To Bake in a Brick Oven
If you have a large family, or board the laborers of a farm, it is
necessary to have a brick oven, so as to bake but twice a week; and to
persons that understand the management of them, it is much the easiest way.
If you arrange every thing with judgment, half a dozen loaves of
bread, as many pies or puddings, rusk, rolls or biscuit may be baked at
the same time. Some persons knead up their bread over night in winter,
to do this, the sponge should be made up at four o'clock in the afternoon.
If you wish to put corn flour in your bread, scald one quart
of it to six loaves, and work it in the flour that you are going to stir
in the rising, to make six loaves of bread, you should have three quarts
of water and a tea-cup of yeast.
Scalded corn flour, or boiled mashed potatoes, assists bread to rise
very much in cold weather. Have a quart of potatoes well boiled and
rolled fine with a rolling-pin on your cake board; mix them well in the
rising after it is light; if the oven is not ready, move the bread to a
cool place.
If the bread is sour before you mould it out, mix a heaped
tea-spoonful of salaeratus in a little water, spread out the bread on the
board, dust a little flour on it, and spread the salaeratus and water
over, and work it well through. This quite takes away the sour taste,
but if the bread is made of good lively yeast, it seldom requires it;
let it rise in the pans about half an hour.
Many persons that make their own bread, are in the constant practice
of using salaeratus, putting in the rising for six loaves a heaped tea-spoonful,
dissolved in a little warm water; in this there is no disadvantage, and it insures sweet
bread, and will also answer in making rolls or light cakes.
Common sized loaves will bake in an hour in the brick oven. If they slip
easily in the pans, and, upon breaking a little piece from the side, it
rises from the pressure of the finger, it is done; but if it should not
rise, put it back again; when the bread is taken out of the oven, wrap
it in a cloth till quite cold.
You should have a large tin vessel with holes in the top, to keep
bread in; in this way, it will be moist at the end of the week in
cool weather.
Coarse brown flour or middlings makes very sweet light bread, by putting
in scalded corn meal, say, to two loaves, half a pint, and is also good
to use for breakfast made as buckwheat cakes.
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