The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Back Matter


Quick Reference Chart: All Recipes by Level, Occasion, and Region

A note on using this chart: the recipes are listed by chapter and number in the order they appear in the book. The Level column indicates the lowest level of observance at which each recipe is appropriate: a recipe marked Level 3 satisfies Level 1 and Level 2 requirements as well, since Level 3 is the most restrictive standard. The Occasion column uses the following abbreviations: P = Passover table; F = feast week general; C = communal or grange gathering; Pr = provision or travel. The Region column notes strong regional associations where they exist; preparations without a strong regional association are marked General.


Part Two: Level 1 Recipes

RecipeTitleLevelOccasionRegion
1Bravian Plain Unleavened Table Flatbread3P, F, CGeneral
2AWestern Coastal Herb Flatbread3F, CWestern Coast
2BHill Country Herb Flatbread3F, CHill Country
2CInterior Amphoe Herb Flatbread3F, CInterior
2DDelta Settlement Herb Flatbread3F, CDelta
3Bravian Baking-Powder Biscuit Bread1FGeneral
4Soda Crackers for the Table1FGeneral
5Hard Tack for Travel and Militia Rations3F, PrGeneral
6Soft Unleavened Wraps3F, CGeneral
7Unleavened Hand Pies1F, C, PrGeneral
8Filled Pastry Pockets1F, CGeneral
9Savory Unleavened Tarts1F, CGeneral
10Open-Faced Flatbread Preparations3FGeneral
11Bravian Festival Honey Cake1F, CGeneral
12Fruit-Filled Pastry Rounds1F, CGeneral
13Thin Unleavened Wafer Cookies3F, CGeneral
14Nut-and-Seed Bars3F, C, PrGeneral

Part Three: Level 2 Recipes

RecipeTitleLevelOccasionRegion
20Unleavened Crepe-Style Thin Breads2FPort Town
21Rolled Egg-and-Flour Flatbreads3*FGeneral
22Cream-Enriched Soft Unleavened Rounds2FGeneral
23Choux-Adjacent Preparation Without Chemical Agents2F, CGeneral
24Simple Unleavened Shortbread-Style Crackers3F, C, PrGeneral
25Unleavened Laminated Dough2F, CGeneral
26Olive-Oil Flatbreads of the Southern Coastal Tradition3F, CCoastal
27Hard Twice-Baked Biscotti-Style Slices3F, C, PrHill Country
28Meringue-Based Unleavened Wafers2F, CGeneral
29Whipped-Egg Unleavened Sponge Layers2FPort Town
30Almond-Flour and Egg Preparations3*F, CGeneral

Level 3 adaptation available; see recipe notes.


Part Four: Level 3 Recipes

RecipeTitleLevelOccasionRegion
15Passover Table Matzah: Plain Water and Flour3P, FGeneral
16Daily Festival Matzah: Oil and Flour3P, F, CGeneral
17Barley Matzah of the Hill Country3P, FHill Country
18Spelt Matzah of the Eastern Settlements3F, CDelta/East
19Surface-Treated Level 3 Flatbreads (Framework)3FGeneral
31The Festival Oil Round3P, F, CGeneral
32Honey-Oil Festival Flatbreads3F, CGeneral
33Thin Sesame-Crusted Level 3 Crackers3F, C, PrCoastal/Delta
34Festival Olive-Oil and Herb Rounds for the Communal Table3F, CGeneral
35Small Oil-Enriched Bites for the Festival Table3F, CGeneral
36Plain Almond Flatbreads3F, CGeneral
37Walnut Flatbreads with Savory Herbs3F, CHill Country
38Hazelnut Festival Rounds3F, CHill Country
39Sesame-Based Thin Preparations3F, CCoastal/Delta
40Sunflower and Pumpkin Seed Flatbreads3F, CInterior

Part Five: Complementary Foods

RecipeTitleOccasionRegion
41Bravian Lamb and Root Vegetable StewP, F, CGeneral
42Slow-Braised Poultry with Bitter Greens and LemonF, CCoastal
43Roasted Root Vegetable SpreadF, C, PrGeneral
44Garlic Confit with Herbs and OilF, CGeneral
45Fresh Herb and Oil Preparations (Framework)F, CGeneral
46Bravian Festival Fresh Curd CheeseP, F, CGeneral
47Pressed Herb CheeseF, CGeneral
48The Passover Table Roasted EggPGeneral
49Festival Hard-Boiled Eggs with Salt and HerbF, CGeneral
50Labneh: Strained Yogurt in Three ConsistenciesF, CGeneral
51Cultured Cream PreparationsFGeneral
52Long-Cultured Festival Fresh CheeseP, FGeneral
53Fresh-Pressed Grape Juice for the Passover TableP, FGeneral
54Spiced Grape Preparation for the Feast Week TableFInterior/Hill
55Chamomile and Honey: The Morning TisaneFWestern Reaches
56Peppermint and Wild Herb TisaneFGeneral
57The Long Tisane: A Contemplative PreparationFWestern Reaches

Substitution Guide for Common Bravian Pantry Shortages

A note on using this guide: the feast season coincides with the end of winter and the early spring, which is the leanest point in the Bravian agricultural year. The autumn harvest’s stores have been diminishing since the Days of Atonement, the spring garden has not yet produced its first yield, and the household pantry during the feast week reflects this seasonal reality with an honesty that the baker must be prepared to work with rather than against. The following substitutions are organized by ingredient category and are drawn from both the practical wisdom of the Bravian household tradition and from my own experience of producing festival preparations under conditions of genuine scarcity, including the years when the Western Reaches harvest was poor and the grange stores were stretched to cover all needs through the spring. Every substitution listed here produces a result that is genuinely good, not merely adequate, and none of them should be understood as a compromise of the festival preparation but as the festival preparation adapted to the available materials, which is what every generation of Bravian bakers has always done.


Flour Substitutions

Hard wheat flour unavailable or insufficient: Spelt flour is the most directly useful substitute for hard wheat in most preparations, producing a somewhat more extensible dough of slightly less structural strength but very good flavor. Reduce the water slightly — by one to two tablespoons per cup of flour substituted — because spelt absorbs liquid more readily than hard wheat. For preparations where structural strength is critical, such as the hand pies and tarts of Chapter 6, consider blending available hard wheat with spelt in whatever proportion the pantry permits rather than substituting completely.

Soft wheat flour unavailable: Additional hard wheat flour can be used in any preparation that calls for soft wheat, with the understanding that the finished product will be somewhat more firm and less tender than specified. Reduce the mixing and kneading time for preparations relying on soft wheat’s tender character, to minimize gluten development as much as possible.

All wheat flour unavailable: This is the most serious shortage scenario and occurs occasionally in frontier settlement contexts. Barley flour combined with whatever starch is available — dried and powdered root vegetables, ground dried legumes — can substitute for wheat flour in the simpler Level 3 flatbread preparations, though the result will be denser and more fragile. The grain-free preparations of Chapter 14 become the primary option, provided nut and seed stores are intact.

Spelt flour unavailable: Hard wheat flour with a small reduction in kneading time approximates spelt’s character adequately in most preparations.


Fat Substitutions

Olive oil unavailable: Rendered lamb fat, beef tallow, or melted butter substitute directly in all oil-based preparations. The flavor character will differ — more savory with animal fats, more neutral with butter — but the technical function is identical. In the coastal and port-town preparations where olive oil is specified as a traditional flavoring element, the substitution changes the regional character of the preparation but not its quality.

Butter unavailable: Rendered lamb fat is the most functionally similar substitute in the hill country and interior Amphoe context. For preparations where butter’s water content contributes to steam lift — particularly the laminated preparation of Recipe 25 — rendered fat produces a slightly less active steam effect; the baker should compensate by ensuring the baking surface is at maximum heat before placing the preparation on it.

All solid fats unavailable: Olive oil can substitute for solid fat in the rubbing and cutting techniques of the pastry preparations, though the result will lack the discrete fat pieces that produce flakiness. The shortbread cracker of Recipe 24 and the laminated preparation of Recipe 25 cannot be made with liquid fat alone; the flat olive-oil preparations of Recipe 26 and the twice-baked slices of Recipe 27, which use liquid fat by specification, become the primary fat-based options in this scenario.


Liquid Substitutions

Buttermilk unavailable: Whole milk with a tablespoon of apple cider vinegar added per cup, allowed to stand for five minutes before use, approximates buttermilk’s acid and tenderizing function in most preparations. The flavor is somewhat less complex than genuine cultured buttermilk, but the technical function is substantially equivalent.

Whole milk unavailable: Whey from the cheesemaking preparations of Chapter 16 is an excellent substitute for whole milk in all dough and batter preparations, providing dairy protein and a pleasant background flavor. Water with a tablespoon of rendered fat stirred in approximates the fat content of milk without the protein contribution; this substitution is adequate in most preparations and recommended over the use of inferior or sour milk, which affects flavor negatively.

Fresh water of good quality unavailable: In frontier settlement and extended travel contexts, where the available water may be of uncertain quality or disagreeable flavor, the safest practice is to boil all water used in preparations before allowing it to cool to the temperature required. The boiling does not affect the performance of the water in dough preparations and eliminates the health concerns of uncertain water sources. Hard water from limestone springs, while producing slightly different results in certain preparations as noted in Chapter 17, is perfectly safe and functional.


Egg Substitutions

Fresh eggs unavailable: In the egg-lifted preparations of Chapter 8 and the egg-based sweet preparations of Chapter 10, there is no adequate substitution for fresh eggs, and these preparations should simply not be attempted when eggs are not available. The preparations that use eggs as minor enrichers — the pastry shell preparations of Chapter 6 and certain of the Level 1 sweet preparations — can be made without the egg with some reduction in tenderness and color, increasing the fat slightly to compensate for the egg’s enriching contribution.

Insufficient eggs for a full recipe: Reduce the recipe proportionally rather than attempting to extend a partial egg quantity through the full recipe volume, because the structural contribution of eggs is not proportionally divisible in the way that flour and water are.


Honey Substitutions

Honey unavailable: In the sweet preparations of Chapter 7 and the beverage preparations of Chapter 17, dried fruit preparations — very finely minced dried dates or raisins dissolved in a small quantity of warm water to a thick syrup — approximate honey’s sweetening and hygroscopic function with somewhat different flavor character. In the honey cake of Recipe 11 specifically, a date syrup substitution produces a preparation of distinctive and genuinely good character that is worth knowing about independent of any shortage scenario.

Only dark, strongly flavored honey available: The robust hill country honey that I noted is too assertive for certain preparations — the honey-oil flatbreads, the meringue wafers, the labneh preparations — can be moderated by combining it with an equal quantity of water and reducing slowly until the syrup returns to honey consistency, which concentrates the sweetness while mellowing some of the more volatile aromatic compounds. This technique is used in certain hill country households as a standard preparation step rather than as a shortage remedy, and the resulting moderated honey is considered a distinct preparation in its own right.


Nut and Seed Substitutions (for Chapter 14 grain-free preparations)

Almonds unavailable: Cashews, where available through port-town trade, are the closest substitute in flavor and fat content. Blanched sunflower seeds ground very finely approximate the almond preparation’s structural behavior with a distinctly different and more assertive flavor. The preparation will not taste of almond, but it will be structurally coherent and genuinely good.

Walnuts unavailable: Any other full-flavored nut available in the regional pantry — pecans through the port-town trade, or additional hazelnuts in the hill country — substitutes with appropriate flavor adjustment to the herb and spice additions.

Sesame paste unavailable: Ground sunflower seeds combined with a generous quantity of olive oil and worked to a paste consistency approximate sesame paste’s fat content and spreadability with considerably less intense flavor. The preparation will lack sesame’s characteristic depth but will produce a structurally correct result.


A Note on Provision Context Shortages

The militia member, the frontier colonist, and the mariner observing the feast at sea may find themselves working with a significantly reduced pantry compared to the household kitchen described throughout this book. In these contexts, the following hierarchy of preparations is recommended, in order of the minimum ingredients required:

The hard tack of Recipe 5 requires only flour, water, and salt and is the most ingredient-independent preparation in the book. The plain matzah of Recipe 15 requires the same minimum. The nut-and-seed bar of Recipe 14 requires nuts or seeds, honey, and fat, with no grain flour at all. These three preparations, in combination, are sufficient to sustain the feast week observance under conditions of genuine material scarcity, and the person who keeps the feast with these three preparations under conditions of hardship is observing as fully and as honorably as the baker at her well-supplied stone hearth.

The feast has always been kept under difficult conditions by people with limited resources. The commandment does not specify the quality of the pantry. It specifies the removal of leaven, and that removal costs nothing beyond the intention to remove it. Every preparation in this book is the feast done well. The hard tack and the plain matzah are the feast done faithfully, which is not a lesser thing.


