I love that you can actually see the quinoa! |
The recipe is really easy and seems to be pretty forgiving. Here is side by side of what I did vs the recipe:
What you'll need . . .
- 1 cup raw quinoa (we used red quinoa, but any kind will do) (I used white)
- 2 cups of water
- 1/2 cup raw walnuts, chopped (I used 1/4 c chopped pecans but you could probably leave them out)
- 2 teaspoons active dry yeast (used instant yeast)
- 3/4 cup water, wrist temperature
- 1/3 cup agave nectar (again, we used Xagave) (1/2 c. honey + 1/8 tsp baking soda)
- 1/4 cup sunflower oil (or canola)
- 2 tablespoons flax meal (didn't have any so left it out)
- 3 tablespoons grainy mustard (ommitted)
- 2 cups unbleached white bread flour (used regular all purpose flour)
- 1 cup whole wheat bread flour (used white whole wheat flour)
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
I think she only made one loaf from her dough, but I divided mine into two which made the final product only 93 calories a slice (19 slices in a loaf). I loved the pop of the quinoa when I tested the dough. I like that the quinoa adds most of the grain for the bread so it doesn't require as much flour either. I probably would have used more nuts if I actually had walnuts instead of pecans, and the flax would have really boosted the nutty texture too. It is really good as a toast!! For some reason all last night it was calling to me as a peanut butter sandwich (probably because I've been reading up on making my own nut butters too) so I finally got one for lunch today. Yep, it works!! I think I prefer it as toast with butter and honey though.
Taste test: jam or honey. Jam won this time. |
I did find with the honey substitute it browns really quickly in the oven. She says to cover it with foil to continue the baking without the browning but even then it still got really brown on top. I wasn't sure if it was really done or not when I took it out, and there aren't any dough spots in the middle, but it is a really moist bread (which is probably why I prefer it as toast).
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