Looking through the old newspaper about cooking I’ve found that nice „people”. I’ve modified the recipe a lot. The dough is elastic, not sticks to hands and is perfect for baking those „people”. I really like playing with yeast dough like that.
400g flour (I used bread flour type 850)
3/4 cup water (not cold)
1/4 cup oli
1 tsp sugar
2 tsp salt
2 tsp dry yeast
Melt the yeast in 1/4 cup of water (in the bowl you will use for making the dough). Add sugar and 2 spoons of flour. When it comes a little floamy add the rest of the ingredients. Make smooth and elastic dough. Leave it to grow. When it’ll be twice as it was, make it again. Now use your imagination and make people from that :). Don’t wait until it grows, grease with egg yolk and bake in 200 degrees until they’re ruddy.
My rye sourdough fell off and Katarzyna gave me a bit of her wheat sourdough. I’ve fed it and when it’s grown I’ve baked challah. Well, in fact three challot, and I took one of them to Radom. I’ve strew them with a lot of crumble – that’s what we like most.
CHALLAH WITH CRUMBLE
1 cup wheat sourdough
1/4 cup warm water
1/2 cup milk
1 egg
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 cup vegetable oil
4 cup wheat flour ( if the dough sticks to your hands you can use more flour, but not more than…)
1 egg for grease dough
Crumble:
50 g soft butter
1/3 cup sugar
wheat flour
Mix milk with water. In the bowl mix together: egg, water with milk (that mixture you’ve prepared), sourdough, olive oil, salt and sugar. While mixing it pour into the flour – slowly, little by little (’little’ is about 1/2 cup). After adding whole flour make the dough until it’s soft and elastic. Leave to grow, until it’s twice bigger than it was. When the dough is ready, make it for a while and form 8 rollers. Make two challot, each one from 4 rollers. Leave your ready challot to grow. While they growing make the crumble. Grind the butter with sugar and add as much flour as it needs to become big crumbles. Grease challot with egg and sprinkle with crumble. Bake them in 190 degrees for about 50 minutes. They should be nice and gold colour.
Sweet cherries are one of my favourite fruits. The are great from the branch, in jam and also tasty then they’re hot and covered with crumble :). I’ve made a crumble with sweet cherries and nectarines just to have something sweet to afternoon coffee. Instead of big baking tray I’ve used small ramekins cause I wanted everyone to have his own mini-crumble :).
CRUMBLE WITH SWEET CHERRIES AND NECTARINES
125 g butter (soft)
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup flour
500 g sweet cherries
4 nectarines
8 tbsp brown sugar
Clean and stone the sweet cherries. Stone the nectarines and cut into quite big cubes.
Mix butter with sugar. Add flours and mix until it comes into little crumbles.
Pour one spoon of brown sugar into each ramekin. Lay fruits on sugar to 3/4 of ramekin. Then lay the crumble on it.
Bake it in the oven, 200 degrees until the crumble comes gold.
The recipe is enough for eight 200ml ramekins
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Tiny, sweet, with delicate taste of cocoa and cinnamon. Cookie-eaters loved it :). I don’t know why these cookies are called 'viennese’. I’ve found the recipe on rugged, old piece of paper in my notebook with recipes.
VIENNESE COOKIES
250 g butter
125 g icing sugar
2 tsp cinnamon
2 tbsp milk
300 g flour
1 tbsp cocoa
Grind butter until fluffy. Add sugar, cinnamon and milk. When the ingredients are combined – pour the flour and coca.
Cover the baking tray with graseproof paper and form little cookies using the decorating bag (tip – star shaped)
Bake for 15 minutes in 200 degrees.
I’ve made a gingerbread domino and gingerbread scrabble. I’ve made gingerbread cards too. I have to made a gingerbread roulette and one-armed bandit and I can open a gingerbread casino :). Cards are for lazy ones. I’ve made them from a pepparkakor’s dough (I guess it’s the only one ready made dough I use). They are easy and fast to prepare – you have to roll the dough, cut the shapes you like and they are ready after 8 minutes of baking!