Glossary of Bravian Baking Terms

The following terms appear throughout this book in either their Bravian usage or their specific technical application within the context of unleavened baking. Terms from other languages are noted where they are in common use in Bravian culinary vocabulary alongside the Bravian equivalent.

Amphoe: The basic administrative and community unit of Bravian rural life, typically encompassing a market town and the surrounding agricultural settlements. The Amphoe grange facility serves as the practical center of agricultural and communal life within each Amphoe, including the grange mill, the cooperative food stores, and the communal kitchen facilities used for feast-season production.

Biscuitbrot: The older Bravian household term for the baking-powder biscuit-style bread of Recipe 3, from the Swiss German tradition carried by the original settlers and preserved in the interior Amphoe communities long after the term fell from common use in the port towns. Literally, biscuit-bread.

Blind baking: The partial or complete baking of an empty pastry shell before filling is added, used in the tart preparations of Chapter 6 to prevent the pastry base from remaining raw under the weight of a moist filling. Not a term of ancient Bravian origin but a practical technique whose name has been adopted into the working vocabulary of the professional Bravian baker.

Chametz: The Hebrew term for leavened food — specifically, food that has undergone grain fermentation and risen as a result. The category of food commanded to be removed from the house during the Days of Unleavened Bread. Distinguished from se’or, which is the leavening agent itself.

Confit: A preparation in which a food is cooked slowly in fat at a low temperature rather than roasted or fried at high heat. In this book, specifically the garlic confit of Recipe 44. From the older continental culinary vocabulary adopted into Bravian port-town cooking.

Cream of tartar: Potassium bitartrate, the natural acid salt deposited on the inside of wine barrels during fermentation. Used in the egg-white preparations of Chapter 10 as a foam stabilizer at Level 2. Not a chemical leavening agent in this application; see the note in Chapter 3.

Docking: The piercing of a raw flatbread or cracker dough with a fork or docking tool before baking, creating a regular pattern of holes that allow steam to escape in a controlled manner and prevent uncontrolled blistering during baking. Essential for the Level 3 preparations of Chapter 11 and recommended for all thin preparations.

Extensibility: The ability of a dough to stretch and extend under rolling without springing back. Extensible dough is easy to roll thin; elastic dough springs back toward its original shape. Rest periods increase extensibility by relaxing the gluten network.

Feast week: The seven days of the feast of Unleavened Bread, beginning on the fifteenth day of the first month of the Bravian religious calendar. The Passover is observed on the evening of the fourteenth day, immediately before the feast week begins.

Grange: The cooperative agricultural organization of the Amphoe community, responsible for the management of the grange mill, cooperative stores, and communal facilities. The grange master and the grange head baker are the key figures in the communal feast-season production described in Chapter 13.

Gluten: The protein network formed when the glutenin and gliadin proteins of wheat flour are hydrated and worked. Gluten provides the structural framework of most wheat-based preparations, trapping gas in leavened products and providing cohesion in unleavened ones. Absent in preparations made from non-gluten-bearing grains and from the nut and seed preparations of Chapter 14.

Hard wheat: Wheat varieties with a high protein content, typically thirteen to fifteen percent, producing strong gluten development. Used where structure and chew are required. Distinguished from soft wheat throughout this book.

Hartshorn: Ammonium carbonate, an older chemical leavening agent used in certain traditional Bravian recipes predating the widespread availability of baking powder. Produces a very dry, crisp result in thin preparations and is treated as equivalent to baking powder for Level 2 purposes.

Hot-water dough: A dough mixed with water heated to just below simmering, which partially gelatinizes the starch in the flour and produces a more extensible and pliable dough than cold-water mixing. The primary technique for improving workability in the Level 3 kitchen.

Labneh: Strained yogurt of varying consistency depending on draining time, from a spoonable dip to a firm, rollable preparation. From the older Semitic dairy tradition present in Bravian culinary vocabulary through the Hebrew language base of the religious culture. See Recipe 50.

Lamination: The technique of folding fat into a developed dough in repeated layers to create thin alternating strata of fat and dough that separate in the oven through steam, producing a flaky, layered product. Available at Level 2; see the discussion of Level 3 applicability in Chapters 3 and 4.

Level 1: The standard of unleavened observance in which only biological leavening agents are removed. The majority standard of Bravian household and institutional baking during the feast season.

Level 2: The standard of unleavened observance in which biological and chemical leavening agents are removed. Observed by a significant minority of Bravian households. The standard of the Stone Hearth Bakery during the festival season.

Level 3: The strictest standard of unleavened observance, in which biological, chemical, and mechanical leavening are all removed. Associated with the most traditionally observant households, certain priestly contexts, and the preparations most directly commemorative of the Passover bread of affliction.

Maror: The Hebrew term for the bitter herbs commanded to be eaten at the Passover table. See the discussion in Chapter 15.

Matzah: The traditional term for the unleavened bread of the Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread. In the Bravian culinary vocabulary, matzah specifically denotes the Level 3 plain flatbread preparations of Chapter 11, though the term is sometimes used more loosely to refer to any unleavened flatbread produced for the feast season.

Mechanical leavening: The incorporation of air into a batter or dough through physical manipulation rather than biological or chemical means. Includes beating egg whites, creaming fat, folding beaten mixtures, and vigorous whole-egg whisking. Removed at Level 3.

Minchah: The Hebrew term for the grain offering of the Levitical calendar, which includes several specified unleavened preparations. The priestly unleavened preparations associated with the feast season derive from the minchah tradition.

Omer: The sheaf of the first grain of the year — barley — offered before God at the beginning of the Days of Unleavened Bread, which begins the count of seven weeks to the Feast of Weeks (Pentecost). See the discussion in the front matter.

Passover: The feast observed on the evening of the fourteenth day of the first month of the Bravian calendar, commemorating the deliverance of the people of Israel from Egypt and, in the New Covenant understanding, the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The Passover table precedes the seven days of the Feast of Unleavened Bread.

Potash: Potassium carbonate, another older chemical leavening agent appearing in certain traditional Bravian recipes, treated as equivalent to baking powder for Level 2 purposes.

Provincial college: The institution of higher learning attached to each provincial capital in Bravia, providing formal education in practical and theoretical subjects. The Provincial College of Porterville includes the Department of Home Economics where the author holds the Chair.

Se’or: The Hebrew term for the leavening agent itself — specifically, the old piece of fermented dough or starter culture used to inoculate fresh dough. The most direct biblical referent for the leaven commanded to be removed from the house. Distinguished from chametz, which is the finished leavened product.

Short dough: A dough in which fat has been thoroughly worked into the flour, inhibiting gluten development and producing a crumbly, tender result. The character of a well-made shortbread cracker. Distinguished from a flaky dough, in which fat is present in discrete pieces rather than thoroughly distributed.

Soft wheat: Wheat varieties with a lower protein content, typically eight to ten percent, producing less gluten development and a more tender result. Used where tenderness is the primary textural goal.

Steam lift: The lift produced in a baked product by the rapid vaporization of the water content of the dough when it contacts a very hot baking surface. The only leavening mechanism available in the Level 3 kitchen, and a fully available and actively managed one. See Chapter 4.

Tisane: An infusion of herbs in hot water, drunk as a beverage. The everyday household beverage of the Bravian tradition throughout the year and the non-ceremonial beverage of the feast week table. Distinguished from tea, which refers specifically to infusions of the tea plant not commonly cultivated in the Bravian climate.

Western Reaches: The westernmost province of Bravia, encompassing the coastal communities around Porterville and the hill country communities of the interior. The regional home of the author and the primary cultural context of this book’s recipes and observations, though the book draws on traditions from all of Bravia’s regions.


Acknowledgments

The debts accumulated over a career of forty years in a single discipline are too numerous to enumerate completely, and the attempt to do so would produce a document longer than any chapter in this book, which is not what the back matter of a cookery book is for. I will therefore be selective, and I ask the understanding of those who are not named here but who know they should have been.

My mother, Elsbeth Hochstrasser, née Keller, taught me everything she knew about the Level 3 kitchen without ever calling it that, and without, I suspect, caring particularly what it was called. She taught me through the annual evidence of her practice, conducted in a kitchen that was warm and orderly and smelled, during the feast season, of toasted grain and rendered lamb fat and the particular combination of attention and contentment that serious work produces in a person who knows what she is doing. She died twelve years ago in the spring, before the feast, and I have kept the feast every year since in the way she would have recognized, which is the way I hope she is recognized in these pages.

My father, Heinrich Hochstrasser, who sat at her table and ate her bread every feast season of his adult life without once, as far as I am aware, reflecting consciously on what went into it, nonetheless provided the household in which it was made with a stability and a generosity that the work required. He was a fair man of good humor and considerable patience, which is what the husband of a serious woman with serious convictions needs to be, and he was those things without apparent effort, which may be the most impressive thing about him.

The Provincial College of Porterville has been my institutional home for thirty-one years, and the Department of Home Economics has been my professional home for all of them. The department’s support of this book’s research and development — including the use of the teaching kitchen for recipe testing, the access to the college library’s collection of historical Bravian household recipe manuscripts, and the considerable patience of my colleagues during the years when I was visibly preoccupied with what they kindly referred to as my unleavened project — has been more valuable than any formal acknowledgment can adequately express. I am grateful to the college, to the department, and to the students who have passed through both over the years and who are, in the most direct sense, the reason this book exists: if they had not asked the questions, I would not have been required to develop the answers to a degree of rigor sufficient for publication.

The head baker of the Porterville provincial temple kitchen, whose name I do not record here at her own request — she made clear when we spoke that she had no interest in being identified in connection with a cookery book, an attitude I find entirely consistent with her general character — gave me two full days of her kitchen and her time during the research for Chapter 13, and provided observations about large-scale Level 3 production that I could not have obtained from any other source. I am grateful to her in direct proportion to her own complete indifference to being thanked.

The head baker of the Porterville Amphoe grange hall kitchen, Hannelore Zimmermann, was equally generous with her time and her knowledge, and somewhat more willing to be identified. She has been baking for the grange community for twenty-three years and baking in general for considerably longer, and her account of the communal feast-week kitchen’s organizational approach — delivered over a workbench covered in flour, without pausing in her rolling, which is the correct way to discuss professional baking technique — is the foundation of the practical sections of Chapter 13. She also brought me a loaf of her everyday hard wheat sourdough the following week, apparently as a reminder that the unleavened kitchen, however worthy of a book, is only part of what good baking requires. The point was well made and I accepted it in the spirit in which it was offered.

My student from the port-town family — she knows who she is, and I will not embarrass her by naming her in a book whose foreword she will read at least once, knowing her — changed my thinking about the egg-white preparations of Chapter 10 through the simple force of her competent and unapologetic practice, and is owed an acknowledgment that she will almost certainly consider unnecessary. She would be right that it is unnecessary. I offer it anyway.

Hedwig Brändli, who has been coming to the Stone Hearth Bakery during the feast season for more than twenty years and who cannot eat grain, is the reason Chapter 14 exists. She has been a patient, exacting, and genuinely helpful collaborator in the development of the grain-free preparations, and her willingness to taste and evaluate many batches of preparations whose early versions did not deserve her tolerance is something I have tried to honor with the quality of the final recipes. The plain almond flatbread in its coastal variation, which she has declared her preference among the preparations in that chapter, is the recipe I am most pleased with in the entire book, and the pleasure is inseparable from the person for whose table it was developed.

The Stone Hearth Bakery staff — Margrit, who has worked the morning shift since the bakery’s third year and who has an instinct for heat management that no amount of formal training produces; Lisbeth, who handles the festival season’s communal orders with an organizational capability that makes my work during those weeks possible; and the various seasonal apprentices who have learned to roll flatbread in my kitchen over the years and who have each, in their way, contributed to my thinking about how this work is taught — deserve acknowledgment that the ordinary rhythms of a working bakery do not always allow time to express. I am aware of what I owe them and I am glad to say so here.

The catering team of the Western Reaches Regional Grange Federation, who have incorporated several of the preparations from this book into their feast-week service over the years during which the book was in development, and whose feedback on the practical performance of those preparations in a genuine communal kitchen context has been invaluable, are collectively acknowledged with gratitude and with the hope that the final published versions serve them as well as the working drafts did.

To the students of the Home Economics department, past and present: you are the people for whom I have been developing and refining these preparations for three decades, and the questions you have asked have been better than the answers I gave them in the early years. I hope the answers in this book are finally adequate to the questions.

Finally: to the feast itself, which has been observed by the people of this covenant for longer than any of our institutions and any of our knowledge, and which will continue to be observed long after this book and its author are both entirely forgotten — the acknowledgment that belongs to it cannot be expressed in the vocabulary of a cookery book and I will not attempt it here. The book is itself an expression of it. That is what it was always trying to be.

