for several seconds to get the heat closer to 350 faster. Bake an additional 15 minutes. Cool 10 minutes, remove from pan.
This bread is very moist and has a chewy crust, plus it keeps well.
If you have your own favorite bread recipe, use that and just add the sprouted lentils. The lentils take on the texture and taste of sunflower seeds (kernels? What's the correct term?) I've used lentils that had short tails, long tails, one time green leaves on tails - I could definitely taste the 'green', on those but the guys couldn't.