Monday 22 May 2017

torta s matchom


Matcha je zeleni prah dobiven finim mljevenjem listova čaja (samo je jedan, Camellia sinensis (L.) Kuntze) koji su rasli u hladovini, zbog čega mu je povišen sadržaj klorofila u odnosu na klasičan zeleni čaj. Matcha prah je bogat antioksidansima te pojedinim vitaminima i mineralima, pojačava osjećaj energije i izdržljivosti tijekom dana, i još mnoge lijepe stvari. Hvalospjev nema kraja, u Japanu i Kini to znaju već stoljećima, ali sve bi to moglo biti sporedno da matcha nema toliko fini okus, pogotovo ako ste ljubitelj čaja. Jedino treba imati na umu da matcha, kao i ostali tipovi čaja dobiveni od listova, sadrži kofein. Zato, ako ste posebno osjetljivi na kofein, možda nije najbolja ideja konzumirati matcha čaj netom prije spavanja. Za razliku od običnog zelenog čaja, matcha se priprema tako da se prah razmuti u toploj vodi i izmiješa pjenjačom od bambusa. Može se pripremati i s toplim biljnim mlijekom ili dodati u sok ili smoothie. A možete i napraviti ovu tortu.

što/
{baza}
1/2 šalice datulja
2/3 šalice vode
1 šalica mljevenih badema
1/3 šalice mljevenog kokosa
.
{krema}
3/4 šalice indijskih oraščića
3/4 šalice bademovog mlijeka
3-4 čajne žličice matcha praha
3 jušne žlice rižinog slada
2 (velike) jušne žlice psyllium ljuskica
.
{glazura}
1/3 šalice datuljinog sirupa
2 jušne žlice kokosovog ulja (opcija)
1 jušna žlica kakaa u prahu
malo mljevene vanilije

kako/
{baza}
Datulje i vodu izblendajte u glatku pastu, pomiješajte s mljevenim bademima i kokosom i utisnite smjesu u kalup za kolače.
.
{krema}
Sve sastojke dobro izblendajte u blenderu kako biste dobili sasvim glatku kremu. Primjetit ćete kako se krema lagano zgušnjava već za vrijeme blendanja, budući da psyllium ljuskice brzo apsorbiraju vodu. Izlijte kremu u kalup i ravnomjerno rasporedite po prvom sloju. Stavite tortu u hladnjak.
.
{glazura}
Izmiješajte sve sastojke žlicom i razmažite po ohlađenoj kremi.



[ENG]

raw matcha cake

what/
{base}
1/2 cup dates
2/3 cup water
1 cup ground almonds
1/3 cup ground coconut
.
{cream}
3/4 cup cashews
3/4 cup almond milk
3-4 tsp matcha powder
3 tbsp rice malt syrup
2 (heaping) tbsp psyllium husks
.
{glaze}
1/3 cup date syrup
2 tbsp coconut oil (optional)
1 tbsp cacao powder
some ground vanilla

how/
{base}
Blend the dates and water into a smoothe paste. Mix it with ground almonds and coconut and press the mixture into a cake mould.
.
{cream}
Blend all the ingredients into a smooth cream, You will notice that it thickens as you blend it, because psyllium husks absorb water pretty quickly. Pour the cream into the mould and spread it evenly on top of the first layer. Leave the cake in the fridge to cool down.
.
{glaze}
Mix all the ingredients with a spoon and spread it on top of cold matcha cream.

torta s kremom od višanja


što/
{baza}
1/2 šalice suhih datulja
2/3 šalice vode (ako datulje nisu suhe, onda može i manje)
1 šalica mljevenih badema
malo ribanog kokosa (po potrebi)
.
{krema}
1/2 šalice indijskih oraščića
2/3 šalice višanja (zasada još uvijek koristim smrznute, ali još malo pa je sezona!)
1/2 šalice vode
sok 1 manjeg limuna
2 jušne žlice kokosovog ulja
2-3 jušne žlice psyllium ljuskica
malo rižinog slada ili datuljinog sirupa (prema ukusu)

kako/
{baza}
Datulje izblendajte s vodom u glatku pastu. Pastu pomiješajte s mljevenim bademima, i dodajte onoliko kokosa koliko je potrebno da smjesa postane kompaktna. Utisnite smjesu u kalup za torte.
.
{krema}
Sve sastojke izblendajte u blenderu u glatku kremu. Izlijte kremu po baznom sloju i stavite tortu u hladnjak na nekoliko sati da se krema stisne.



