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I seem to be on a one-food kick. It happens sometimes. I've been making oatcakes for dinner, like, every day.
Oatcakes
2 cups (200 grams) Bob's Red Mill gluten-free rolled oats
1/2 tsp salt
1-1/2 tbsp (about 30 grams) bacon fat or butter
Put all that in a food processor and grind it up. With the processor running, add near-boiling water slowly till you have a ball of sticky dough.
Roll it out (use some more oats to "flour" the board) and cut it into circles.
Bake at 350F/175C (Gasmark 4, I think) for quite a while--like half an hour?--till they're crisp and dry.
Eat them warm with butter and sharp cheddar. They're kind of addictive. I'd take a picture but I ate them all.
On an unrelated topic, this new DW slug-URL thing is pretty cool.
Oatcakes
2 cups (200 grams) Bob's Red Mill gluten-free rolled oats
1/2 tsp salt
1-1/2 tbsp (about 30 grams) bacon fat or butter
Put all that in a food processor and grind it up. With the processor running, add near-boiling water slowly till you have a ball of sticky dough.
Roll it out (use some more oats to "flour" the board) and cut it into circles.
Bake at 350F/175C (Gasmark 4, I think) for quite a while--like half an hour?--till they're crisp and dry.
Eat them warm with butter and sharp cheddar. They're kind of addictive. I'd take a picture but I ate them all.
On an unrelated topic, this new DW slug-URL thing is pretty cool.
(no subject)
20/7/13 18:58 (UTC)(no subject)
21/7/13 00:16 (UTC)(no subject)
21/7/13 01:03 (UTC)There is no Thanksgiving tradition associated with olives, to the best of my knowledge, but the canned "Large Ripe Black Olives" are one of those weird mid-century foodstuffs, just expensive enough not to have been an everyday item in a struggling household, and perceived as "fancy." So they would appear on special occasions, and I associate them with Thanksgiving.
The "traditional" part is really just that little kids, when confronted with them, always put them on their fingertips.