Posts Tagged coffee

Cinnamon Swirl Bread

“Put this in your oven and bake it”

Cinnamon Swirl Bread

  • 1 1/4 – 1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
  • 1 cup whole wheat flour
  • 1 tsp yeast (rapid rise)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp sugar
  • 1 1/2 tbsp butter
  • 3/4 cup milk
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1 large egg
  • melted butter (for brushing top)

For swirl

  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1 1/2 – 2 teaspoons cinnamon

In the bowl of a mixer, combine yeast and sugar.  In a saucepan, heat milk, butter and salt over low heat until butter melts 49-55°C  Slowly pour liquid into yeast and sugar. Stir and allow to rest for 30 seconds. Turn the mixer on low and add flour 1/2 cup at a time.  Midway through the addition of the flour, stop the mixer, scrape down bowl and incorporate an egg thoroughly.

Finish adding the flour and continue beating dough until soft and elastic, about 3-4 minutes in the mixer. For best results, the dough should be a little sticky. Handle dough with oiled hands to pull from the hook. Stretch and turn the dough in your hands. If kneading, turn and stretch dough on a floured board for 6-8 minutes.  Form dough in to a ball. Place ball into an oiled bowl. Cover, first with plastic wrap, then with a towel. Allow to raise until doubled in size (1-1.5hours).

Bread Raising Tip : Allow dough to rise in a comfortable, draft free location. With the oven turned OFF, place a steaming bowl of water on the bottom rack of the oven. Then, place the covered dough on the top rack of the oven. This creates the moist environment and comfortable temperature dough loves.

After dough has doubled in size, punch down, reform into a ball and allow to raise another 30 minutes, until doubled in size again. Punch down, knead and form dough into a rectangle.

When stretched and formed to the desired size, brush dough with water and sprinkle with cinnamon sugar mixture.  Roll up, tucking and stretching the dough into a spiral loaf. Tuck and pinch the ends.

Place into a lightly oiled loaf pan, seam side down. Cover and allow to raise another 30 minutes.  Loaf should puff and almost fill the pan. For a spilt-top look, use a butter knife and make an indentation into the top of the loaf. Do not slice into the dough.

Brush the top of the loaf with melted butter and bake in a 180°C oven for 25-30 minutes. Allow to cool on a wire rack before slicing.

Note : Follow the link to the original recipe, averagebetty.com is a fantastic site with great recipes, and they’ve done a phenomenal job with a step by step photo explanation of how to make this recipe.

Source : AverageBetty.com

Servings/Yield : Makes one loaf

Rating : Hasn’t been tested yet

Difficulty : Moderately Easy

Course : Dessert

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How to Drink by Victoria Moore

Victoria Moore

I love a good drink, and growing up as a young adult, I had plenty thereof, even enough to inspire a quick purchase or two of a cocktail guide and a rummage on the net for something to wow the ladies and the taste buds.  Nothing has inspired passion and awe as Victoria Moore’s book ‘How to Drink’.

A gift received last year.  I took one look and thought about how much that person disliked me enough to buy me cheap crap from the book store on the assumption that if I got drunk a few times, I must love a book about drink.  This was so much more than that.  Victoria Moore speaks of drinks from cocktails to coffee, and from tea to lemonade, the concepts and misconceptions that surround the subject with such informative passion without condescension.

“Chefs are asked to learn to respect their ingredients in any form, and this book Victoria Moore helped me respect the beverage”.

Last summer we enjoyed fresh Watermelon Martinis and Citron Presse as a non alcoholic treat by the pool.  This year in the summer sun, I hope to read on and enjoy some more of Victoria’s inspirational drinks.

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Why Dark Coffee Is Easier on Your Stomach

By Rachel Ehrenberg, Science News

SAN FRANCISCO — Roasting coffee beans doesn’t just impart bold, rich flavor. It also creates a compound that helps dial down production of stomach acid, according to research presented on March 21 at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society. The discovery may explain why dark-roasted brews are gentler on the stomach than their lighter peers, and could lead to a new generation of tummy-friendly coffees.

Even though several studies have found a cup-a-day habit imparts health benefits such as decreased risk of obesity, Alzheimer’s and colon cancer, many coffee lovers drink decaf or forgo the beverage altogether because it irritates the stomach or spurs heartburn. Previous work suggested that coffee made from steam-treated beans tamps down this gastric distress, a finding attributed to lower levels of caffeine and other compounds in these brews.

“But there is no experimental or human data that says these compounds increase gastric acid,” said Veronika Somoza of the University of Vienna, who presented the research.

To explore the science behind these gentler brews, Somoza and her colleagues used water and three other solvents to extract compounds from regular commercial coffee blends. Each solvent extracted a different profile of compounds, including caffeine and N-methylpyridinium, a ringed compound that doesn’t appear in green coffee beans but is created in the roasting process. Stomach cells exposed to each suite of compounds upped their acid secretion, except for the cells exposed to the extract containing NMP.

The team then compared the chemical profiles of a dark-roasted and light-roasted brew made with regular roasted and steam-treated beans. Both versions of the dark-roasted coffee had more than 30 milligrams per liter of NMP, as compared with the lighter roast, which had 22 mg/l. The light roast that was subjected to steam treatment, a technique thought to weaken coffee’s stomach-provoking powers, had a mere 5 mg/l of NMP.