[ENGLISH]

raw cake with cherry cream

what/
{base}
1/2 cup dried dates
2/3 cup water (or less, if the dates are not dry)
1 cup ground almonds
a bit of ground coconut
.
{cream}
1/2 cup cashews
2/3 cup sour cherries
1/2 cup water
juice of 1 smaller lemon
2 tbsp coconut oil
2-3 tbsp psyllium husk
a bit of rice malt syrup or date syrup, up to your taste

how/
{base}
Process the dates and water in a blender until you get a smooth paste. Mix the paste with ground almonds using a spoon or your hands and add some coconut flakes /ground coconut if the mixture needs to be thicker. Press the mixture into a cake mould.
.
{cream}
Blend all the ingredients into the smoothest cream you can get and pour it on top of the first layer. Leave the cake in the fridge for a couple of hours, or until it thickens.

Saturday 20 May 2017

kremasti desert s bademima, lješnjacima i tonkom


_sloj1
1 šalica lješnjaka, namočenih barem 8 sati
2/3 šalice vode
1 jušna žlica psyllium ljuskica
2/3 šalice datulja
1-2 jušne žlice kakaa u prahu
malo naribane tonke /ako niste još probali tu divotu od začina, možda je vrijeme

_sloj2
1 šalica badema, namočenih barem 8 sati
1/2 šalice vode
1 jušna žlica psyllium ljuskica
2-3 jušne žlice rižinog slada, ili prema ukusu
malo vanilije

Za svaki sloj izblendajte sve sastojke u glatku kremu, izlijte u staklenke, ostavite malo u frižideru da se ohladi i guštaj brate.



[ENG]


almond, hazelnut and tonka creamy dessert


_layer1

1 cup hazelnuts, soaked for at least 8 hours
2/3 cup water
1 tbsp psyllium husk
2/3 cup dates
1-2 tbsp cacao powder
a bit of ground tonka /if you still don't know about this amazing spice, maybe it is time to try it

_layer2

1 cup almonds, soaked for at least 8 hours
1/2 cup water
1 tbsp psyllium husk
2-3 tbsp rice malt syrup, or up to your taste
some vanilla

Blend the ingredients for each layer into a smooth cream, pour it into jars, let it cool down a bit in the fridge and enjoy this tasty little wonder.

Wednesday 17 May 2017

kruh od kiselog tijesta /recept


U prošlom postu sam ukratko objasnila po čemu se kruh od kiselog tijesta razlikuje od "normalnog" kruha i zašto ga čak i ljudi kojima kruh inače ne odgovara u prehrani često mogu jesti bez ikakvih problema. Sada ću napisati vrlo intuitivan recept za izradu takvog kruha. Ako ste već istraživali o kiselom tijestu po internetu, sigurno ste primijetili da nema baš odokativnih recepata i da se često sve mjeri u gram, a postupak ponekad izgleda kao protokol za laboratorijsku vježbu. Ti detaljni opisi su korisni za bolje razumijevanje cijelog procesa, ali budući da ih je pun internet, ovdje ću napisati postupak koji će biti od koristi i ljudima koji se ne mogu strogo držati recepta, već sve rade po osjećaju (jer znam da nas ima...). Uostalom, "naši stari" nisu imali precizne kuhinjske vage, niti su znali što znači autoliza, a radili su kruh na ovaj način.

Ono što je vrlo važno ako želite napraviti dobar kruh od kiselog tijesta je dobar starter. Nema kraćeg puta niti alternativnog rješenja, bez dobrog startera to nije to. Zato je u početku važno imati dovoljno strpljenja da se starter razvije, a jednom kada se razvije, imate ga zauvijek.

