I was reminded of receiving a bag of starter from a friend's Mom along with a recipe to make this recipe. Her recipe was almost identical to several available on line include this from this website devoted entirely to "Amish Friendship Breads." The instructions included 5 days of mushing the bag, day 6 adding flour, sugar and milk to the starter and then allowing it to be in the bag for another 3 days before baking. The quantities are large enough to give each of 3 friends a bag of 1 cup of starter and make 2 loaf pans each time this bread is baked. My friends were experimenting with how to make a recipe that calls for 2 cups of sugar, a box of instant vanilla pudding, and all while flour could be more healthy with less oil, whole wheat and soy flours, and applesauce. I find it really fascinating that this starter seems to rely very heavily on sugar and milk especially since discovering just how easy it really is to begin a starter with just flour and water. There are warnings in many places about not refrigerating this starter and never touching it with metal.
For this version, I decided that I didn't need to spend an extra 9 days mushing a bag of starter because mine is very active already. I also wanted to experiment more with reducing the sugar and using whole grain flours. The recipe suggests baking in either 2 loaf pans or a bundt pan. I found it easier to just use the one pan. It's a sweet bread, and I like the addition of the blueberries and nuts. I cannot imagine adding in another 1 cup of sugar as called for in the recipe because I think the sweet would just be overpowering.
Amish Friendship Bread
1 c starter
1/2 c flour
1/4 c milk
1/2 c canola oil
1/2 c applesauce (our tree)
1/2 c sugar
1/2 c milk
3 eggs
1 1/2 c Red Fife Wheat (from Lonesome Whistle Farms)
1/2 c rye flour (from Lonesome Whistle Farms)
1 1/2 t vanilla
1/4 t salt
2 t cinnamon
1 1/2 t baking powder
1/2 t baking soda
1/2 c chopped filberts (from Thistledown Farm)
1 c blueberries (from Thistledown Farm)
Mix all the ingredients together. Preheat oven to 325. Grease one bundt cake (or 2 loaf pans). Sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar. Bake for one hour.
It still tastes good even if a cat jumps onto it while chasing a fly...
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