Saturday, October 16, 2010
Surprise!
Guess What Fruit is This?
If you have not be able to guess what it is, then I guess you never hear of jujube.
Ziziphus zizyphus (from Greek ζίζυφον, zizyfon[1]), commonly called jujube, red date, or chinese date, is a species of Ziziphus in the buckthorn family Rhamnaceae, used primarily for its fruits. Common names in Arabic are nabq, dum, tsal, sadr, zufzuuf (in Morocco) and sidr, the last of which also means Ziziphus lotus.[2] In Persian it is called anab or annab , a name also used in Lebanon.
It is a small deciduous tree or shrub reaching a height of 5–10 m, usually with thorny branches. The leaves are shiny-green, ovate-acute, 2–7-cm wide and 1–3-cm broad, with three conspicuous veins at the base, and a finely toothed margin. The flowers are small, 5-mm wide, with five inconspicuous yellowish-green petals. The fruit is an edible oval drupe 1.5–3-cm deep; when immature it is smooth-green, with the consistency and taste of an apple, maturing brown to purplish-black and eventually wrinkled, looking like a small date. There is a single hard stone similar to an olive stone.[
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Update zuccchini bread
It did taste healthy. The graham flour made the bread taste nutty without the walnut part. I put less sweet so my bf did not like it because he expected treat to be sweet and he did not like to see chunk of zucchini in it. Or should I said he hate vegetable! I will try to make it again next year.
I did not put any all purpose flour in it just the graham flour so you could imagine it was very wholesome and goodness pack in a loaf of bread.
I put a whole zucchini instead of direction. :) I guess that made into two loaves instead of one; however, one and a (little more than) half loaf. I don't know, but I prefer to weight by pound instead of cup or Tsp/TBSP because the scale is more accurate than uneven pack into cup.
It was fun to bake and cook something everyday; that is, if I have the time and the change to do.
Friday, October 1, 2010
Graham flour
Graham flour is a type of whole wheat flour named after the American Presbyterian minister Rev. Sylvester Graham (1794-1851), an early advocate for dietary reform. According to the Larousse Gastronomique, Graham despised processed white flour and believed that bran was the cure-all for the bad eating habits of his compatriots.
Rather than simply grinding the whole grain wheat kernel (bran, germ, and endosperm), in graham flour the components are ground separately. The endosperm is ground finely, initially creating white flour. The bran and germ are ground coarsely. The two parts are then mixed back together, creating a coarse-textured flour that bakes and keeps well. Graham flour is used to make graham crackers and pie crusts, among other things.
Graham flour is not available in all countries. A fully correct substitute for it would be a mix of white flour, wheat bran, and wheat germ in the ratio found in whole wheat. Wheat comprises approximately 83% endosperm, 14.5% bran, and 2.5% germ by mass.[1] For sifted all-purpose white flour, wheat bran, and wheat germ having densities of 125, 50, and 80 grams/cup, respectively, one cup of graham flour is approximately equivalent to 84 g (~2/3 cup) white flour, 15 g (slightly less than 1/3 cup) wheat bran, and 2.5 g (1.5 teaspoons) wheat germ.
Plain whole wheat flour can also be used as a substitute in recipes, but the resulting baked goods' textures will differ from that of examples where graham flour was used.