Što je uopće starter? To je fermentirana mješavina brašna i vode koja je puna nama korisnih mikroorganizama iz zraka i sa žitarica (kvasaca i bakterija) koji se hrane šećerima iz žitarica, a u procesu razgradnje šećera nastaju mliječna kiselina i ugljični dioksid. Svježi starter zato ima kiselkasti miris i pun je mjehurića, dok starter koji je malo dulje odstajao ima miris kvasca i alkohola (razgradnja se odvija dalje do alkohola, a kvasci se još više namnože). Oba spomenuta su dobra za izradu kiselog tijesta, ali vrlo je važno da tekstura bude jako prozračna i mjehuričasta. Ako u starteru nema puno mjehurića, znači da nije dovoljno fermentirao, pa se niti kruh izrađen s takvim starterom neće dići, nego će biti težak i sabijen.

kako napraviti dobar starter/
Pomiješajte približno jednake količine brašna* i vode (volumno malo više brašna), za početak oko 2-3 jušne žlice, i dobro izmiješajte. Smjesa bi trebala biti gusta ali tekuća, kao na slici. Ostavite na sobnoj temperaturi u staklenci s nataknutim poklopcem da fermentira, pa nakon 24 sata dodajte još oko 3 (ravne) jušne žlice brašna i 2 jušne žlice vode i dobro promiješajte. Postupak ponovite nakon još 24 sata. Osjetite kako se miris mijenja iz blago orašastog u blago kiselkasti i kako se lagano počinju razvijati mjehurići. To znači da se polako razvijaju mikroorganizmi koji se hrane šećerima iz brašna i koji su potrebni za kasniju fermentaciju kruha. Dakle, starter je prepun živih mikrobića koja je potrebno hraniti svaki dan kako bi se odvijali procesi koji su nama ovdje potrebni. Nakon još 24 sata, ukoliko već miriše dosta kiselo, pola startera odlijte u drugu staklenku (to vam neće trebati za kruh, ali možete od toga napraviti jako fine palačinke ili nešto drugo), a ostatak nahranite, odnosno dodajte još brašna i vode. Sada se fermentacija već odvija relativno brzo, pa možete hraniti starter dva puta dnevno, recimo ujutro i navečer, a u jednom od tih navrata prvo odliti dio u onu staklenku za palačinke. Može se raditi i bez odlijevanja, ali po mom iskustvu je bolje odliti dio jednom dnevno jer inače prebrzo fermentira u alkohol. Nakon 5-7 dana, ovisno o temperaturi u prostoriji, starter bi vam trebao izgledati savršeno pjenasto, mjehurićasto i prozračno (možete provjeriti da li pluta na vodi). Takav starter možete koristiti za izradu kiselog tijesta.

Nemojte nikada iskoristiti sav starter; uvijek ostavite barem nekoliko žlica i nadohranite ga, kako bi se fermentacija mogla nastaviti odvijati i kako biste uvijek imali spreman starter. On bi sada svaki dan trebao razviti prozračnu teksturu punu mjehurića i biti spreman za izradu kruha. Ukoliko ga držite na sobnoj temperaturi, potrebno ga je nadohranjivati dva puta dnevno kao što je već opisano, a ako ne pečete kruh toliko često, možete ga držati u frižideru pa po potrebi izvaditi, nahraniti i pričekati oko 12 sati da se aktivira (da se razviju mjehurići). Višak startera možete i pokloniti nekome.

*ja koristim samo domaće pirovo brašno iz cijelog zrna koje nije baš niti prosijano i uvijek odlično ispadne. Ako se u tijesto za kruh doda malo bijelog pirovog brašna, razvije se više mjehurića i kruh se bolje digne (isprobano), ali meni je okus bolji kada koristim samo brašno od cijelog zrna. Pa kako vam drago.