May the preparations in it serve the table well.

Vreni Hochstrasser Porterville, Western Reaches The Stone Hearth Bakery Year 3015


The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: A Practical Guide to the Three Levels of Unleavened Baking is a publication of the Provincial College of Porterville, Department of Home Economics. All recipes have been tested in the Stone Hearth Bakery professional kitchen and in a domestic kitchen of standard Bravian household equipment. The theological positions expressed in this book are those of the author and do not represent the official position of the Provincial College, the Porterville Amphoe grange, or the provincial temple of the Western Reaches, all of whom were consulted during the book’s development and none of whom are responsible for the author’s conclusions.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 17 — Drinks and Fermented Beverages Compatible with the Season

I have saved the question of fermented beverages for the last chapter of this book not because it is the least important of the topics addressed in Part Five — it is not — but because it is the most theologically contested, and I have learned over the course of a long teaching career that contested questions are better encountered after the reader has been established in the author’s general approach to reasoning than before. By this point in the book, the reader knows how I think about the relationship between the letter and the spirit of the commandment, how I approach questions that the Scripture does not address with complete explicitness, and how I hold my own positions with conviction while acknowledging the legitimate reasoning behind positions that differ from mine. She is therefore better prepared to encounter the beverage question than she would have been in the front matter, and I am better prepared to present it honestly, because we have been in conversation long enough for her to know what I mean when I say that a question is genuinely difficult.

The beverage question is genuinely difficult.

Let me state the difficulty plainly before we discuss its resolution. The commandment removes leaven from the house during the seven days of the feast. We have established, across sixteen chapters and a substantial quantity of flour, that biological leaven is the primary and most directly addressed category, that chemical leavening presents a reasoned case for Level 2 removal, and that mechanical leavening presents an equally reasoned case for Level 3 removal. Now: what about beverages whose character is the product of biological fermentation?

The grain-fermented beverages — ales, certain traditional grain beers, and any beverage produced by the fermentation of grain — present, in my view and in the view of the majority of Bravian religious scholarship on the matter, a clear and straightforward answer. A grain-fermented beverage is produced by exactly the same biological process as a leavened bread: wild or cultivated yeasts ferment the sugars of the grain, producing alcohol and carbon dioxide. The yeast in a fermenting grain beverage is biologically identical to the yeast in a leavening culture. The process is the same. The product, while liquid rather than solid, is the direct fruit of the leavening organism operating on grain in the same way it operates in a leavened dough. Grain-fermented beverages are, in this reading, liquid chametz — leavened grain preparations in a different physical form — and they are removed from the Bravian household during the Days of Unleavened Bread along with the leavened bread and the sourdough starter, without serious dispute in most Bravian communities.

The fruit-fermented beverages — wine, cider, fruit-based fermented preparations of various kinds — present a more complex picture, and it is here that the genuine theological discussion begins. The fermentation of grape juice into wine involves yeast, and the yeast involved is biologically similar to the yeast involved in bread leavening. Does wine, therefore, constitute a leavened preparation in the sense of the commandment?

The answer given by the overwhelming consensus of Bravian religious scholarship, ancient and modern, is no — and the reasoning is important enough to state clearly. The commandment specifically addresses leaven as a substance whose identity is defined by its relationship to grain: the word se’or, as I explained in Chapter 1, refers to the old leavened dough or starter culture kept from batch to batch, a grain preparation. The fermented fruit beverage has no grain in it. The yeast that produces wine operates on the sugars of fruit rather than on the starches of grain, and the product of that fermentation — alcohol, carbon dioxide, and the complex flavor compounds of fermented fruit — is categorically different from the product of grain fermentation: not chametz, not se’or, not the leaven the commandment addresses. Wine is not bread, and the process that makes wine is not the process the commandment targets.

This is why wine appears at the Passover table itself as part of the commanded service. This is why the Bravian feast has always been celebrated with wine. The commandment does not remove fermentation from the table. It removes grain-based fermentation from the table, and the distinction between the two is not a technicality invented for the purpose of retaining a beverage one happens to enjoy. It is a theologically grounded, textually supported distinction that has been part of the Bravian understanding of the feast from the beginning.

I say this at some length because I have encountered, in certain corners of Bravian religious life, a position that extends the removal of all fermentation during the feast season to include wine and all fruit-fermented beverages, on the grounds that fermentation itself — any fermentation, by any organism, of any substrate — partakes of the character of leaven and should be avoided. This position exists and is held by sincere and thoughtful people, and I record it here as I have recorded the Level 3 position throughout this book: without dismissal, but also without endorsement. The theological case for it, in my careful reading, does not hold against the weight of what the text actually says and against the evidence of the Scripture’s own inclusion of wine in the Passover service. I do not follow it in my own practice or recommend it to others, but I acknowledge it exists.

With this established, let us talk about what to drink.


On Wine at the Bravian Festival Table

Wine occupies a position at the Bravian festival table that is different from its position in ordinary meals, and understanding this difference is important for the baker who is preparing the full festival table rather than simply the bread.

At the Passover table, wine is a commanded element of the service. The traditional Passover service of the Bravian community includes the drinking of multiple cups of wine — typically four, though practice varies somewhat between communities — at specific points in the service, and these cups are not optional embellishments but integral parts of the ritual structure of the evening. The first cup accompanies the sanctification of the day; the second accompanies the telling of the story of the deliverance; the third accompanies the grace after the meal; and the fourth accompanies the concluding praise. Each cup of wine marks a transition in the service and in the meal, and the feast table without wine at these moments is missing something that the commandment itself has placed there.

The grape juice alternative, which I address in detail below, is a legitimate option for those households where wine is not appropriate — for children, for those who cannot drink wine for health reasons, for households that prefer fresh grape juice on principle — and it has a long history in the Bravian feast tradition as a parallel observance to the wine. But the reader should understand that grape juice at the Passover is an accommodation rather than an equivalent: the commanded element is wine, and those households that can observe with wine and choose to do so are observing the full intent of the service.

For the subsequent six days of the feast, wine is present at the festival table as a mealtime beverage in the same way that it appears at the ordinary Bravian meal — modestly, in reasonable quantities, as an accompaniment to food rather than as the subject of the drinking. The Bravian character is not given to excess in any form, and the feast week’s wine is no exception: it is present because it is appropriate and good, not because the feast is an occasion for unusual quantities.


Bravian Wine and the Festival Season: Practical Considerations

The Bravian wine tradition is primarily a tradition of grape cultivation in the southern and eastern agricultural regions, the more temperate valleys of the hill country, and — increasingly — the Delta settlements where the combination of river-enriched soil and long growing seasons produces grapes of considerable character. The port towns have access to imported wines through their maritime trade, and the festival table in those communities may draw on a wider range of wine sources than the inland communities that are limited to what is grown within their own province.

The selection of wine for the Passover service and the feast week table is a matter on which I have views but limited authority, because wine selection is properly the domain of those who know the specific wines available in any given region and in any given year, and the baker preparing a festival table should consult the merchants and growers of her region rather than a cookbook for guidance on what to serve. What I can offer is the practical consideration relevant to any wine at the festival table: the wine should be genuinely good, of a quality appropriate to a commanded observance and to a week of celebration, and it should be selected with the same care and attention that the baker brings to the selection of her flour and her oil and her honey.

A note for the household that makes its own wine: the home winemaker preparing for the feast season should ensure that the wine intended for the Passover cups and the feast week table has completed its fermentation fully before it is used, because actively fermenting wine — wine in which the yeast is still visibly at work, producing bubbles and foam at the surface of the vessel — presents a different theological question than fully fermented wine. A wine that is still actively fermenting is a wine in which a biological leavening culture is present and operating. The same reasoning that removes sourdough starter from the kitchen during the feast removes actively fermenting wine from the feast table, and the home winemaker should time her winemaking so that the wines intended for the feast have fully fermented and settled before the feast begins. Wine that has fully fermented, in which the yeast has completed its work and settled out of the liquid, is a product rather than a process, and it is as appropriate at the feast table as the Scripture places it.


Recipe 53 — Fresh-Pressed Grape Juice for the Passover Table

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: fresh-pressed grape juice is the traditional alternative to wine at the Passover table for those members of the household who do not or cannot drink wine, and it appears in the Bravian feast tradition as a parallel presence alongside the wine rather than a replacement for it. In the households I know best, the Passover table typically holds both: a carafe of wine for the adults who observe with wine, and a smaller pitcher of fresh or preserved grape juice for the children and for any adult who prefers it. Both are present at each cup, and each member of the household drinks from the preparation appropriate to them.

Fresh-pressed grape juice, when it is available — which in the spring feast season means preserved grape juice from the autumn’s pressing, since fresh grapes are not yet in season — is the correct form for the Passover table. The preparation I describe here addresses the pressing and preservation of grape juice from the autumn harvest in a form that will keep through the winter and spring for use at the feast, as well as the reconstitution of preserved juice for the table.

I am aware that some readers will note the absence of fresh grapes in the spring season and wonder how fresh-pressed grape juice can be a traditional feast preparation. The answer is that in the Bravian tradition, the fresh-pressed juice used at the feast is the preserved juice of the previous autumn: pressed from the harvest grapes in the autumn, heated briefly to prevent fermentation from beginning, and stored in sealed vessels in the cold room through the winter. This is not a compromise of the preparation but the traditional method of its production, and the juice produced by careful autumn pressing and clean preservation is genuinely excellent when served at the Passover table in the spring.

For autumn pressing and preservation:

When the grape harvest arrives — in the Western Reaches, typically in late summer or early autumn — set aside a portion of the freshest, ripest grapes specifically for juice pressing rather than for winemaking. The distinction in the harvest between grapes for wine and grapes for feast-table juice is a deliberate one in the organized Bravian household, and the grapes for juice should be pressed within a day or two of picking to minimize the wild yeast activity on their skins that will begin fermentation if the juice is not heated promptly.

Press the grapes by whatever method your household uses — the large wooden press of the grange facility if you have access to it, the hand press of the home operation, or, for small quantities, the simple method of pressing the grapes through a clean cloth with the hands over a large bowl. The goal is the extraction of the clear juice from the fruit without the crushing of the seeds, which release bitter compounds into the juice that affect its flavor. Press firmly but without violence.

Transfer the pressed juice to a clean heavy-bottomed pot immediately after pressing. Heat over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until the juice is hot throughout and beginning to show the first signs of surface movement — not a full boil, not even a simmer, but the temperature at which a finger held in the juice becomes uncomfortable to keep there, the same temperature I described for milk in Chapter 16. This gentle heating kills the wild yeast on the skins that has entered the juice during pressing and prevents fermentation from beginning, while preserving the flavor compounds of the fresh grape that a full boiling would destroy.

Transfer the heated juice immediately to clean, dry, sealed vessels — stoneware jars with tight-fitting lids, glass bottles sealed with wax, or any vessel that can be closed completely against air. Fill the vessels as completely as possible, leaving minimal air space at the top, because the air that remains above the juice contains wild yeast spores that will eventually produce fermentation even after the juice has been heated. Store in the cold room, where the low temperature and the absence of air will preserve the juice through the winter and spring in good condition.

When the feast season arrives, bring the preserved juice to the table directly from the cold room. A juice that has been correctly preserved and stored will be clear, deeply colored, and fresh in flavor with a concentration of grape character that no commercially produced grape juice — processed at high heat and often diluted — can approach. The cold room’s low temperature may have produced a fine sediment of natural tannins and grape solids at the bottom of the vessel: this sediment is harmless and is the sign of a minimally processed juice rather than a processed one. Pour carefully, leaving the sediment in the vessel, or pour through a fine cloth if a completely clear juice is preferred for the table presentation.

For the household that did not press juice in the autumn: Consult the port-town merchants or the grange cooperative store for preserved grape juice of good quality. The grange cooperatives in most Amphoe communities maintain a small supply of preserved festival juice precisely because not every household has the grape cultivation or the pressing equipment to produce its own, and this supply is generally sold at cost to community members as a service to the feast observance rather than as a commercial product.


Recipe 54 — Spiced Grape Preparation for the Feast Week Table

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the spiced grape preparation is a warm beverage made from grape juice combined with gentle spicing and served heated — not boiled, which would alter the character of the juice, but warmed to a comfortable drinking temperature that makes it appropriate for the cooler evenings of the spring feast season in the interior communities and the hill country, where the spring nights are still cold enough to make a warm beverage genuinely welcome at the table. It is not the Passover service preparation, which is served in its simple, unspiced form as described in Recipe 53; it is the feast-week table beverage for the evenings of the subsequent six days, when the ceremonial requirements of the Passover night have been met and the table can settle into the pleasures of the remaining feast days.