Follow-up work confirmed the molecule’s mild-mannered nature. Human stomach cells treated with coffee that had medium or high concentrations of NMP secreted far less acid than cells treated with coffee containing the least amount of NMP, Somoza reported. And the activity of many of the genes and proteins involved in this gastric secretion were quashed in cells exposed to NMP-rich coffee.

The research team is now conducting a pilot study in which subjects swallow a sensor embedded in a capsule that measures the stomach’s pH and transmits the readings to a computer. Preliminary results suggest that stomach acid surges for a longer time when subjects drink light-roast coffee compared to dark-roast.

“Most people think that non-processed food is beneficial, that possibly raw foods are best, but we do not believe that,” Somoza said. “There are healthy, beneficial compounds in processed food. Our idea is to identify these beneficial compounds and enhance them.”

How NMP acts on the gastric system isn’t well understood. Acid secretion didn’t change noticeably in stomach cells treated with NMP alone. And caffeine’s name hasn’t been cleared — the friendlier darker brews also had less caffeine than their lighter-brewed counterparts.

This lower caffeine may also contribute to the darker roasts’ antacid powers. While chemists are fond of breaking bigger things into their smaller parts, these parts often work in concert, said Bhimu Patil of Texas A&M University in College Station. “It’s important to break things down to understand them, but most of the time, there is a synergistic effect.”

Image: eclectic echoes/flickr

Read More http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/03/why-dark-coffee-is-easier-on-your-stomach/#ixzz0iwH0Aa08

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What’s Inside a Cup of Coffee?

drink-coffee

Caffeine

This is why the world produces more than 16 billion pounds of coffee beans per year. It’s actually an alkaloid plant toxin (like nicotine and cocaine), a bug killer that stimulates us by blocking neuroreceptors for the sleep chemical adenosine. The result: you, awake.

Water

Hot H2O is a super solvent, leaching flavors and oils out of the coffee bean. A good cup of joe is 98.75 percent water and 1.25 percent soluble plant matter. Caffeine is a diuretic, so coffee newbies pee out the water quickly; java junkies build up resistance.

2-Ethylphenol

Creates a tarlike, medicinal odor in your morning wake-up. It’s also a component of cockroach alarm pheromones, chemical signals that warn the colony of danger.

Quinic acid

Gives coffee its slightly sour flavor. On the plus side, it’s one of the starter chemicals in the formulation of Tamiflu.

3,5 Dicaffeoylquinic acid

When scientists pretreat neurons with this acid in the lab, the cells are significantly (though not completely) protected from free-radical damage. Yup: Coffee is a good source of antioxidants.

Dimethyl disulfide

A product of roasting the green coffee bean, this compound is just at the threshold of detectability in brewed java. Good thing, too, as it’s one of the compounds that gives human feces its odor.

Acetylmethylcarbinol

That rich, buttery taste in your daily jolt comes in part from this flammable yellow liquid, which helps give real butter its flavor and is a component of artificial flavoring in microwave popcorn.

Putrescine

Ever wonder what makes spoiled meat so poisonous? Here you go. Ptomaines like putrescine are produced when E. coli bacteria in the meat break down amino acids. Naturally present in coffee beans, it smells, as you might guess from the name, like Satan’s outhouse.

Trigonelline

Chemically, it’s a molecule of niacin with a methyl group attached. It breaks down into pyridines, which give coffee its sweet, earthy taste and also prevent the tooth-eating bacterium Streptococcus mutans from attaching to your teeth. Coffee fights the Cavity Creeps.

Niacin

Trigonelline is unstable above 160 degrees F; the methyl group detaches, unleashing the niacin—vitamin B3—into your cup. Two or three espressos can provide half your recommended daily allowance.

via What’s Inside a Cup of Coffee? .

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Douwe Egberts GREEN packaging

DSCF9004

We’ve been using Douwe Egberts instant range of coffee at home for a number of years now, this is for a number of reasons, primarily because it tastes better than other coffees on the market, but then again I don’t fall in the category that believes that Italian coffee is the best in the world, I prefer filtered (percolated) coffee, but then again that’s an argument for another article, because don’t get me started on the size of the handle that a coffee cup should have.

Douwe and Egberts Instant coffee range come in these re-usable jars that my wife and I wash and store things in, from spare change to spices, we use them for everything.  In fact I don’t think we’ve thrown a single jar out since we started buying them; the times when we bought another brand of instant coffee left us no choice but to throw them into the recycling bin.  Why aren’t we using past sauce jars with metal lids as a reusable jar for our kitchen?  The Douwe Egbert jars just look so much better, just like something out of an old apothecary; and you can decorate them with whatever label you want.

The Douwe Egbert jars just look so much better, just like something out of an old apothecary

As a few regulars in our fridge, we grate parmesan and store them in the jars, as well as sauces, and minced garlic.  Best of all, we chuck them in the dishwasher with no problems.  We did find that if you do chuck them in the dishwasher, remove the plastic liner on the cap, as water always seems to collect in the glass top, so chuck this plastic stopper liner into the cutlery holder of the Dishwasher so it doesn’t run amok in the machine.

For sustainability sake, and product packaging that I would gladly re-use again and again, I give Douwe Egberts 10 out of 10 for packaging.  If only other brands would follow suit..

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