kako napraviti kruh od kiselog tijesta/
Ulijte šalicu mlake vode u zdjelu. Dodajte oko (1/2-)2/3 šalice startera, žlicu po žlicu, tako da možete usput provjeriti kvalitetu startera. Ako pluta na vodi, znači da je dobar, a ako ne, znači da još nije dovoljno fermentirao (to se vidi i prije stavljanja u vodu - mora imati baš puno mjehurića i biti lagan i prozračan). Promiješajte prstima da se starter razmuti u vodi. Nastavite miješati, a drugom rukom sipajte brašno dok ne dobijete tijesto koje je moguće mijesiti rukama bez da se previše lijepi, ali je još uvijek dosta mekano. Dobro ga izmijesite i ostavite da odstoji u zdjeli pokriveno mokrom krpom nekoliko sati. Možete ga ostaviti i dulje, ja ga često izmijesim ujutro prije nego izađem iz kuće, pa nastavim raditi s njim tek nakon 8-9 sati. Nakon što je odstajalo, primjetit ćete da se već diglo i da su se razvili mjehurići - sada ga izvadite iz zdjele i dobro posolite, ali ga više ne mijesite na klasičan način. Sada u nekoliko navrata s razmacima od pola sata (a možete i samo jednom ako nemate vremena ili vam se ne da razmišljati o tome) više puta razvucite tijesto i preklopite ga, nježno i bez stiskanja. Što više puta to napravite, to će biti ljepši mjehurići kada se ispeče. Nakon zadnjeg presavijanja, stavite tijesto u kalup u kojem će se peći i ostavite ga da odstoji još nekoliko sati (da sve skupa, od početka procesa, bude barem 12 h). Možete ga i staviti u hladnjak preko noći ako ne želite odmah peći, na hladnom će se fermentacija dalje odvijati ali vrlo sporo. Kada je kruh spreman, odnosno kada se digao na sobnoj temperaturi i osjetite da je barem donekle ispunjen mjehurićima ugljičnog dioksida od fermentacije, stavite ga u pećnicu zagrijanu na 200 °C i pecite oko pola sata. Ako na pećnici imate program pečenja s više vlage, koristite njega, a ako nemate, bilo bi idealno poklopiti kruh nekim velikim loncem ili protvanom jer će na taj način ostati sočniji iznutra. Kruh je pečen kada izvana porumeni, a kora postane tvrda. Ako lagano lupite prstima po kori i čuje se kao da je unutra šuplje, to je gotovo sigurno znak da vam je kruh odlično ispao.




[ENGLISH]

sourdough bread /recipe

In my previous post I wrote a little bit about sourdough bread, its advantages in comparison to "normal" bread and why many people who would normally have to avoid bread in their diets, can eat sourdough bread without any problem. Now I will write a pretty intuitive recipe for making such bread. If you already did some research on sourdough online, you must have noticed that there are almost no approximate "recipes" and that quantities of all ingredients are usually precisely measured. The whole procedure sometimes reminds me on laboratory practice protocols. Those detailed descriptions can be useful if you want to understand the whole process more deeply, but since the internet is full of such writings, I will now present a lazy baker's way to make sourdough without measuring anything - for all those people who can never follow a recipe and like to do everything by feel (don't worry, that includes me too). I'm sure that our ancestors didn't have kitchen scales or thermometers, or awareness of the definition of the word autolyse, and they could still make good sourdough bread.

There is one thing that is crucial for a good sourdough bread, and that is a good starter. There is no shortcut or alternative solution; without a proper starter it won't be the same thing. That is why you need some patience in the very beginning of the process. Once the starter has developed, you can have it forever.

What is a sourdough starter anyway?
It is a fermented mixture of flour and water which is full of microorganisms (wild yeasts and bacteria that naturally live/exist on the grains or in the air) that are useful for us: they feed on the sugars from the grains, and some of the important products of that feeding process are lactic acid and carbon dioxide. That is why freshly fermented starter smells sour and has lots of bubbles in it, and an older starter smells like yeast and alcohol (further fermentation leads to occurrence of alcohol, and yeasts naturally reproduce more and more). Both of these starters are good for sourdough making, but it is very important that their texture is very bubbly, light and airy. If there are not many bubbles in a starter, it means that it had not fermented enough and hence the bread will turn out very heavy.

how to make a good sourdough starter/
Mix approximately same quantities (a few tbsp) of water and flour* (there should be a bit more flour than water, volume-wise). The mixture should be thick, but still pretty liquid, like the one on the picture. Leave it in a lightly covered jar at a room temperature for 24 hours, and then add 3 tbsp flour and 2 tbsp water. Repeat the procedure after another 24 hours. Now you should already be able to sense that the smell of the mixture is changing from mild and nutty to more sour, vinegar-like smell. You should also be able to see some bubbles forming inside the mixture. Those are signs that our dear microorganisms are feeding on the sugars form the grains and reproducing. That means that our starter is filled with living microbeings that need to be fed regularly in order to keep the processes that we are interested in going. After another 24 hours you can feed it the same way again, or, if it already smells very sour, you can first pour half of it into another jar and then feed it. You won't need the half that you poured out, but you can always make pancakes from it, or use it in some other recipe (so don't just throw it away). Now the fermentation is probably already going on pretty fast and your starter needs to be fed twice a day, for example in the morning and in the evening. Just add some flour and water as usual. Once a day, before feeding, discard half of it into that pancake-jar. You can skip that and just keep the whole thing, but in my experience it ferments too fast and gets loaded with alcohol if you don't pour some of it out once a day. After 5-7 days, the starter should look/feel perfectly bubbly and light and if you drop some in the water, it should float. Now you can use it to make sourdough.