This preparation is made fresh for each serving and requires no advance preparation beyond having good grape juice available, which the household that followed the autumn preservation guidance above will have in abundance.

Serves 4 to 6

Ingredients:

  • 4 cups preserved grape juice, as prepared in Recipe 53 or of equivalent quality
  • 1 stick of cinnamon
  • 4 whole cloves
  • 3 cardamom pods, lightly crushed to open them — not ground, not powdered, but lightly cracked so the seeds within are exposed to the liquid during heating
  • 1 strip of dried lemon or orange peel, approximately three inches long, with the pith removed as thoroughly as possible
  • 1 tablespoon honey, optional — to moderate the tartness of a particularly dry or astringent grape juice; taste first and add honey only if the juice’s natural character warrants it, because over-sweetened warmed grape juice loses the refreshing quality of the grape flavor and becomes simply sweet

Method:

Combine all ingredients in a small, heavy-bottomed saucepan. Warm over low heat, stirring occasionally, until the preparation is hot enough to hold in the hands comfortably and produces a visible fragrant steam from the spices, but is not boiling or simmering. The correct temperature is the same gentle warmth specified in Recipe 53 and in Chapter 16: hot enough to be a genuinely warm beverage, not so hot as to boil off the aromatic compounds that the spices have released or to alter the fundamental character of the grape juice. Maintain this gentle warmth for ten minutes to allow the spices to fully infuse the juice, then remove from the heat.

Strain through a fine cloth or sieve into a serving vessel, removing the whole spices and peel. Serve immediately in cups, with a small additional stick of cinnamon in each cup if presentation at the table warrants the gesture.

On the selection of spices: The combination of cinnamon, clove, and cardamom is the Western Reaches standard for this preparation, and it is a combination of long standing in the Bravian household tradition that I find consistently balanced and appropriate. Cinnamon’s warmth and sweetness, clove’s depth and slight bitterness, and cardamom’s floral complexity each contribute something distinct, and the combination is more interesting than any of the three alone. The lemon or orange peel provides a brightness that keeps the spiced preparation from becoming heavy.

The baker who wishes to vary the preparation across the seven days of the feast — using it, as I do, as one of the small daily variations that keep the feast week table from becoming repetitive — can do so by varying the spice combination: ginger root added for warmth and bite, star anise for a more complex anise character, dried rosehips for a slight tartness and a deeper color. All of these are appropriate variations, and the specific combination that works best with a particular grape juice depends partly on the character of the juice itself: a very sweet, ripe juice benefits from spicing that adds complexity and a degree of astringency, while a tarter, more acidic juice benefits from spicing that rounds and softens its character.


Herbal Tisanes of the Bravian Household

The herbal tisane — a preparation made by steeping dried or fresh herbs in hot water and drinking the resulting liquid — occupies a specific and important position in the Bravian household beverage tradition that is quite distinct from the ceremonial and table-beverage roles of wine and grape juice. The tisane is the everyday beverage of the Bravian household throughout the year: the morning beverage of the working household before the day’s labor begins, the evening beverage of the contemplative household after the day’s labor ends, the comfort preparation of the sick room, the thinking drink of the scholar and the planning drink of the household manager. It is present throughout the year and throughout the feast season without any question of appropriateness or theological consideration, because it contains no grain, no leavening, no fermentation of any kind, and no ingredient whose relationship to the feast’s commandments presents any complexity whatsoever.

I include the tisane preparations in this chapter because a complete treatment of the beverages of the feast table would be incomplete without them, and because the tisanes specific to the feast season — both those associated with the spring herbs that come into growth during the feast week and those that have traditional associations with the Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread specifically — deserve documentation alongside the wine and the grape juice preparations that receive most of the seasonal attention.

The following are the tisanes most commonly associated with the feast season across Bravia’s regional household traditions, organized by region and by the timing of their use within the feast week.


Recipe 55 — Chamomile and Honey: The Morning Tisane of the Feast Week

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: chamomile grows readily in the meadows and kitchen gardens of the Western Reaches and flowers in late spring, which means that during the feast season the first chamomile flowers of the year are available — barely, in the cooler years, abundantly in the warmer ones — for the morning tisane that is the traditional opening of each feast-week day in the Western Reaches household tradition. Chamomile dried from the previous summer is equally good if the fresh flowers are not yet available: the flavor difference between fresh and properly dried chamomile is a matter of subtlety rather than substance, and the dried preparation is what most households use for the majority of the feast week.

This tisane is associated with the morning rather than the evening because chamomile’s mild, apple-scented gentleness is the flavor of a quiet morning beginning rather than an evening closing, and because the honey dissolved in the warm tisane provides a small, gentle sweetness that is the appropriate way to begin a day of the feast: not extravagant, not austere, but warmly moderate, which is the register of the Bravian feast morning table generally.

Serves 2

Ingredients:

  • 2 tablespoons dried chamomile flowers, or 4 tablespoons fresh flowers if available — the larger quantity for fresh because the flavor compounds are less concentrated in fresh flowers than in dried
  • 2 cups water, heated until just below boiling — chamomile tisane should not be made with fully boiling water, which destroys some of the more delicate aromatic compounds of the flower and produces a slightly harsh result; the water should be hot enough to produce vigorous steam but should be removed from the heat before it reaches a full boil
  • 1 teaspoon good honey per cup, or to taste

Method:

Place the chamomile flowers in a small, clean teapot or a heatproof vessel with a lid. Pour the hot water over the flowers. Cover and allow to steep for five minutes — not longer, because chamomile steeped beyond five minutes develops a slight bitterness from the breakdown of certain compounds in the flower that the five-minute steep preserves intact. Strain through a fine sieve into cups. Dissolve the honey in each cup, stirring until the honey is fully incorporated. The correct serving temperature is warm enough to be a genuine hot beverage but cool enough to drink without discomfort: a cup of chamomile-honey tisane should be drinkable immediately rather than requiring a period of cooling.

Serve at the morning table alongside the first day’s simple flatbread breakfast — the plain matzah or the oil-enriched round of Chapter 11, with soft cheese and a small dish of honey — as the opening beverage of the feast day. There is something in the combination of chamomile’s gentleness and honey’s warmth and the plain flatbread’s direct grain flavor that constitutes, for me, the essential flavor of a feast-week morning: simple, honest, and genuinely good in a way that does not announce itself but simply is.


Recipe 56 — Peppermint and Wild Herb Tisane: The Digestive of the Feast Week Table

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the peppermint tisane is the post-meal beverage of the feast week table throughout Bravia, served after the main meal in the late afternoon or the evening as the digestive beverage that closes the day’s primary eating. Peppermint grows readily throughout Bravia — it is one of the few herbs that spreads of its own accord through a kitchen garden with the enthusiasm of a plant that has decided to be helpful and needs no encouragement — and it is one of the most universally present herbs in the Bravian household pantry in both fresh and dried form throughout the year.

The addition of wild herbs to the peppermint tisane varies considerably by region and by what the spring landscape of each area provides: in the Western Reaches, wild thyme from the hill country and lemon balm from the coastal meadows are common additions; in the Delta settlements, fresh coriander leaf appears in some preparations; in the interior communities, dried lemon verbena or dried lemon peel serves the brightening function that fresh citrus herbs provide in the regions where they grow. The framework below accommodates this regional variation while maintaining the peppermint as the primary character of the preparation.

Serves 4

Ingredients:

  • 3 tablespoons dried peppermint, or 6 tablespoons fresh peppermint leaves, torn roughly — the tearing releases the mint oils without the bruising that chopping produces, which generates a slightly harsh character
  • 1 tablespoon secondary herb of your region’s choice: dried lemon balm, fresh coriander leaf, dried lemon verbena, dried lemon peel, or fresh thyme in small quantity
  • 4 cups water, heated to just below boiling
  • Honey to taste, optional — I drink this without honey and prefer it that way, because the peppermint’s own natural sweetness and the slight sharpness of the secondary herb are a combination that honey moderates in a direction I do not want; others disagree and add honey readily

Method:

Combine the peppermint and the secondary herb in a covered vessel. Pour the hot water over the herbs, cover, and steep for four to six minutes — longer than the chamomile, because peppermint’s robust essential oils require more time to fully infuse the water and because peppermint, unlike chamomile, does not become objectionably bitter with slightly longer steeping. Strain into cups or a serving vessel. Add honey if desired.

Serve warm or, for the summer evenings of the feast season in the southern communities where the feast week falls in warm weather, slightly cooled or at room temperature. A peppermint tisane that has been allowed to cool is a pleasant beverage in warm conditions and is quite different from the warm version in its character: the coolness moderates the peppermint’s sharpness and makes the secondary herb’s contribution more prominent.

On the digestive function of peppermint at the feast table: The peppermint tisane’s role as a digestive after the feast meal is not merely conventional but practical. The feast week meals, particularly around the Passover table with its lamb stew and its rich oil-enriched preparations and its dairy accompaniments, are generous and substantial meals whose digestion is genuinely aided by the mild carminative properties of peppermint. The Bravian tradition of the post-meal peppermint tisane is as much a practical health practice as a culinary one, and it is a practice that the feast meal, with its particular combination of rich preparations, especially rewards.


Recipe 57 — The Long Tisane: A Contemplative Preparation for the Feast Season

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the long tisane is not the tisane of the busy morning or the post-meal digestive but the tisane of the contemplative evening, associated in the Bravian religious tradition with the private reflection and the household study that are considered appropriate activities during the feast week. It is brewed differently from the quick tisanes of Recipes 55 and 56 — steeped for a longer period at a lower temperature, in the manner of a traditional herbal decoction rather than a quick infusion — and the result is a preparation of deeper color and more complex flavor that rewards slow drinking and extended attention rather than the quick cup of the working morning.

The specific herbs in the long tisane vary more widely across Bravia’s regional traditions than any other preparation in this chapter, because the choice of herbs for an evening contemplative beverage is a deeply personal and deeply regional matter, shaped by what is available, what is traditional in the household, and what specific qualities the drinker is seeking. I offer the following as the preparation I make for myself during the feast week evenings when the bakery is closed and the festival table has been cleared and the household settles into the quieter hours: it is my own long tisane, drawn from the ingredients available in the Porterville kitchen garden and the hill country herb sources that I have used for many years, and the reader should understand it as a specific, personal formulation rather than a prescriptive standard.

The long tisane is the preparation I associate most directly with the private, quiet dimension of the feast season — the dimension that the Passover table and the grange gathering and the community observances address collectively, but that is also observed individually in each household as a matter of personal reflection and personal renewal. The feast week, in the Bravian understanding, is not only a communal observance but a personal one, and the long tisane of the evening hour is, for me, the beverage of that personal dimension.

Serves 1 to 2 for an extended evening

Ingredients:

  • 1 tablespoon dried linden flower — linden grows in the older residential areas of Porterville and along the edges of certain of the meadows north of the town, and its flowers dried in late summer produce a tisane of remarkable gentleness and sweetness that I consider the base note of this preparation
  • 1 teaspoon dried elderflower, if available — elderflower is not universally available throughout Bravia but appears in the hill country communities and in some of the older Amphoe plantings; it adds a complex floral character to the preparation that is distinctive and very pleasant
  • 1 teaspoon dried rosehip — the fruit of the wild rose, dried from the autumn harvest; rosehips contribute a mild tartness and a warmth of color to the preparation, deepening its character without asserting themselves at the expense of the gentler flowers
  • ½ teaspoon dried lemon balm — for brightness and a very mild citrus-adjacent note that keeps the preparation from becoming too sweet
  • 1 teaspoon honey, added to the finished preparation
  • 2 cups water, heated until just below boiling

Method:

Combine all dried herbs in a covered vessel. Pour the hot water over the herbs and cover. Allow to steep for ten minutes — considerably longer than the quick tisane preparations, because this longer steep at the slightly lower temperature of just-below-boiling water extracts the deeper, more complex compounds of the herbs without the harshness that fully boiling water and long steeping would produce in the chamomile. After ten minutes, strain slowly through a fine cloth into a cup or a small vessel that can be kept warm during the drinking.

Add the honey while the preparation is still very warm and stir until dissolved. The honey’s contribution to this preparation is more significant than in the chamomile tisane: the linden and elderflower’s natural sweetness is gentle enough that the honey rounds and completes it rather than merely adding to an already-present sweetness, and the specific honey used matters somewhat. I use a lighter wildflower honey rather than the robust dark honey of the hill country, because the preparation’s character is gentle and should not be overwhelmed by a strongly assertive honey.

Drink slowly, in a warm room, in the evening. This is not a beverage of ceremony or obligation but a preparation of personal pleasure and personal reflection, and it is drunk in whatever manner and with whatever thoughts are appropriate to the hour and the person drinking it.


