From the Midwest

From The Midwest

From The Midwest
Location
North Carolina,
Birthday
September 29
Title
CEO
Company
Never Give Up! Never Doubt Goodness and that Includes YOU!
Bio
Former English teacher-artist from the Midwest and just another statistic of "The Great Recession." Life goes on . . .

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JANUARY 24, 2012 7:55AM

Stale Bread for Breakfast--Foodie Tuesday

Rate: 9 Flag

 

 

A local grocery store carries a brand of fresh-baked Semolina bread I like very much. They'll usually only put out a few loaves, so when I see one, I grab it. I keep it in the paper wrapping to preserve the crisp crust. (The wrapper also reminds me of something my grandmother would have had around her kitchen from a loaf she purchased at a Chicago bakery.) Needless to say, it goes stale in a few days. No matter. That's when I have it for breakfast. Yes, breakfast. Don't turn up your nose!

 

This only works with a quality artisan bread that adapts well to soaking up the liquid. Anything else will turn into a paste.

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Stale, artisan bread, broken apart
  • Olive oil (use a good quality olive oil)
  • Salt and pepper
  • Boiling water
  • Onion powder (optional but recommended)

 

 

 

Place your stale bread in a bowl. Drizzle with olive oil. Sprinkle with a bit of salt and pepper and just a pinch or two of onion powder. Now begin pouring the boiled water over the bread. It will immediately begin to soak through like a dried sponge. Turn pieces over and drizzle with more hot water. Heel ends require a bit more soaking. Stir. Taste for seasonings. If crusts are still hard, add a bit more water so it sits in the bottom of the bowl and turn bread crusts so they rest in it. Break apart and enjoy. 

 

 

 

With a bit of grated hard cheese, this makes for a quick lunch. It's warm and filling. Sometimes I'm tempted to use milk, sugar and cinnamon, and for children, that would be great. But I enjoy the plain simplicity so much, I never deviate from the original plan. Enjoy, and remember your grandma!

 

 

Below is a video showing how Clara from "Great Depression Cooking" makes this:

 


 

 

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Comments

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My grandmother used to do this. I swear I can taste the bread.. I miss gluten..:)
HUGGGGGGGGGGG
This takes me back a lot of years, Gary. Thanks.
I've done this for some meals. Good bread, even when stale, can be recycled into new meals that are even tastier. A few times I've used old recipes from WWI cookbooks I inherited. Bread pudding is delicious as well and it's nutrtional value is better than some of the garbage consumers stuff themselves with in processed or packaged consumables on supermarket shelves.
I'm a dough girl, love bread. This sounds like a version of Panzanella.
Add tomatoes, olives, onions, basil - and voilà - you have a delicious bread salad.

R♥
Very interesting. My grandma would cook rice and have it with butter and sugar, but I don't know if she ever did bread this way.

Does Clara have a whole series of videos?
I never would have thought of this. What a great idea! It would work with the left-over ends of bread we bake, which I never know what to do with. And vegan too! Yay.
This seems like it is missing a soft boiled egg. I will be experimenting.
I had stale bread this morning! I'm going to do that with a little brown sugar, and milk. Yum.
Linda: As long as one's mind can remember good things like grandma's, the taste buds won't worry . . .

Walter: My grandmother would often just boil water, put it in a cup with lemon, and drink it in the a.m. To hear her talk about it, you'd think it was the nectar of the gods.

Belinda: Yes to bread pudding...

FusunA: like Panzanella, it has to be a good, quality bread.

Jeanette: Yes, Clara has an entire set of vids. Another good grandma is "Feed Me Buba." Both are on You Tube.

Laura: There you go! Breakfast. I think it's better than oatmeal.

Jack: I'm sure you could add an egg and mix it all in.

Zuma: Yum! When we were ill, my mom would make up "milk toast." Cut up toast in squares, pour on milk or 1/2 and 1/2 and sprinkle with sugar.
oh my goodness...milk toast! my mother used to make it for us too: torn up white bread, milk, a few berries of whatever was around and a sprinkling of white sugar. I always thought it was some wacky French-Canadian thing!
Caroline: Had it for breakfast yesterday . . . mmmmmm
A new to me concept. I LOVE bread so this would not be a hardship. It would have to be good quality bread, though.
I just had this the other day. Yes, it has to be a really good bread.