Don't use all of it; always leave at least a few tbsp of starter and continue feeding it, so that the fermentation goes on and you always have some starter ready for making new dough. Now it should get nice and bubbly every day, so you can make the bread daily if you want. If you keep it at a room temperature, it needs to be fed every day (preferably even twice a day, as described), but if you don't bake as often, you can keep it in the fridge and take it out and feed it (and wait for a day until it develops enough bubbles) when you need to make bread. You can also give some starter to your friends...if your friends are as crazy and dedicated as you and have interest in making sourdough bread..

*i use only homemade whole-grain spelt flour that is naturally a bit coarse (milled with stone mill, completely unprocessed) and the bread turns out great every time. If you want more bubbly final texture of the bread, you can use some white spelt flour as well. I tried it and it works, but I prefer the taste of completely whole-grain bread.

how to make sourdough bread/
Pour 1 cup lukewarm water into a bowl. Add approximately (1/2-)2/3 cup starter, spoon by spoon so that you can check the quality of the starter. If it floats, it's good, and if not, it means that it hasn't fermented enough.  Mix it with your fingers and continue mixing while adding flour with your other hand. Add enough flour to form a soft but easily kneadable dough that preferably doesn't stick too much. Knead it well and leave it in the bowl, covered with a wet kitchen cloth, for at least a couple of hours. I usually leave mine for 8-9 hours because I make it in the morning and then go out. Then take it out of the bowl (it should have already risen at least a bit by now), add enough salt and don't knead it the classical way anymore. Just stretch it and fold it for 5 or more times and let it sit for half an hour, then repeat the stretch and fold and place it into a baking mould. Let it sit some more covered with a wet cloth. It should sit for at least 12 hours altogether (from the moment of mixing flour and water). You can also leave it in the fridge overnight if you want to bake it tomorrow, the fermentation will continue going on very slowly at a lower temperature. When the dough is ready - when it has risen at a room temperature and you can feel that it is bubbly inside from all that fermentation, you can put it into an oven preheated to 200 °C and bake it for around 30 minutes. If you have a program on your oven that adds moisture, it is good to use it, and if not, you can cover the bread with a big pot or a baking tray while baking, as that will help to keep it more soft and moist from the inside. The bread is baked when it gets golden-brown from the outside and the crust turns hard. If you knock:) on the crust and you hear a sound as if it is empty inside, you can be almost sure that your bread turned out great.

Friday 5 May 2017

kiselo tijesto


Gledate sve nekakve veganske hambiće u zadnje vrijeme na ovom blogu pa se možda netko i zapitao jesam li pored tih sirovih radosti zaista počela opet jesti kruh. Paaa i ne baš, ne redovito, ali više se ne ustručavam pojesti šnitu-dvije kada ispečem štrucu za dragog. Zašto? Zbog kiselog tijesta. Što je kiselo tijesto? Krenimo od početka...

Ako pratite ovaj blog, vjerojatno već znate moju filozofiju oko žitarica i mahunarki (ali i ostalih sjemenki). Smatram da one mogu biti prikladna hrana za čovjeka jedino ako se jedu proklijale ili fermentirane - između ostalog zato što sadrže gomilu škroba koji je čovjeku sam po sebi težak za probavu, kao i antinutrijenata, kemijskih spojeva koje je priroda osmislila s itekako korisnom ulogom za jednu sjemenku, no u čovjekovom probavnom sustavu oni vežu na sebe tijelu dragocjene minerale i tako onemogućuju njihovu apsorpciju.

Onda valjda razumijete što je pogrešno kod većine današnjeg kruha. I tu ne mislim na kruh iz pekara i supermarketa koji je pun raznih gluposti, njega niti ne računam kao nešto što bi bilo tko trebao unositi u sebe. Mislim na domaći kruh od dizanog tijesta, kako se danas najčešće radi. To je kruh kojemu je pomoću kultiviranog kvasca ubrzan proces "dizanja"; kvasci su mikrogljive koje se hrane šećerima (iz žitarica, no vjerojatno znate da će se tijesto bolje dići ako dodate i žlicu npr. smeđeg šećera uz kvasac), te kao jedan od produkata fermentacije stvaraju ugljikov dioksid, zbog čega se u tijestu stvaraju mjehurići pa se ono "diže". Još jedna ključna komponenta potrebna za dizano tijesto je gluten, koji će se rastezati kao opna oko mjehurića zraka. Zašto ovo sve skupa nije baš idealno? Zato što u tom kratkom procesu dizanja tijesta pomoću kupovnog kvasca koji danas traje svega sat vremena, ako i toliko, većina brašna ne stigne fermentirati, fitinska kiselina se ne stigne razgraditi, tijesto ostaje puno škroba, a gluten...gluten, pisala sam već o njemu.