A Note on Water

I want to close the recipe section of this chapter with a word about the preparation that underlies every tisane and every hot beverage in this chapter and that deserves more acknowledgment than it typically receives in a book about baking and cooking: water.

The water available in different regions of Bravia varies considerably in character, as I noted in Chapter 4 in the context of Level 3 flatbread preparation. Hard water, with its mineral content, produces slightly different results in baking and noticeably different results in tisane preparation: a hard water tisane will be slightly more astringent in character than the same preparation made with softer water, and the mineral content of the water will be perceptible as a faint metallic or chalky background note in delicate preparations like the chamomile tisane where nothing else competes with it.

In the limestone regions of the Western Reaches hill country — Porterville sits at the edge of this zone — this hard water character is simply a fact of the kitchen and of the table, and the households that have grown up drinking it have calibrated their preparations accordingly. The chamomile tisane of the hill country household tastes slightly different from the same preparation made in a port-town kitchen where the water is softer, and this is not a defect but a regional characteristic in the same way that the lamb fat flatbread of the hill country is a regional characteristic: it is what it is, and it is part of the flavor of the place.

Good water, clean and appropriate to the preparations made from it, is the invisible ingredient of everything in this book — the base of every dough, the medium of every tisane, the liquid of every braising pot. The feast week’s drinks are only as good as the water they are made from, and the baker who pays attention to her flour and her fat and her oil and her honey should pay equal attention to her water, which is the simplest and the most fundamental ingredient of the festival kitchen and which, when it is genuinely good, contributes a quality to the table that no other ingredient can provide or replace.


The Feast Week Table Complete

We have now, between this chapter and the fourteen that preceded it in the recipe sections of this book, addressed the full range of what the Bravian feast week table can offer: the bread in its three levels and its many regional forms; the savory accompaniments in their soups and stews and spreads; the dairy preparations from fresh curd to long-cultured pressed cheese; the eggs in their ceremonial and everyday forms; and the beverages from the commanded cups of the Passover service to the contemplative long tisane of the feast-week evening. The table that can be built from these preparations is a table of genuine abundance and genuine variety — not the abundance of excess, which is not the Bravian way, but the abundance of careful attention paid to a wide range of good things over the course of seven full days.

I want to say something about the seven days before I close, because the number is not incidental to the experience of the feast and not incidental to the use of this book.

Seven days is a long time to observe a single feast. It is long enough that the first day’s preparations — the Passover table with its ceremonial weight and its particular combination of flatbread and bitter herbs and lamb and wine — recede into a different character by the seventh day’s quieter, more familiar eating. It is long enough that the baker has time to bake many batches of many preparations and to develop, across the week, a relationship with the unleavened kitchen that a single observance day would not permit. It is long enough that the household settles into the feast rather than merely observing it and then returning to ordinary life: the feast week becomes its own kind of ordinary life, temporarily, and in this temporary ordinariness there is something that a single ceremonial day cannot achieve.

The bread of affliction, eaten every day for seven days, stops being a symbol at some point and becomes simply what one eats — which is, I think, exactly the intention. The removing of leaven from the house for a week is not a reminder of the Exodus in the way that a photograph reminds us of a moment. It is a participation: a week of actually living in a different relationship to the basic material of daily bread, which is a participation in the memory of our fathers who lived in a different relationship to bread for all the years of their affliction and on the night of their departure and in the years of the wilderness that followed.

Seven days is the right length for this participation. Not so short that it remains entirely symbolic, not so long that it becomes a burden the commandment never intended. Seven days of genuinely eating unleavened bread, genuinely drinking the wine of the table and the tisanes of the evening, genuinely bringing the full attention of the household kitchen to the preparation of good food within the constraints the season sets — seven days of that constitutes an experience that changes the baker’s relationship to her materials in a way that lasts beyond the week itself and enriches every subsequent year’s observation.

I have been observing this feast for more than fifty years. The first days of the feast still taste different from the last days, and the last days of the feast still taste different from the first day after the feast, when the sourdough starter comes back out of the cold cellar and the first leavened preparation of the new year comes off the griddle. I eat that first piece of leavened bread every year with a genuine pleasure at its return — a pleasure that would not be as sharp or as genuine if the seven days had not been fully and carefully kept.

The feast gives back what it takes, and it gives it back with interest. This is the pattern of the covenant that the feast commemorates, and the baker who keeps the feast fully, across all seven days and at whatever level of observance her household holds, will understand this in her hands and in her kitchen and at her table, in the specific and irreplaceable way that only the doing of a thing teaches.

That is what this book has been trying to serve, from the first words of the foreword to these last words of the final chapter.

May your kitchen be well-supplied, your griddle well-heated, and your feast fully kept.

Vreni Hochstrasser Porterville, Western Reaches The Stone Hearth Bakery Year 3015


The Back Matter — Quick Reference Chart, Substitution Guide, Glossary of Bravian Baking Terms, and Acknowledgments — begins on the following page.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 16 — Dairy and Egg Accompaniments

There is a category of knowledge in the Bravian domestic tradition that sits between cooking and keeping, and the dairy preparations of the festival kitchen belong to it. They are not complicated in the way that a braised lamb stew is complicated, requiring sustained attention to heat and timing and the management of multiple elements simultaneously. They are patient preparations, requiring a different kind of attention: the attention of waiting, of watching for the quiet signs that something has happened — a curd has formed, a culture has set, a cheese has reached the correct degree of firmness — and of trusting that the time and the temperature and the quality of the starting materials will do the work that no amount of active intervention can accomplish more quickly.

I was taught the dairy preparations of the festival kitchen by my mother, which is the expected answer, but also by the wife of the priest who served our Amphoe community throughout my childhood, a woman of considerable practical intelligence whose name was Rahel and who kept, in the cellar beneath the presbyterium, a dairy operation of quiet but genuine ambition. She made cheeses of several types throughout the year, maintained a perpetual cultured butter culture, and produced during the feast season a range of dairy preparations that were, in my childhood estimation, the finest things at the festival table — finer than the lamb, finer than the bread, finer than the honey cake that my mother brought every year to the grange gathering. I have since revised this childhood ranking in favor of a more balanced assessment, but the memory of Rahel’s soft festival cheeses and her cultured preparations has stayed with me clearly enough that I can still taste them when I think carefully about the feast seasons of my youth, which is the test I apply to any food preparation when I want to know whether it was genuinely excellent or merely pleasant.

They were genuinely excellent. This chapter is my attempt to provide what she knew to the baker who did not have the advantage of learning it from her directly.


On Dairy and the Festival Season

The dairy preparations of the festival kitchen present no theological complexity of the kind that the leavening question generates throughout Parts Two through Four of this book. They contain no leavening of any kind, they require no modification for any level of observance, and they are appropriate at the festival table in any combination and at any meal. The only question the dairy-keeping household must ask during the feast season is whether the culture used to produce its cultured dairy preparations contains any grain-based starter — certain older cultured butter and soft cheese traditions in some communities use a grain-fermented starter culture as an initial inoculating agent — and if so, whether the small quantity of grain ferment present in the culture constitutes leaven in any meaningful sense. This is a question I leave to the individual household and its religious advisors, noting only that the preparations in this chapter are written with non-grain starter cultures throughout, which resolves the question entirely for the baker who wishes to avoid it.

The dairy preparations of the festival kitchen divide naturally into three categories, which correspond to the three sections of this chapter: fresh soft cheeses made during the feast week from whole milk, which are quick preparations of one to two days’ duration and represent the most directly useful and most immediately accessible of the dairy preparations; egg preparations including the hard-boiled and ceremonially roasted eggs of the Passover table; and the cultured dairy dips and spreads — yogurt, cultured cream, and their derivatives — that provide the richest and most varied range of dairy accompaniment available for the unleavened table.

Each category makes somewhat different demands on the baker’s time and organizational attention, and understanding these demands in advance allows the dairy preparations to be integrated into the feast-week kitchen’s production calendar without conflict. The fresh soft cheeses should be started two days before they are needed, which for the Passover table means beginning the day before the feast. The cultured preparations take longer to develop their full character and are better started three to four days before they are wanted, making them appropriate projects for the days immediately before the feast begins. The egg preparations are immediate, requiring no advance preparation beyond having the eggs at hand.


Fresh Soft Cheeses for the Unleavened Table

The fresh soft cheese of the Bravian festival tradition is, in its simplest form, nothing more than good whole milk heated to a specific temperature, combined with an acid that causes the milk proteins to coagulate into curds, and then drained of its whey through a cloth until the correct degree of firmness is achieved. This description makes it sound simpler than it feels in practice, because the variables within each of these steps — the quality of the milk, the temperature at which coagulation is induced, the type and quantity of acid used, the duration of the draining and the degree to which the draining is assisted by gentle pressure — produce results that range from a loose, delicate fresh curd that barely holds its shape when lifted from the cloth to a firmly pressed cheese that can be sliced cleanly and kept for several days without deterioration. Understanding these variables and managing them deliberately is the curriculum of the festival soft cheese section of this chapter.

On milk quality: The character of the finished cheese is determined primarily by the character of the milk, more directly and more legibly than in any leavened preparation, because the cheesemaking process concentrates the milk’s qualities rather than transforming them. Good milk from well-kept animals, produced in the spring season when the pasture is at its most abundant and the milk’s fat and protein content is highest, produces a fresh cheese of a richness and complexity that milk from lesser sources cannot approach. In Bravia, where the local dairy tradition is strong and where the grange communities typically maintain shared dairy herds whose management is a matter of communal attention and pride, accessing milk of good quality during the feast season is not usually difficult for the household within the Amphoe community. For the port-town baker who is more remote from the pastoral sources of good dairy, the covered milk market that operates in most of the larger port towns provides a reliable if somewhat more expensive alternative.

The milk should be whole — not skimmed, not reduced, not processed beyond the separation of cream that is a natural consequence of letting fresh milk stand — and it should be as fresh as possible. Milk that has been standing for more than a day will produce a soft cheese with a sharper, more acidic character than fresh milk, because the naturally occurring bacteria in raw milk have already begun their work. This sharper character is not necessarily unpleasant — Rahel, in fact, preferred it, and used day-old milk deliberately for one of her festival preparations — but it should be understood as a variable rather than encountered as a surprise.

On the acid: The two acids most commonly used to produce the soft cheeses of the Bravian festival tradition are apple cider vinegar and lemon juice. Both cause the milk proteins to coagulate by lowering the pH of the milk, and both produce excellent results with some differences in character. Lemon juice produces a slightly cleaner, brighter flavor in the finished cheese and is the preference of the coastal and port-town tradition where citrus is readily available. Apple cider vinegar produces a slightly more complex and mildly tangy background flavor that is the preference of the interior communities and the hill country, where lemons are less readily obtained and vinegar is a household staple. Both are correct. A third option, the use of a cultured buttermilk starter rather than direct acid addition, produces a slower coagulation and a more complex flavor in the finished cheese, and I describe this variation in the cultured cheese section below.


Recipe 46 — Bravian Festival Fresh Curd Cheese

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: this is the simplest and most immediately accessible of the fresh cheese preparations, and it is the one I recommend for the baker who has not made cheese before and who is beginning this section of the festival preparation. It requires no special equipment beyond a large pot, a thermometer if you have one and patience if you do not, and a piece of clean cloth through which to drain the whey. It can be made the day before the Passover table is set, which integrates it naturally into the pre-feast production calendar without adding pressure to the feast-day kitchen.

The fresh curd cheese I describe here is a preparation of considerable versatility: it can be served soft and loose from the draining cloth as a dipping preparation, pressed to a firmer consistency for slicing and serving alongside the crackers and flatbreads of Parts Two through Four, or seasoned in various ways before or after draining for specific flavor profiles appropriate to different positions at the festival table.

Makes approximately 1 pound of fresh curd cheese from 1 gallon of whole milk

Ingredients:

  • 1 gallon whole fresh milk — the yield of approximately one pound of fresh cheese from one gallon of milk is a reliable rule of thumb across a wide range of milk sources, though milk with a higher fat and protein content will yield somewhat more and milk of lesser richness somewhat less
  • ¼ cup apple cider vinegar or fresh lemon juice — begin with this quantity and have additional available, because the amount required to produce a clean separation of curds from whey varies with the acidity and freshness of the milk
  • 1 teaspoon fine salt, added after draining

Method:

Pour the milk into a large, heavy-bottomed pot and heat over medium heat, stirring occasionally to prevent scorching at the base. The correct temperature for acid-set fresh cheese is what I would describe as hot but not simmering: the milk should produce occasional small bubbles at the edges and a noticeable amount of steam, but should not be boiling or even approaching a full simmer. If you have a cooking thermometer, this is approximately seventy-five to eighty degrees on the Bravian temperature scale. If you do not have a thermometer — and in this preparation, the thermometer is a convenience rather than a necessity — the correct temperature is the temperature at which a finger held in the milk for three seconds becomes too uncomfortable to keep there, which is a reliable if informal indicator.

