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Home » Instagram » I have made this loaf every week for the past 18 months. It is a winner – pure and simple. Nutty spelt, zero-waste, crunchy crust, soft crumb, lots of rise, slices well and stays soft. . It’s so good; I’d love you to enjoy it too, so I’ve written the recipe up as this month’s #ancestralcookup. There’s a link to it on my profile.
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I have made this loaf every week for the past 18 months. It is a winner – pure and simple. Nutty spelt, zero-waste, crunchy crust, soft crumb, lots of rise, slices well and stays soft. . It’s so good; I’d love you to enjoy it too, so I’ve written the recipe up as this month’s #ancestralcookup. There’s a link to it on my profile.

December 1, 2020 by Ali

Previous PostSourdough Wholegrain Spelt Loaf
Next PostThese are fermented millet and sorghum polenta bread slices which have been fried till crispy. I love them for breakfast, topped with ground linseed and dehydrated, super-crispy nuts . They are also good for a quick supper. I make the loaf (check my story today for more info) at the weekend and then have something I can pop in the cast iron pan weeknights to crunch up while I pull together the rest of our meal. . The fermenting is important (to me, at least!). It is easy, brings a yummy sour flavour and makes them easier to digest.

Recent Posts

  • This thyme feels like more than *just* thyme to me. . I bought it, along with some cabbages and brussels, from a lady who grows and sells her veg at the tiny local market here in Pontassieve. . We’ve been in this town almost a year and in that time we’ve come to know (and love) the farmers from whom we buy our meat, eggs and dairy. . Vegetables have been the last part of our food shopping without a face. By that I mean, up until now, I’ve mostly not known the person who grew them. Finally, this month, I had the head space to make an attempt to change that. . Thursday evenings will host our ‘walk together to the market and get veg’ routine. I hope that we’ll get to know (and love) the small producers there, including the lady who picked and dried this wild thyme. . If so, it’d feel to me like we’d settled. We’d be part of the precious fabric of this land. We’d sustain and be sustained by the beauty, knowledge and effort of this community. . And I’d be able to breathe out.
  • We’re not the only family to eat spare water kefir grains on sourdough pancakes right?!
  • Chocolate Water Kefir. Totally 6-year-old son approved! . I had a brain wave whilst making cacao husk tea: man, this’d be goood fermented. So I cooled it, added sugar and let my kefir grains at it! After a second ferment with orange and cardamon it’s delicious.
  • A new batch of Sowans, the traditional Scottish fermented drink, ready for a 7-day ferment. . I make a batch of this every other week. It’s whole oats, flaked at home, then put through a sieve. The bits I use here are the crumbs that fall through the holes in the sieve. I put them into jars, add water, stir and then leave to ferment for a week. . Every morning during that week, I give them a quick stir. Towards the end of the week, I taste the liquid. When it’s funky enough for me (I like it funky), I stir it and strain it through a sieve to remove to bran particles. I leave the remaining liquid to settle. Over time it separates into liquid and oat starter. . I use the liquid, Sowans, as a drink, a starter and to bake bread. I cook up the oat sediment, called Swats, as a porridge, use it as a thickener and bake it into sourdoughs too. . Phew. Trying to explain that clearly took some thought. I’m hoping that, later in the year, I can put together some videos demonstrating how I make this and more of my kitchen alchemy projects. I’m also hoping to create a newsletter and have an exciting project with Andrea @farmandhearth on the burner. Lots of things fermenting – both literally and figuratively over here. . Happy weekend to you all. x
  • This time last year me and my two boys were living out of 2 suitcases. We did it – being forced to move 8 times over a period of 6 weeks, because the flat we were supposed to move turned out to be uninhabitable. . During those 6 weeks, in various unfamiliar and ill-equipped kitchens, I continued to make sourdough. We were never without a loaf. . Looking back (thankfully from the comfort of a new flat we found 10 days before the first lockdown), it astounds me that I kept this going. It was testament to 2 things: 1 – The simplicity of my ‘go to’ sourdoughs, and . 2 – The amount of times I’d baked them before. . If we practise, we can do anything. We can repeat nourishing staple foods with our eyes virtually shut. . I have written up the recipe for my Everyday Rye Sourdough. You can find it via the link in my profile. It’s super-simple. No kneading, no constant watching. So easy you could even make it if you ever find yourself ‘between homes’, I promise ;-)

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