Nekada se kruh nije radio na ovakav instant-način, nekad su ljudi možda bolje razumjeli što je hrana i posvećivali joj više vremena. U redu, cijeli stil života je bio drugačiji, nije sve bilo ovako užurbano i ljudi su imali vremena fermentirati kruh po 12 sati, ali zato nisu obolijevali zbog žitarica u prehrani kao što je slučaj danas. Danas stalno slušamo o štetnosti žitarica i intoleranciji na gluten, a prije 100 godina toga nije bilo. Nekada su ljudi bolje znali kako pripremiti te namirnice kako bi postale prihvatljive čovjekovom tijelu kao hrana. Naravno da ova priča ima puno više komponenata (i [ova] je jedna od njih), ali danas pišem o kruhu.

Po čemu se kiselo tijesto razlikuje od modernog dizanog tijesta? Po tome što je kod kiselog tijesta za taj proces dizanja tijesta, odnosno stvaranja mjehurića unutar tijesta, zaslužna dugotrajna fermentacija brašna pomoću mikroorganizama (divljih kvasaca i bakterija) iz zraka i sa žitarica, odnosno brašna. U tom procesu, koji u ovom slučaju zaista zahvaća brašno, odnosno mljevene žitarice (kao što bi i trebao, a naši preci su to znali), dolazi do razgradnje mnogih tvari koje su čovjeku inače teško probavljive. Molekule škroba se razgrađuju na jednostavnije šećere, a mnogobrojni nutrijenti prirodno prisutni u žitaricama postaju dostupniji našem tijelu za apsorpciju. Zbog veće količine mliječne kiseline koja nastaje ovakvom fermentacijom, dolazi do većeg stupnja razgradnje fitinske kiseline koja se ponaša kao antinutrijent. Ono zbog čega je kruh od kiselog tijesta također hvaljen je njegov nizak glikemijski indeks u odnosu na standardni kruh, što znači da razina glukoze u krvi nakon što čovjek pojede ovakav kruh neće rapidno narasti. Iduća stvar će možda zvučati kao neka ugabuga-informacija, ali često se navodi kako se velik dio glutena u tom dugotrajnom procesu fermentacije tijesta razgradi na aminokiseline. Iako nisam našla stručnu literaturu o tome, vrlo sam sklona povjerovati u te navode. Ono što mogu reći iz vlastitog iskustva je da ako jedem previše žitarica s glutenom, osjećam se pomalo umorno i kao da mi se stvara nekakav upalni proces u tijelu, dok se nakon što pojedem fermentirani kruh osjećam odlično. Nakon čitanja dosta iskustava drugih ljudi, shvatila sam da nisam jedina. Sve u svemu, ako se ne želite odreći kruha u prehrani a znate da vam ne čini neku uslugu zdravlju, pokušajte s kruhom od kiselog tijesta, razlika je ogromna.

Kiselo tijesto se može raditi i od žitarica bez glutena. Ali ako imate samo neki oblik intolerancije na gluten, možete probati i s kiselim tijestom od pira, mnogima ne smeta iako pir sadrži gluten, a neki odgovorno tvrde da im ni pšenični kiseli kruh ne smeta iako inače imaju intoleranciju; to ne bih znala jer nisam probala. U tom slučaju će kruh imati manje onih zgodnih mjehurića koji nastaju zbog razvlačenja glutena, ali žitarice će biti fermentirane, a to je najvažnije. Ovaj kruh na fotkama sam radila od kombinacije neprosijanog integralnog pirovog brašna i rižinog brašna, zato nema one mjehure iz reklama za francusku pekaru. Ali okus i tekstura su divni. Detaljan opis kako napraviti kiselo tijesto ću objaviti uskoro, a do tada preporučam [ovaj] recept (bez recepta:). Upravo taj da vidite da se ne mora sve savršeno izvagati, kao što to nisu ni naši preci radili dok nisu još postojale one dilerske vagice. Savjetujem da obratite pozornost na to kako treba izgledati dobar starter, kao i na metodu razvlačenja tijesta. A uskoro ću i ja o tome ponešto napisati i uslikati postupak. Pa... živili! I probali kiseli kruh.