When the milk has reached the correct temperature, add the acid in a slow, steady pour, stirring gently as you pour. Almost immediately, the milk will begin to separate into white curds and yellowish-green whey: the proteins of the milk, destabilized by the acid, coagulate into solid masses that pull away from the surrounding liquid in a process that is, when first witnessed, rather startling in its speed and decisiveness. Stir gently once or twice to encourage even coagulation throughout the pot, then stop stirring and allow the separation to complete undisturbed for five minutes. Do not continue stirring after the initial combination: vigorous stirring after coagulation begins breaks the forming curds into very fine particles that drain inefficiently through the cloth and produce a looser, less satisfying finished cheese.

After five minutes, assess the separation: the curds should be distinct and clearly pulled away from the whey, which should be relatively clear and yellowish-green rather than still milky. If the whey still appears milky and the curds are soft and ill-defined, add another tablespoon of acid, stir once gently, and wait an additional two minutes. Milky whey indicates insufficient acid and the coagulation is incomplete; additional acid will complete the separation. Clear whey and distinct curds indicate successful coagulation.

Line a colander with a double layer of clean cloth — a cloth through which the whey can drain but which will retain the curds. Muslin, a closely woven linen, or a clean kitchen cloth that you do not mind dedicating to cheesemaking work are all appropriate. Place the colander over a large bowl to catch the whey.

Ladle the curds gently into the lined colander — do not pour the pot’s contents in a single rush, which would break the curds and drive them through the cloth; ladle carefully, allowing each addition to drain slightly before adding more. Allow the curds to drain freely for thirty minutes without any disturbance, during which time a substantial quantity of whey will drip through the cloth and collect in the bowl below. The drained whey is not waste: it is an excellent liquid for unleavened dough preparations, as I noted in Chapter 3, and should be kept and used.

After thirty minutes of free draining, the curds will have consolidated somewhat but will still be soft and moist: this is the loose, spoonable fresh curd suitable for dipping preparations and for use as a filling in the filled preparations of Chapter 6. If a firmer, more sliceable cheese is wanted, gather the corners of the cloth around the curds and tie them together to form a bundle. Hang the bundle from a hook or a wooden spoon laid across the top of the colander and allow to drain for an additional two to four hours for a soft but sliceable consistency, or overnight in the cold room for a very firm fresh cheese that can be unmolded from the cloth, sliced cleanly, and served as you would serve a pressed cheese.

After draining to the desired consistency, transfer the cheese to a bowl, add the teaspoon of fine salt, and work it through the cheese gently with a spoon or with clean hands. The salt is not merely seasoning: it also acts as a preservative that extends the keeping quality of the cheese from one to two days for an unsalted fresh curd to three to four days for a salted preparation.

Serving suggestions: Plain, at room temperature, alongside any of the festival flatbreads and crackers. Drizzled with honey and scattered with ground cinnamon for the sweet festival table. Combined with finely minced fresh herbs — whatever the spring garden provides — and seasoned with additional salt and black pepper for a savory spread. Crumbled over the roasted root vegetable spread of Recipe 43 as a finishing element that provides richness and a contrasting white visual presence against the deep caramel color of the roasted vegetables. Eaten directly from a spoon with nothing but its own fresh dairy flavor for company, which is not an official serving suggestion but an entirely appropriate use of a preparation of this quality.

On the whey: Set the drained whey aside in a covered container in the cold room. Use it in place of the water in any of the flatbread or cracker recipes of Parts Two through Four, where it contributes a background dairy flavor that is subtle but perceptible and that gives the bread a slight additional tenderness from its whey proteins. It can also be used as the base of a simple soup — heated gently with a few root vegetable pieces, some herbs, and salt — or consumed directly as a beverage, which is a practice recorded in the oldest Bravian household accounts as the traditional morning drink of the dairy-keeping household during the feast season.


Recipe 47 — Pressed Herb Cheese

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the pressed herb cheese is the festival soft cheese most commonly offered at the Stone Hearth Bakery during the feast week, and the preparation that has received the most consistent appreciation from customers who come in search of dairy accompaniments for the festival flatbreads and crackers. It begins from the same fresh curd as Recipe 46 but is pressed under a weight for an extended period — typically overnight — and is seasoned throughout its interior with dried herbs that distribute through the curd during the pressing and produce a preparation of much greater flavor complexity than the plain fresh cheese. The result is a firm, sliceable cheese with a distinctive herbed interior and a clean, firm rind formed by the cloth during pressing.

Makes one pressed cheese of approximately ¾ pound

Ingredients:

  • 1 batch of fresh curd, drained for thirty minutes as in Recipe 46 — before the long pressing stage
  • 1½ teaspoons fine salt
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme, crumbled to as fine a texture as possible
  • ½ teaspoon dried rosemary, crumbled very finely — the rosemary must be quite finely crumbled because whole rosemary pieces in a pressed cheese are unpleasant to encounter in the slice; the herb should be present as flavor rather than as identifiable fragments
  • ½ teaspoon dried marjoram
  • ¼ teaspoon coarse black pepper, finely ground

Method:

Transfer the thirty-minute-drained curd to a clean bowl. Add the salt, thyme, rosemary, marjoram, and pepper and work them evenly through the curd with clean hands, pressing and turning the curd gently until the herbs are uniformly distributed throughout. The curd at this stage is still soft enough to work with and firm enough to accept the herb distribution without breaking down into a liquid: this is the correct window for seasoning, and the baker should not delay it or the curd will have drained further and be less amenable to even mixing.

Transfer the seasoned curd back to the cloth-lined colander. Gather the cloth corners and tie them as before. Place the cloth bundle on a clean, flat surface — the colander set in the bowl works well for this, with the bundle sitting on the inside bottom of the colander — and place a flat weight on top of the bundle. A plate weighted with a heavy stone or a filled jar is the traditional pressing arrangement in the Bravian household; a purpose-made cheese press, if the household has one, is more effective but not necessary. The weight should be sufficient to compress the bundle gently and encourage drainage without crushing it so forcefully that the cheese is expelled through the cloth: approximately two to three pounds of weight is correct for this quantity of curd.

Place the weighted bundle in the cold room and allow to press for a minimum of eight hours and up to eighteen hours. The longer pressing time produces a firmer, more sliceable cheese; the shorter time produces a cheese that is somewhat softer and more spreadable. For slicing alongside festival crackers and flatbreads, twelve to fourteen hours of pressing is the sweet point that produces a cheese with sufficient firmness to hold a clean slice while retaining enough moisture for a pleasant, yielding texture in the mouth.

After pressing, unwrap the cloth carefully. The finished pressed herb cheese will be a compact, firm disk with the impression of the cloth’s weave on its surface, pale white throughout with visible green-grey flecks of herb distributed through the interior. It should hold its shape cleanly when placed on a cutting surface and should slice without crumbling when a sharp knife is drawn through it decisively.

Store wrapped in a fresh piece of clean cloth in the cold room. This cheese keeps well for four to five days, developing a slightly firmer texture and a more complex flavor as it ages. By the third day, the herb flavors will have fully infused the cheese and the flavor will be noticeably more developed than it was at the time of pressing. This is the character of a well-made pressed herb cheese: it is better on day three than on day one, and the patient baker who makes it before the feast begins will be rewarded at the mid-feast table.

Variation for the sweet festival table: Substitute the dried herbs and black pepper with a tablespoon of honey worked through the curd before pressing, and add the finely grated zest of half an orange and a quarter teaspoon of ground cinnamon. The resulting sweet pressed cheese is unusual in character — simultaneously dairy-fresh and gently sweet and warmly spiced — and is a preparation of considerable versatility at the sweet festival table, particularly alongside the honey cake of Recipe 11 and the fruit-filled pastry rounds of Recipe 12, where its gentle sweetness complements the honey preparations without competing with them.


Hard-Boiled and Roasted Egg Preparations

The egg occupies a specific and theologically significant position at the Passover table in the Bravian tradition that is distinct from its role in the rest of the festival kitchen, and I want to address this position before the recipes, because understanding it shapes how the egg preparations of this section are understood and served.

The Passover table of the Bravian household traditionally includes a roasted egg alongside the ceremonial preparations: the unleavened bread, the bitter herbs, the lamb, and the wine or grape juice. The roasted egg’s symbolic meaning is interpreted variously in different Bravian communities, but the most common understanding, consistent with the older Bravian religious scholarship that I have consulted on the matter, is that the roasted egg is a memorial offering — a symbol of the korban chagigah, the festival sacrifice offered in the temple at Jerusalem in the ancient period, which is no longer offered in its original form but is remembered at the Passover table through the presence of the roasted egg. In this understanding, the roasted egg is not primarily food but symbol: it is present on the table as a reminder, and the question of whether it is eaten or not is secondary to the question of whether it is present and understood.

In practice, most Bravian households do both: they place the roasted egg on the table as the tradition requires, observe its presence and meaning in the context of the Passover service, and then eat it, because the Bravian character does not tend toward the performance of observance that produces no practical result, and an egg roasted specifically for the table is a good egg that deserves to be eaten as well as contemplated.

Beyond the ceremonial roasted egg of the Passover table, the egg in its hard-boiled and roasted forms appears throughout the festival week as one of the most versatile and most useful accompaniments to the unleavened preparations of this book. It provides complete protein, portable nutrition, and a flavor and textural character that pairs well with every level and category of flatbread and cracker described in Parts Two through Four. I address the practical preparations below.


Recipe 48 — The Passover Table Roasted Egg

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the roasted egg of the Passover table is prepared differently from the hard-boiled egg of ordinary kitchen practice, and the difference is not merely aesthetic. The direct exposure to dry heat — whether from the fire, a hot griddle, or the oven — produces a cooked egg whose interior character is different from a boiled one: the white is firmer and slightly drier, with a faint toasted quality at the surface, and the yolk is fully cooked throughout and has developed the pale, slightly crumbly texture of a long-cooked egg yolk. The shell, partially charred in the traditional preparation over an open fire, gives the egg a distinctive speckled appearance and a faint smoky character that permeates the shell into the white nearest to it.

I provide both the traditional open-fire method and the oven method, because not every household has access to an appropriate open fire, and both produce a correctly prepared Passover table egg.

Makes as many as required — typically one per place setting at the Passover table

Method — open fire or direct flame:

Place whole, unwashed eggs directly in the coals of a low fire or, in a household without an open hearth, directly on the grate above a gas flame turned to its lowest setting. The eggs will rest directly on the hot surface without any intermediate vessel or water. Turn them with tongs every five minutes to ensure even exposure. After fifteen to twenty minutes of turning, the shells will be partially blackened and cracked in places, the white nearest the shell will be firm and dry to the touch through the cracks, and the egg will feel very light when lifted, indicating that the interior has fully cooked. Remove and allow to cool before placing on the Passover table.

Method — oven roasting:

Place the whole eggs directly on the oven rack at a high temperature, with a baking sheet on the rack below to catch any egg that might crack during roasting. Roast for thirty to thirty-five minutes, until the shells are very lightly browned in places — the oven’s dry heat will not produce the same degree of charring as direct flame, and the visual result is more subtle — and the egg rattles very slightly in its shell when shaken, indicating that the interior has separated somewhat from the shell as it dried and contracted. Remove from the oven and cool before placing on the table.

To eat: Peel the roasted egg, which will come away from the shell with a slight resistance compared to a boiled egg, revealing a white of firm, slightly dry character and a yolk that is fully set and crumbles cleanly when pressed. At the Passover table, the roasted egg is traditionally eaten with a pinch of salt, often dipped lightly in the salt water that also appears on the Passover table as a symbol of the tears of the bondage, before being eaten alongside the bitter herbs and the unleavened bread.


Recipe 49 — Festival Hard-Boiled Eggs with Salt and Herb

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the hard-boiled egg of the festival week is less ceremonial and more practical than the Passover table roasted egg, and it appears throughout the seven days as one of the simplest and most universally appropriate accompaniments to the unleavened preparations. I include it as a recipe in the full sense rather than simply as a technique note because the preparation of a truly excellent hard-boiled egg — one with a fully set but not rubbery white and a yolk that is cooked through without the grey ring of overcooking — requires more attention to timing and method than the apparent simplicity of the preparation suggests, and because the salting and herb treatment I describe below elevates the hard-boiled egg from a utilitarian accompaniment to a genuinely pleasant element of the festival table.

