(Warning - don’t try these at home)
We cruise in remote
areas along the Pacific Northwest coast, so I often miss joining the monthly baking activity with SourdoughSurprises. Last month we were anchored in Kisameet Bay
in the Central Coast region of B.C. on July 20, completely out of cellphone or
wi-fi range, and since we don’t have a firm float plan our August 20
whereabouts are uncertain. No matter, I decided to bake away, pre-schedule a post when I found an unexpected wi-fi connection in Ocean Falls, and hope someone can help
with a linkup when the time comes.
Oh my yes, this was an interesting sourdough cracker misadventure.
Grin. “Interesting” is a useful
adjective, it can mean so many things. Read on, shake your head and laugh along with me.
Instead of modifying one
of my existing, non-sourdough cracker recipes, I based these crackers on a
recipe published in a small 32-page pamphlet I found in a Ketchikan bookstore
years ago. Two assumptions led me down a frustrating path. 1. Thinking an Alaskan
bookstore would stock only the best in sourdough recipes, I didn’t question the
ingredients or ratios. 2. Reasoning that a publisher with a 50-year history and
over 200 titles in their Country Wisdom Bulletin series must have solid
content. Hmmmm, "maybe" on both counts. Of course, it could have been the cook; another "maybe" on that thought.
Moving on to the actual
crackers. These were seriously salty little suckers, tough rather than crisp,
more firm like hardtack than brittle like a cracker. Nope, not at all what I expected from a cracker
recipe. The dough was stiff, resisted rolling out in one tidy piece, and threw
off a lot of sesame seeds as it was rolled. What bad manners from my usually
agreeable sourdough starter.
Initial response? Meh. Better taste another one… or two…
and soon we noticed that two dozen sesame crackers were gone. There was something about these one-bite nibbles
that kept both of us coming back for “just one more.” Something, but certainly not texture.
The sesame seeds gave the
recipe a faintly Asian tilt, so I paired the crackers with Asian Salmon
Burger Sliders for an unusual appetizer. Slather on some wasabi-flavored cream
cheese, add a dollop of Thai sweet chili sauce and top with a tiny salmon
burger, done. Each cracker was sturdy enough to support a moist, mini salmon patty
and the sesame flavor played well with the ginger, garlic, green onions and Ponzu sauce in
the burger for a satisfying mouthful.
The crackers were merely tough
on the first day, on day two you had to work hard to nibble away a corner, and
I’ll bet by day three you could chip a tooth trying to gnaw a bite. We didn't try any to find out; I fed the few remaining to the seagulls. The recipe
below is for information only, not recommended by this galley cook. I still
need a good sourdough cracker recipe, so I’m extra eager to see the successes
shared by the other SourdoughSurprises bakers.
(Note: we enjoyed a pan of
sourdough sticky buns that same morning, the July challenge topic from SourdoughSurprises.
They were incredibly tasty, saving the day and
my reputation!)
Sourdough Sesame Crackers
Recipe from Baking with Sourdough by Sara
Pitzer
Makes 4 dozen bite-sized
crackers
½ cup refreshed and active
sourdough starter
2 tablespoons butter,
melted
2 teaspoons salt (I’d use
much less next time, if there is a next time)
about 1 cup unbleached AP
flour (amount depends on the consistency of your starter)
¼ cup white sesame seeds
Melt the butter and set
aside to cool.
Add the salt to the flour
and whisk to combine.
Add the cooled butter and
as much flour as you can work in.
When the dough is very
stiff, turn it out onto a floured surface and knead in the sesame seeds, adding
more flour as needed to achieve a stiff dough. (Pitzer suggests resting the
dough for a few minutes, covered with a damp tea towel, to make it easier to
knead.)
When the dough is very
stiff, use a rolling pin to roll it out very very thin, 1/16 inch or less.
Cut the crackers with a
sharp knife or a sharp, round cutter. Place on an ungreased cookie sheet,
separated slightly. Use a fork to poke holes in the tops so they don’t puff up
as they cook.
Bake in a preheated 400 F
oven until the tops brown slightly,
roughly 7 to 10 minutes.
Cool the crackers on a
wire baking rack. Store them in an airtight container.
Great post! Often our failures are as important as our successes. You turned yours into an interesting treat!
ReplyDeleteAh yes, "interesting" is the key word here.
DeleteAt least the Sticky Buns were good:) Sorry to hear your crackers didn't turn out, maybe next time~ Lynn @ Turnips 2 Tangerines
ReplyDeleteAfter skimming the other cracker posts, I'm ready to try again with another recipe... keeping in mind that sticky buns will always be there to console me.
DeleteHaha, what a challenge! I am glad that you joined us this month (and we are ALWAYS willing to link you up if you need be!). You would think your pamphlet would have been good, so sorry that the recipe was terrible! It looks like you tried to make good use of them anyway (your sliders sound amazing). I bet the seagulls thoroughly enjoyed them! :)
ReplyDeleteI'm not really sure whether to blame the recipe or the cook, but it WAS an adventure.
DeleteI'm glad you were able to try the cinnamon buns, even if it didn't quite match up with the challenge. I'm sorry the crackers didn't work out (though I had to laugh that they were still so addictive... and that the seagulls got to sample them, too!), but I am so glad you were able to join in the fun!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Shelley. Now I'm SO ready to see what the September challenge will be.
DeleteI've had problems baking Alaskan recipes too...makes me wonder. But you gotta try :-)
ReplyDeleteCan I blame it on using lower 48 starter with an Alaskan recipe??? Well......., maybe not.
DeleteBaking is an adventure sometimes. Sounds like you made hardtack, appropriate for being on a boat!
ReplyDeleteGrin!
DeleteHahahaha :) Still, the salmon sliders look so-o-o delicious!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jane. Yes, the salmon patties WERE pretty tasty little bites.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like you've been having some interesting adventures with baking and otherwise. I've had some not so pleasant cracker-baking adventures myself. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDelete"Interesting", indeed. Today my rangetop quit, so there will be a lot of baking in the next few weeks.
Delete