[ENGLISH]

sourdough

After seeing all those pictures of vegan burgers, some of those rare dedicated followers of this blog might wonder if I started eating bread despite saying it's not good for you over and over again. Well, I didn't really start eating bread regularly, but I don't mind eating an occasional slice when I make a loaf for my boyfriend. Why? Because sourdough. What is sourdough? Let me explain some things first...

If you have, by any chance, been following this blog for some time, you might already know what is my philosophy about grains and legumes (and other seeds) in human diet. I think those food groups can be an appropriate part of human diet only if they are either sprouted or fermented - because they are full of starches that are not really suitable for proper digestion, and are also packed with some molecules (that nature made for a reason, to help the plant), such as phytic acid, that act as antinutrients in human digestive system. They bind precious minerals and prevent them from being absorbed in human body.

Then I guess you understand what is so wrong about most of today's bread. And I don't mean that whoknowswhat that you can buy in supermarkets and is full of chemicals. In my opinion, that shouldn't be considered food at all. I mean, you know, the most common type of handmade bread that requires pre-cultivated fresh or dried yeast for the dough to rise. Yeasts are actually fungi that feed on sugars (usually from the flour, but you probably know that if you add some sucrose /brown sugar/ to the dough, it will rise more and quicker), and one of the fermentation products is carbon dioxide which makes bubbles within the dough, making it rise. That process is made as short as possible today, leaving no time for the flour to actually ferment. That means the phytic acid won't get decomposed and there will be lots of starch molecules in the dough. Gluten, which traps those nice bubbles in the dough, can be another problem, as I already wrote in one of previous posts.

Not that long ago, bread was not made this modern, instant-way. Our ancestors probably had bigger awareness of what is actually food and how to prepare it. OK, the whole lifestyle wasn't so fast back then and they probably had time to ferment bread for 12 hours, but that is why they didn't get health conditions from eating grains, as modern humans do. Today we hear so much about grains being bad and people being gluten-intolerant and so on. Some conditions that didn't exist 100 years ago... Those people probably knew how to prepare grains to make them appropriate food for human body. Of course this story has more components (one of them is [this one]), but today I'm writing about bread.

What makes sourdough different form modern leaven dough? 
Sourdough bread includes long fermentation of flour with wild yeasts and bacteria that are found on the grains and in the air. The fermentation also results in forming carbon dioxide bubbles inside the dough that make the dough rise, but there are some bigger and more important changes that also happen. The grains included in this process actually ferment, as they really should, and many of their harmful compounds get decomposed. Starches get broken down into simpler sugars, and phytic acid gets decomposed in presence of relatively high concentrations of lactic acid. The minerals and other precious nutrients get much more available for human body to absorb. Sourdough bread is also characterized by lower glycemic index in comparison to "normal" bread, which means it doesn't make blood glucose levels rise too high after consuming it. I also found lots of claims that most of the gluten in sourdough gets broken down to amino-acids in this long fermentation process, but I didn't find any written scientific proof for that. However, I think there must be some truth to it because I felt the difference myself: when I eat too much grains that contain gluten, I feel tired and as if there is an inflammation process going on in my body. After I eat sourdough bread, I feel fantastic. I read about lots of cases where gluten-intolerant people had no problems after eating sourdough bread. All in all, if you know that bread is bad for you but still like its taste or usefulness in your everyday feeding habits, give sourdough bread a try - there is a huge difference in how you'll feel afterwards.

Sourdough can be made from gluten-free grains as well, but it won't look all nice and bubbly as if it jumped out of a french bakery commercial. But the grains (flour) in it will get fermented, and that is all that really matters. This bread on the pictures was made from coarse spelt flower mixed with rice flour, hence its not-so-bubbly look. Nevertheless, the taste and texture were amazing. I will write a post with detailed description of how to make sourdough at home as soon as I have some time, and until then, watch [this guy]. I love this video because it shows that you don't need to measure everything and follow a strict recipe. Our great-grandmas' grandmas didn't have those little kitchen scales. Just pay special attention to how a good starter should look, and to the dough stretching technique. I will write something about it soon, and make some photos of the process. Until then, I hope you try some sourdough bread and fall in love with it..:-)
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