Pictures of our first successful, home-made, dehydrated bread
Date: 3/26/2006 12:36:50 AM ( 19 y ago)
I am pleased to report that my girlfriend has made some dehydrated bread that actually tastes good!
I just knew having her on the raw team would be fantabulous. She made
Juliano's Real Toast recipe (page 62). She used sprouted black eyed
peas from Whole Foods rather than trying to sprout them herself. The
dough was quite attractive looking and smelled awesome.
The first batch she put on the dehydrating tray she shaped into
perfect little "loaves" less than an inch thick. She still had a lot
of dough left over for 2 more trays, but decided to do only one, just
in case we didn't like it, that way she could adjust the flavors for
the last batch.
For the second tray she improvised with baking paper (parchment
left over from my bread baking days) since only one tray comes with the
American Harvester dehydrator. After spreading the dough she used a
knife to create separate pieces right on the tray. (I would recommend
spreading a little olive oil on the paper and the tray for easier
removal after dehydrating).
She set the dehydrator to 100 degrees instead of the 90
recommended, since it appears to run way below the temperature settings
on the dial. The whole house smelled great while the bread dehydrated,
thanks to the herbs and garlic. At 3 a.m. the thinner pieces that were
baking on the paper were done- since I was up studying, I had the
pleasure of tasting it. Very flavorful! I left the thicker ones on for
a few more hours. Around 10 a.m. they were done as well.
This is one of the square pieces after dehydration- not too thick,
and moist enough to be bendable without snapping, but dry enough to not leave dough on your fingers.
Here is one of the smaller, triangular pieces from the second tray.
This is a tasty recipe with strong flavoring. Juliano says to use
any herbs you want. We chose sage for one of them. The fun thing will
be trying different herbs for a completely new taste next time. We'll
be using this as a base for pizza, hummus, salsa, and anything else we
can think of.
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