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egarrard
06-14-2003, 09:21 AM
Recipe Link (http://www.copykat.com/asp/copykatrecipe.asp?recipe=869#)
Salt Grass Steakhouse Shiner Bock Beer Bread

Ease of Cooking: Medium Difficulty
Serving Size: 6-8

Notes:
This is a favorite of many that visit the Steakhouse. It is served warm and with their special Honey Butter.


Ingredients:
1 1/2 -1 3/4 C. Shiner Bock Beer (flat)
2 1/2 C. Whole Wheat Flour
2 tsp. Dry Active Yeast
1/4 C. Warm Water ( not hot )
1/2 tsp. Salt
1/4 C. Honey
1/4 C. Vegetable Oil
1 1/2 C. All Purpose Flour

Preparation:
Dissolve in a large mixing bowl yeast with warm water, add honey and stir. Mix in wheat flour, salt, and all purpose flour in bowl. Stir in oil and slowly add flat beer. Mix all ingredients together. Place dough on a floured service and kneed for at least 10 - 15 minutes. The dough may need a little more flour added to it if while kneading its sticking to your hands. The finished dough will feel smooth and spongy and will not stick to your hands.
Place dough in a lightly oiled bowl and cover with plastic until it doubles in size. Do not place dough in a draft or a over heated area. The dough should be let to rise at room temperature.
When dough has doubled, punch in the middle and let rest for 5 minutes. Divide into four equal parts and shape into round loaves. Place loaves on a lightly oiled cookie sheet. Score twice on top of each loaf with a knife two inches apart and about 2 1/2 inches long. Cover loosely with plastic wrap until the loaves have double in size.
Place in a preheated oven at 350 degrees for about 30 minutes.

Orangepeel
06-14-2003, 09:28 AM
Boy does that look deee-lish :p! MMmmmm, warm fresh bread with churned butter. Comfort food :).

Bread making by hand is one of those things that you're either really really good at, or suck at badly.

Don't ask me to make bread, unless it's with a bread machine :lmao

I'm still gonna try that recipe though :D. Thanks egarrard!

egarrard
06-14-2003, 09:32 AM
Link (http://www.copykat.com/asp/copykatrecipe.asp?recipe=975#) They surprised me with this one.
White Castle Hamburgers

Ease of Cooking: Easy

Notes:
These are a classic. You can enjoy these at home.

Ingredients:
12 - 14 Dinner Rolls (Parker house shape, 2 1/2" x 2 1/2" size)
1 lb. lean ground beef (80% lean)
1/2 C. water (for beef)
1/2 tsp. Salt
3/4 C. diced onions
1 beef bouillon cube
1/2 - 1 C. Water (for onions)
Dill Hamburger Slices

Preparation:
In food processor place ground beef, salt and water. Process for a few seconds so water and salt are blended through ground beef and meat should look a little pasty. On a 11" x 13" jelly roll pan place plastic wrap on bottom. Place hamburger in middle and with another piece of plastic wrap on top of meat. Roll hamburger out to 1/4" thick. Remove plastic wrap and cut meat into 3" x 3"squares, leave ground beef pieces on tray. You should get between 12 and 14 squares. Perforate each piece five times with the end of a plastic straw, this will give the meat little steam holes. Cover hamburger with plastic wrap and place in freezer until meat is partially frozen but not solid.

Place onions, beef bouillon, and 1/2 cup water in fry pan. On medium low heat sauté and stir onions until they are clear, more water may be added as needed. Turn heat off until ready to cook hamburger patties.

When beef patties are ready to prepare, turn fry pan on medium low heat and add enough water to onions just so the bottom of fry pan is covered. Place patties in pan and cover with lid. Frying time is just a few moments. Turn patties and cook until done but not dry. The patties should be juicy. When hamburgers are finished cooking place on top of a roll add pickles, cover hamburgers so they will steam slightly or pop in microwave covered just for a few seconds until ready to serve.

wazman
06-14-2003, 10:21 AM
Mmmmm..... More recipies! And just in time for Father's Day...

I will print these out and WazLady and I will have to give them a try! :)

ch0g0nda
06-14-2003, 11:53 AM
That last one looks like it's made with a, higher grade than usual, slab of spam.

Artcwolf
06-14-2003, 03:03 PM
Originally posted by egarrard
Recipe Link (http://www.copykat.com/asp/copykatrecipe.asp?recipe=869#)

That looks most excellent...esp. since my fav beer is Shiner. It didn't say, but do not let the water get above 110F (43C) that you are dissolving the yeast in.

Orangepeel
06-14-2003, 03:09 PM
Originally posted by Artcwolf
That looks most excellent...esp. since my fav beer is Shiner. It didn't say, but do not let the water get above 110F (43C) that you are dissolving the yeast in.

It kills those little yeastie bacteria, eh :D?

WazLady73
06-14-2003, 06:47 PM
Yum Yum Yum! Bread Bread Bread!!!!!

I will have to make that!

Nothing better than kneading bread when your all stressed out! Gets all that built up tension out of you!:rofl2

Warm bread.......REAL butter....

What more can you ask for????

:beer :banana :bounce

wazman
06-14-2003, 09:31 PM
Originally posted by WazLady73
Yum Yum Yum! Bread Bread Bread!!!!!

I will have to make that!

Nothing better than kneading bread when your all stressed out! Gets all that built up tension out of you!:rofl2

Warm bread.......REAL butter....

What more can you ask for????

:beer :banana :bounce

Umm... In your case, dear, I believe, based on your current level of excitement...

A cold shower...