Wednesday, January 26, 2011

I made this- and James Beard taught me how.



Last fall a woman I worked with gave me a bread maker. It had been in solitary confinement in a closet, and she only remembered it because I said I wanted one.

At first the bread maker worked. It kneaded, then baked several loaves of white bread and honey bread. Then it balked. The kneading blade refused to run when I put the flour, the yeast and the liquid in the metal bowl. Empty, it worked just fine. Now it sits in my closet until I decide what to do with it. I had to find another way to make bread.

For a decade I have had a $300.00 white Kitchenaid mixer. It was decorative. And unemployed until I used a recipe from James Beard's book "Beard on Bread" for plain white bread. Now I make this bread every week, and the mixer's dough hook kneads for me. This is a most excellent loaf.

I found "Beard on Bread " at the estate sale of the late Mrs. H-. It cost two dollars. And yesterday I spent three dollars for "James Beard's Simple Foods" at the used book store.

I love James Beard , for he knows how to teach. His books are far more than recipes. And his opinions are a joy to read. Here is what he writes about the lunch my mother tried to feed me every day of my youth:

"-I consider the jelly-and-peanut-butter combination the lowest ebb to which eating can fall".

I consider it the lowest ebb as well. I hid my sandwiches in the little roll-top desk in my bedroom. When it was safe I took them outside and threw them away. Some I forgot, and they mummified and permeated the wood with their smell-

Beard is at the top of my list of admired cooks. Julia Child, Richard Olney, James Peterson, and Craig Claiborne follow him. Old-fashioned I know, and all but Peterson are dead. But to read them is to be included in a most delightful conversation. And if James Beard says that sliced onions dressed with mustard and sandwiched between two slices of his salty, crispy white bread is good, I know he will not lead me astray.

2 comments:

Out on the prairie said...

I had forgot about Beard, I think I had one of his books, but really watch a lot of cooking shows. I make all my bread during the cold months.I get cracked wheat ceral in a bulk food store and cook some to add to all my yeast and quick breads. I forget i have the big mixer to use.my kids used to help me as I did my mom when they were at home. I never measure and make different kinds each time.

troutbirder said...

We have one of those rarely used unfortunately. The smell of fresh baked bread early in the morning is one of this lifes real pleasures. :)