Makes as many as required

Ingredients:

  • Eggs, as many as needed
  • Fine salt and coarse salt
  • Dried herbs for serving: thyme, rosemary, or a combination, crumbled finely
  • Good olive oil for drizzling, optional

Method:

Place the eggs in a single layer in a heavy-bottomed saucepan. Cover with cold water by at least an inch above the top of the eggs. Bring to a full, rolling boil over medium-high heat. The moment the water reaches a full boil, remove the pan from the heat, cover with a tight-fitting lid, and allow the eggs to sit in the covered hot water for exactly eleven minutes for a yolk that is fully set throughout but still a deep golden yellow without any grey discoloration at its surface. Shorter than eleven minutes produces a yolk with a soft, not-quite-set center; longer produces the grey ring of sulfur compounds released by overcooking that signals an egg left too long in the water.

After eleven minutes, transfer the eggs immediately to a bowl of cold water — genuinely cold, with ice if available — and allow to cool completely before peeling. The cold water stops the cooking immediately and prevents the grey ring from developing even in a correctly timed egg, because the egg continues to cook slightly from residual heat after leaving the hot water unless actively cooled.

Peel the cooled eggs and place them on a clean cloth. To serve as a festival table accompaniment: cut each egg in half lengthwise, place cut-side up on a serving dish, and season each half with a small pinch of fine salt, a scatter of finely crumbled dried thyme or rosemary, and, if desired, a very small drizzle of good olive oil across the surface. The oil is optional but produces a preparation of noticeably better character than the unseasoned egg, because the combination of the warm, rounded flavor of the cooked yolk with the bright, slightly bitter character of a good olive oil is one of those simple pairings that requires no embellishment to justify itself.

Serve alongside the hard-boiled egg: a small dish of good coarse salt for dipping, in the tradition of the Passover table salt water but in its plain form. The ritual dipping of the egg in salt water is specific to the Passover service; outside of that context, plain coarse salt alongside the boiled egg is the correct and sufficient accompaniment.

On large-scale production of hard-boiled eggs for the communal table: The grange hall gathering’s egg preparation is a production task rather than a domestic one, and the timing method above must be adapted for large quantities. The maximum effective quantity for the timed method is approximately twenty-four eggs per batch in a large pot: more eggs than this cannot be brought to the boil quickly enough to ensure even cooking throughout the batch, and the eggs at the center of a very large batch will be undercooked when the timing that correctly cooks the outer eggs is applied. Work in batches of twenty-four or fewer and use the same eleven-minute timing throughout.


Cultured Dairy Dips and Spreads

The cultured dairy preparations of the festival kitchen are the most time-intensive of the dairy accompaniments but also the most flavorful and the most versatile. They require the patience I described at the beginning of this chapter — the patience of waiting for a culture to set, a cheese to develop — and they reward that patience with preparations of genuine complexity and genuine character that the quick fresh cheeses, however good, cannot quite match.

The three primary cultured dairy preparations appropriate for the festival table are labneh — a strained yogurt of increasing firmness depending on the duration of straining — cultured cream preparations that occupy the territory between fresh butter and a soft cream cheese, and a long-cultured fresh cheese produced by inoculating whole milk with a buttermilk or yogurt culture rather than with direct acid addition. I address each in sequence.


Recipe 50 — Labneh: Strained Yogurt in Three Consistencies

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: labneh is among the most ancient dairy preparations in the biblical tradition and one whose production requires the absolute minimum of equipment and technique. It is yogurt — good, full-fat yogurt cultured from whole milk — strained through cloth until the desired consistency is achieved, seasoned with salt, and served. The three consistencies I describe correspond to three different positions at the festival table: the loose, dipping consistency appropriate as a spread for the festival flatbreads; the medium, serving consistency appropriate for individual portions alongside the crackers and hand pies of Parts Two and Three; and the firm, formed consistency appropriate as a cheese-like preparation that can be rolled in herbs and oil and served as a centerpiece preparation at the dairy portion of the festival table.

The yogurt used as the base for labneh should be whole-milk yogurt of the best available quality: full-fat, without stabilizers or thickeners or any additions beyond the milk and the live culture. In the Bravian household tradition, the yogurt is made at home from whole fresh milk inoculated with a small quantity of reserved culture from a previous batch, and this household yogurt is the correct base for labneh. The commercially available yogurt of the port-town markets varies in quality and suitability: read the ingredient list and use only a product that contains no additions beyond milk and active culture.

Makes approximately 1 cup of medium-consistency labneh from 2 cups of whole-milk yogurt

Method:

Line a fine-mesh strainer or colander with a double layer of clean cloth and set it over a bowl. Pour the yogurt into the cloth-lined strainer. Gather the edges of the cloth loosely around the yogurt — not tightly, which would press the yogurt rather than allowing it to drain by gravity — and set the bowl in the cold room.

The three consistencies are achieved by varying the draining time:

Loose dipping consistency: Drain for four to six hours. The finished labneh at this consistency is thicker than the original yogurt but still spoonable and will spread easily onto flatbread without resistance. It retains a pronounced yogurt tanginess and a high moisture content, and it is at this consistency most useful as a dipping preparation for the thin crackers and flatbreads of Part Two through Part Four.

Medium serving consistency: Drain for twelve to sixteen hours. The finished labneh has lost a substantial portion of its whey and is now a thick, creamy preparation that holds its shape when scooped with a spoon but is still soft enough to spread easily. At this consistency it can be placed in small individual portions on a plate and served as a cheese-adjacent preparation alongside other festival table elements. This is the consistency most commonly served at the Stone Hearth Bakery festival table and the one I find most generally useful.

Firm, formed consistency: Drain for twenty-four to thirty-six hours. The finished labneh at this stage is very firm — stiff enough to be rolled by hand into small balls without losing its shape — and has a concentrated flavor of considerable intensity: simultaneously tangy, rich, and slightly salty from the concentration of the milk’s natural salt content along with any added salt. Rolled balls of firm labneh can be stored in olive oil with herbs and dried chili for several days and improve considerably in flavor as they absorb the aromatics of the oil.

To all three consistencies, add: One teaspoon of fine salt per cup of original yogurt, worked gently through the drained labneh after straining. The salt is both seasoning and preservative, and it should be added to all three consistencies regardless of whether any further preparation or storage is intended.

Surface treatments and serving variations:

Plain, drizzled with olive oil and scattered with dried thyme or za’atar blend: The most traditional Bravian festival presentation of medium-consistency labneh. The oil and herb treatment complements the yogurt’s natural tanginess without competing with it, and the preparation needs nothing more to be excellent alongside the plain festival flatbreads.

Rolled balls of firm labneh in olive oil with rosemary and black pepper: Place the rolled balls in a clean jar or a shallow dish, cover completely with good olive oil, and add two or three sprigs of fresh or dried rosemary, six whole black peppercorns, and a strip of dried lemon peel if available. Set in the cold room for at least one day before serving. The oil becomes infused with the flavors of the herbs and the labneh’s own tanginess, and both the balls and the oil are served together at the table as a combined preparation: the balls on a small plate with the infused oil drizzled over them, alongside the crackers and flatbreads for scooping and dipping.

Loose labneh as a filling base: The loose dipping-consistency labneh can be used as the primary component of a filling for the crepe-style thin breads of Recipe 20, combined with a small quantity of roasted vegetables and fresh herbs, which produces a filling of dairy freshness and vegetable depth that is one of the most appealing non-meat festival preparations at the intermediate table of the feast week.


Recipe 51 — Cultured Cream Preparations

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the cultured cream preparations of the festival table occupy the richest and most indulgent end of the dairy accompaniment range, and they are appropriate to the feast season in exactly the way that I argued for the sweet preparations of Chapter 7: the feast is a time of rejoicing and generous eating, and cultured cream is both ancient in its Bravian pedigree and entirely consistent with the spirit of celebrating a deliverance rather than merely commemorating an affliction.

The cultured cream of the Bravian tradition is made by adding a small quantity of active culture — buttermilk, yogurt, or a reserved quantity of previously cultured cream — to fresh heavy cream and allowing the culture to ferment at a warm room temperature until the cream has thickened and developed a pleasant background tang. The result is somewhere between soured cream and a very soft cream cheese: thicker and richer than yogurt, with a fat content and a buttery character that gives it a body and a depth that the labneh preparations, however good, do not have.

Makes approximately 1 cup

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup heavy cream, at room temperature — not cold, because the culture will not work effectively in a cold environment; bring the cream to room temperature at least an hour before beginning
  • 2 tablespoons active cultured buttermilk or plain whole-milk yogurt with active cultures — this is the inoculating culture that will transform the cream; it must contain living cultures and must not be from a preparation that has been heated above the temperature at which those cultures are active
  • ¼ teaspoon fine salt, added after culturing is complete

Method:

Combine the room-temperature cream and the buttermilk or yogurt in a clean glass jar. Stir gently to distribute the culture through the cream. Cover the jar with a piece of clean cloth secured with a band — not a solid lid, which would prevent the gas produced by the culture’s activity from escaping — and set in a warm place in the kitchen: near the stove, on top of a warm hearth, or in any location where the temperature is consistently between the warmth of a comfortable room and the warmth of a gentle summer day. The culture requires this warmth to be active; a cold kitchen will produce a cream that does not culture correctly within a reasonable time.

Allow the cream to culture at this warm temperature for sixteen to twenty-four hours. The cultured cream is ready when it has thickened noticeably — it should pour slowly rather than readily from the jar — and has developed a mild background tang that is perceptible when a small quantity is tasted. It should smell of clean dairy with a faint pleasant sourness, like good buttermilk. If it smells sharp, putrid, or otherwise off, it has been spoiled rather than cultured and must be discarded; the distinction between a spoiled cream and a cultured one is clear and unmistakable to anyone with experience of both, and the baker who has not previously cultured cream should taste and smell carefully at the end of the culturing period.

After culturing, stir in the salt, cover the jar with a solid lid, and transfer to the cold room. The cold stops the culturing process and preserves the cream at its current character: the cream will continue to develop slowly in the cold room, becoming gradually tangier over the course of three to four days, which is the full shelf life of the preparation.

Serving variations:

Plain, alongside the festival flatbreads: A small bowl of cultured cream at the center of the table, with a spoon, for spreading onto the plain or oil-enriched flatbreads. It is particularly good on the water-only matzah of Recipe 15, where the cream’s richness provides everything that the absolute plainness of the bread invites and nothing more.

Combined with roasted garlic from Recipe 44: Press two or three roasted garlic cloves into a tablespoon of cultured cream and stir together until the garlic is distributed through the cream in rough pieces. The combination of the cultured cream’s tang and the roasted garlic’s sweetness is one of the best simple preparations at the festival dairy table and one that pairs particularly well with the savory preparations of Chapter 15.

Sweetened with honey for the sweet festival table: Stir a tablespoon of good honey into half a cup of cultured cream until uniform. The cultured cream’s tang and the honey’s sweetness are in direct and productive tension, each making the other more interesting than it would be alone, and the combined preparation is excellent alongside the honey cake of Recipe 11 and the wafer cookies of Recipe 13.


Recipe 52 — Long-Cultured Festival Fresh Cheese

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: this preparation is the festival dairy preparation I think of as the heir of Rahel’s cheeses — the one that, of all the preparations in this chapter, most directly produces the kind of deep, complex, genuinely excellent result that I remember from the presbyterium cellar of my childhood. It is made by inoculating whole milk with a buttermilk or yogurt culture and allowing the culture to set the milk slowly and gently over the course of twenty-four hours, after which the resulting curd is drained, seasoned, and pressed to a firm preparation that is quite different in character from the direct-acid fresh cheese of Recipe 46. The slow culturing produces a curd of much finer, more even texture and a flavor that is simultaneously more complex and more subtle than the quicker preparations: the tang is deeper and more layered, the dairy character is richer, and the overall impression is of a preparation that has had the time to become fully itself rather than having been hurried into existence.

This is the preparation that requires the most advance planning of any in this chapter: it should be started three days before it is wanted, which for the Passover table means starting it two days before the feast begins. The long lead time is entirely worth it, and the baker who makes this preparation even once will understand immediately why.

Makes approximately ¾ pound of cultured fresh cheese

Ingredients:

  • 1 gallon whole fresh milk, at room temperature
  • ¼ cup active cultured buttermilk or plain whole-milk yogurt with active cultures — the inoculating culture
  • 1 teaspoon fine salt, added after draining

Method:

Combine the room-temperature milk and the buttermilk or yogurt in a large, clean pot. Stir gently to distribute the culture throughout the milk. Cover the pot with a clean cloth and set in the warmest available location in the kitchen, maintaining a temperature similar to that described in Recipe 51 — warm but not hot, consistently warm rather than variable. Allow the milk to culture undisturbed for twenty-four hours.

