Rooibos Tea and (Gluten-Free) Toast
with Peanut Butter
Rooibos tea - a South African favourite! |
One of the pleasures of childhood was waking up on a Summery Saturday with the entire day stretched before you like a treasure chest waiting to be discovered. No school. Zero responsibilities. Ample sunshine.
But first, breakfast.
And in South Africa, at my parents' house, that usually meant hot white toast with Black Cat peanut butter.
Oh, the simple joy to be found in biting into a slice of crunchy hot toasted bread smeared with (melting) peanut butter that was so gooey it glued your gums together! Paired with a frosty glass of cold milk to make swallowing easier (or possible), it was decadence.
A decadence I have, however, been sorely missing for some years (because, let's face it...sometimes rice cakes just don't cut it!)
So I set about baking some fresh gluten-free bread on Friday afternoon in order to ensure that there would be toast on (this leisurely) Saturday morning.
My Homebaked Gluten-Free Bread Recipe
My bread flour mix:
- 1 kilogram of Entice Rice rice flour
- 550 grams of Nature's Choice potato starch
Ingredients for bread:
- 1 kilogram of my bread flour mix
- 10 grams (1 sachet) of instant yeast granules
- 20 millilitres (4 teaspoons) of white sugar
- 100 millilitres (20 teaspoons) of olive oil (or another vegetable oil)
- 500 - 1000 millilitres (0.5 - 1 litre) of tepid/lukewarm water
- 1 teaspoon of sea salt chrystals
- Put 250 millilitres (1 cup) of tepid/lukewarm (approximately 37 degrees Celsius, which is body temperature) in a bowl and stir in 20 millilitres (4 teaspoons) of sugar. Allow the sugar to dissolve slightly, then sprinkle the 10 gram sachet of instant dried yeast granules over the water/sugar mixture and stir through briefly. Allow this to sit on the counter for about ten minutes. The yeast will start frothing happily.
- While the yeast is having a party in a bowl, get out a much bigger bowl. Measure out your 1 kilogram of my bread flour mix and add it to this big bowl.
- Keep approximately 750 millilitres of tepid/lukewarm water at the ready. Take 250 millilitres (1 cup of that) and stir in 1 teaspoon (5 millilitres) of salt chrystals. Stir until the salt chrystals have dissolved.
- Make a well in the centre of your flour. Add the 250 millilitres (1 cup) of salty water, the 100 millilitres of olive oil (or another vegetable oil) and the happy frothing yeasty liquid into the flour and stir through.
- Next, continue adding tepid/lukewarm water to the mixture and stirring it through until the dough resembles something between a scone dough and a cake batter. There is definitely no kneading involved in gluten-free bread making as there is no gluten to make the dough stretchy!
- Allow the dough to sit on your counter for about 30 minutes while it rises. In the meantime, grease three loaf tins. I would suggest you use those silicone non-stick loaf tins, as the softer dough and use of rice flour can make the end product a little difficult to get out of regular tin loaf pans.
- Once the 30 minutes has passed, divide the dough into the three loaf pans and allow it to rise for another 20 to 30 minutes. While this is happening, pre-heat the oven to 180 degrees Celsius (356 Fahrenheit) and shift the oven rack to the middle of the oven.
- Drizzle some vegetable oil over the top of each loaf, and use your (clean) fingers to spread it (gently and evenly) on the surface of each loaf.
- Bake the bread (there's nothing quite like the smell of freshly baking yeasty bread), one to two loaves at a time (I would definitely not recommend baking three at a time unless you have a fancy convection oven that distributes the hot air evenly throughout the oven) for 30 - 40 minutes. From 30 minutes, insert a cake skewer or kebab stick into the loaf every 5 minutes till it comes out clean.
- Leave the loaves in their silicone loaf mould/loaf tin for 10 minutes after baking before turning out.
- Slice with a sharp bread knife.
- Best eaten fresh if sandwiches are what you're after. If not, then keep it wrapped in wax paper/tin foil once cool and keep it in the fridge. It goes quite hard but makes for excellent toast over the next couple of days.
- Although I have never tried, I suspect it could be frozen and thawed (for toasting) as well.
- Serve with the topping of your choice and, above all, enjoy the pleasures of eating homebaked bread!
Woolworths sells a great organic, sugar-free peanut butter. |
The only ingredients are tasty, organic roasted peanuts! |
This magnificent tea cosy was purchased for me by my darling husband from "Out of Alex" for R165. Not only is it handcrafted, but it works like a dream, keeping one's tea nice and hot for over an hour. Plus it's really easy to wash and supports an excellent cause. For a list of stockists, see their website. Simeon bought it for me from the Bryanston Organic Market (where the company has a stall) which makes for a wonderful Saturday morning outing. |
6 comments:
I love bread for the breakfast and peanut butter is definitely a bonus.
What a lovely memory remembering warm happy days of your youth. I have always loves Saturdays since it's the one day of the week that I could truly relax with nothing to do. :) I love your breakfast ritual... well done! :)
How wonderful you were able to enjoy a childhood favorite! And your tea cozy is fabulous!!!
weekdays i'm on the go, so it's just peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. but on the weekends, i love to make exactly this...warm toast that melts the peanut butter. mmm. i love rooibos tea, too. first discovered it at starbucks when i was looking for non-coffee tea drinks. they made me a vanilla rooibos latte. so good!
hope you are well!
[oomph.]
This looks nice and healthy.. And now I am so hungry! :)
Great gluten-free recreation of a childhood favorite :) It looks like a lovely way to start the day too!
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