After twenty-four hours, the milk will have set into a soft, wobbly gel: the culture’s acids and enzymes will have coagulated the milk proteins just enough to produce a mass that holds its shape when the pot is tilted gently but is still very fragile and will break apart easily. This cultured curd is ready for draining. Do not stir it, do not agitate it, and do not disturb it more than is absolutely necessary as you proceed: the cultured curd is far more delicate than the direct-acid curd of Recipe 46 and breaks into very fine particles under any mechanical stress, which would produce a preparation that drains slowly and produces a coarser-textured finished cheese than the careful handling of an intact curd achieves.

Line a colander with cloth as in Recipe 46 and set it over a bowl. Ladle the cultured curd very gently into the cloth-lined colander, using the largest ladle available and disturbing the curd as little as possible with each transfer. Allow to drain freely at room temperature for four hours, then transfer to the cold room with the draining apparatus intact and allow to drain for an additional twelve to sixteen hours, for a total draining time of sixteen to twenty hours.

After draining, gather the cloth corners and tie them to hang the bundle for a further four to eight hours if a firmer preparation is wanted, or proceed directly to pressing with a moderate weight for four to six hours for the pressed-cheese format described in Recipe 47. The long-cultured cheese takes somewhat less pressing time than the direct-acid cheese to achieve an equivalent firmness, because the cultured curd has already been somewhat dewatered during the long slow culture period.

After pressing, add the salt, work it gently through the cheese, and wrap in a fresh cloth. The finished long-cultured festival fresh cheese should be stored in the cold room and will develop progressively more complex character over the three to four days of its shelf life. It is genuinely different on the first day from the third, and the baker who is planning for the Passover table should time the production so that the cheese reaches its optimal character — approximately two days after pressing is complete — at the time of the feast.

Serve plain, sliced thinly alongside the crackers and flatbreads of Parts Two through Four. Serve with a drizzle of good oil and coarse salt. Serve alongside the honey preparations of Chapter 7 for the sweet festival table. Or serve simply, as Rahel served her cheeses at the grange gathering Passover table when I was a child: on a clean cloth at the center of the table, with a small knife, and nothing else, because a preparation of this quality needs nothing added to it to be entirely right.


A Closing Note on the Dairy Table

The preparations in this chapter are, in the most ancient sense, the preparations of the pastoral covenant people: a people who kept flocks and herds, who valued the produce of those animals as foundational to their table, and who developed across generations a dairy tradition of considerable sophistication and considerable beauty. The Bravian dairy tradition is part of this longer lineage, and the festival table that includes well-made fresh cheese, carefully cultured dairy preparations, and properly prepared eggs alongside the unleavened bread is honoring that lineage as directly as the bread itself honors the commandment.

Rahel, who kept her dairy operation in the cellar beneath the presbyterium with the quiet competence of someone who had inherited knowledge from a long line of people who knew how to do a thing well, understood this in her practical, unsentimental way. She did not make the connection explicit, at least not to me; she was not the kind of woman who explained things she considered evident. But in the care she brought to every preparation — the patience of the culturing, the attention to the draining, the judgment about when a cheese had reached its correct moment — she was, I understand now, doing the same thing that the baker does at the bench with her flour and her hot water and her flat griddle: honoring a covenant with the full attention of capable and serious hands.

That is the work. It belongs at the feast table as fully and as properly as anything else described in this book.


Chapter 17: Drinks and Fermented Beverages Compatible with the Season begins on the following page.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 15 — Soups, Stews, and Spreads That Pair with Unleavened Bread


A note before beginning: Part Five addresses the preparations that accompany the unleavened breads, flatbreads, crackers, and pastries of Parts Two through Four at the festival table. These preparations are not leavened and do not need to be — they are soups, stews, spreads, dairy preparations, and beverages whose relationship to the unleavened season is one of complement rather than constraint. None of the preparations in this part requires any leavening agent of any kind, and all of them are appropriate at every level of unleavened observance without modification unless otherwise noted. They are written in the same voice and at the same level of practical specificity as the baking preparations in the preceding chapters, because a good unleavened table is only as good as everything that appears on it alongside the bread, and the preparations that accompany the bread deserve the same care and the same understanding as the bread itself.


The question I am asked most often by students preparing for their first seriously observed feast season is not about bread. It is about what to put next to the bread. This surprises some people when I describe it, because the bread is the obvious challenge — it is the thing the season’s observance directly affects, the thing that requires the most adjustment from ordinary practice, the thing around which the entire framework of this book has been constructed — and the assumption is that the bread having been solved, everything else falls into place naturally. This assumption is not wrong exactly, but it is incomplete, and the incompleteness matters in a way that becomes apparent the first time a person sits down to a festival table where the bread is excellent and the accompaniments have been treated as an afterthought.

Unleavened bread, at every level and in every form, is a more direct and more demanding eating experience than leavened bread. It has less interior complexity, less fermentation flavor, less of the yeasty richness that carries ordinary bread through a meal even when the accompaniments are modest. What it has instead is a clean, honest grain character and a surface flavor developed through heat that is genuinely good but that benefits more than leavened bread does from the contrast and complement of strong, well-made accompaniments. A plain Level 3 matzah eaten alongside a deeply flavored lamb stew is a different and better experience than either preparation would provide alone: the stew’s richness and complexity give the bread’s simplicity a context in which it registers fully, and the bread’s plainness provides a foil against which the stew’s depth is legible in a way that it would not be alongside a complicated, elaborately flavored leavened bread.

This mutual benefit — the bread improving the accompaniment and the accompaniment improving the bread — is the organizing principle of the festival table, and it is what the preparations in this chapter are designed to achieve. They are not modest or supplementary preparations. They are, in many respects, the preparations around which the bread is chosen and sized and flavored, and the baker who understands her bread well enough to choose the right accompaniment for it has understood something important about how a festival table is built.

The preparations in this chapter are organized by category rather than by occasion, though I note specific occasions and pairing recommendations throughout. We begin with the bitter herb preparations, which occupy a unique position at the Passover table as commanded accompaniments to the unleavened bread, and proceed through the lamb and meat stews, the roasted vegetable spreads, and the herb-and-oil preparations that round out the full range of what the unleavened table can offer across seven days of the feast.


On the Bitter Herbs: Theology and Practical Preparation

The commandment to eat bitter herbs alongside the unleavened bread and the lamb at the Passover is one of the most specific and most practically consequential directives of the feast calendar. Unlike the commandment to remove leaven, which requires interpretation and generates the three-level framework that this entire book is built around, the commandment to eat bitter herbs is direct in its requirement: the herbs are to be bitter, they are to be eaten at the Passover table alongside the lamb and the unleavened bread, and their purpose is commemorative — they recall the bitterness of the bondage in Egypt from which the deliverance of the Passover came.

What the commandment does not specify with equal directness is which herbs. The Hebrew word maror covers a range of bitter plants, and the Bravian tradition across its various regional communities has resolved the question of which specific plants fulfill the commandment in ways that reflect the agricultural realities of each region rather than a single national standard.

The bitterness required is genuine and unambiguous: a token scatter of mildly bitter salad greens does not fulfill the spirit of the commandment, in my reading and in the reading of most Bravian religious authorities I have consulted on the matter. The bitter herbs should be genuinely, assertively bitter — bitter enough that eating them requires a deliberate act of acceptance rather than a casual consumption — and the quantity eaten should be sufficient to be tasted and experienced rather than merely present on the table as a symbol. The feast commemorates a real bitterness, and the eating of the bitter herbs is a physical participation in the memory of that bitterness that deserves to be done with full intention.

Within these parameters, the following plants are the most commonly used across Bravia’s regional communities, and I address each with some practical guidance for the baker preparing the Passover table:

Horseradish root, freshly grated, is the bitter herb preparation most common in the interior Amphoe communities and in much of the hill country. It is emphatically, sometimes aggressively bitter and pungent, producing a heat that affects the sinuses as well as the palate, and it leaves no room for doubt that one has fulfilled the commandment. Fresh horseradish root, grated immediately before the table is set — not prepared in advance, because the volatile compounds that produce its heat and bitterness dissipate quickly once the root is cut and exposed to air — is the correct preparation. Grate it finely, accept that the process will be uncomfortable for the eyes and nose, and serve a small but genuine quantity alongside the lamb and the flatbread.

In some households, the freshly grated horseradish is combined with a small quantity of grated fresh beet, which moderates the pure bitterness slightly with a sweet earthiness and produces a preparation of deep red color that is visually striking at the Passover table. This combined preparation is associated particularly with the eastern interior communities and has been described to me by hill country students as the taste of their childhood Passover tables with a consistency and a warmth of recollection that no other preparation in this book has inspired in them.

Bitter endive, chicory, and wild chicory greens are the bitter herb preparations of the port towns and the coastal communities, where horseradish root is less commonly grown and where the tradition of the Mediterranean bitter green — established through centuries of trade contact with the southern coastal cultures and adopted into Bravian festival practice in those communities — has taken firm root. The bitter green preparation for the Passover table in the port-town tradition is made as follows: fresh endive or chicory leaves, washed and dried, are torn into rough pieces and piled on the festival plate without dressing of any kind. The bitterness of fresh endive or chicory is genuine and assertive, though different in character from horseradish — more sustained and more vegetable, less volatile and less immediate — and it fulfills the commandment in a manner that is well-attested in the Bravian religious record.

Wild bitter herbs gathered from the spring landscape — specific to those communities with the knowledge of local plants to identify them correctly — represent the most ancient layer of bitter herb practice in the Bravian tradition and are still observed in some of the older hill country communities where specific wild plants have been used for the Passover table for as many generations as anyone can document. I do not specify these plants by name in a book intended for a wide readership, because the correct identification of wild bitter plants requires knowledge and experience that cannot be conveyed through a general text, and I do not wish to encourage the gathering of plants by anyone who is not already confident in their identification. The household that has this knowledge has it from its own tradition and does not need my guidance; the household that does not have this knowledge should use the cultivated preparations above.

A note on the preparation and service of bitter herbs at the Passover table: The bitter herbs are served at the beginning of the Passover meal, before the main preparations, as part of the ritual order of the service. They are eaten with the unleavened bread — in many Bravian households, as a sandwich of sorts with a piece of the festival flatbread — and in the traditional order they are eaten before the lamb is served, so that the bitterness is experienced on its own terms before the richness of the lamb moderates it. The quantity is small but genuine: a tablespoon of freshly grated horseradish or a small handful of bitter greens per person is sufficient, and the eating should be deliberate and aware rather than casual. This is the preparation that most directly connects the feast-day table to the event being commemorated, and it deserves to be treated with the seriousness that its position in the service implies.


Recipe 41 — Bravian Lamb and Root Vegetable Stew

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the lamb stew is the central preparation of the Passover table and of the festival week’s savory cooking, and it is the preparation that most directly earns the status of the most important accompaniment to the unleavened bread in the Bravian culinary tradition. Lamb has been the meat of the Passover since the first Passover, and the Bravian tradition maintains this association with an unselfconsciousness and a lack of qualification that I find genuinely admirable: there is no hedging about the lamb, no suggestion that another meat would do equally well, no modernization of the association into a general meat preparation. The lamb is the lamb, and it is at the center of the Passover table because the Scripture put it there and the Bravian people have kept it there.

The specific preparation I describe here — a slow-cooked stew of lamb with root vegetables in a rich braising liquid — is not the only way to serve the Passover lamb, and I want to be clear about that before the recipe begins. The roasted lamb, prepared whole or in large pieces, is equally traditional and perhaps more commonly associated with the Passover table in the hill country and the more traditional interior communities. The stew is the preparation most commonly found in the grange hall communal context and in the port-town households where the distribution and sharing of a stew among a large gathering is more practical than the service of a whole or large-piece roasted lamb. Both are correct. The recipe below is for the stew because the stew is the preparation most directly useful alongside the full range of unleavened breads described in this book, providing the moist, richly flavored braising liquid that makes a plain Level 3 flatbread extraordinary when used to scoop and carry it.

Serves 8 to 10

Ingredients:

  • 3 to 4 pounds bone-in lamb shoulder, cut into large pieces — bone-in rather than boneless, because the collagen and marrow of the bones contribute enormously to the richness and body of the braising liquid and produce a stew of depth and complexity that boneless lamb simply cannot match; the bones also give the braising liquid a silkiness — a quality that coats the spoon and the palate — that is one of the defining characteristics of a well-made Bravian lamb stew
  • 2 tablespoons rendered lamb fat or olive oil, for browning the meat
  • 2 large onions, roughly chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic, crushed but not minced — crushing rather than mincing produces a garlic flavor that is present but not sharp, because the cell damage from crushing is less complete than from mincing and the volatile compounds are released more slowly during the long braise
  • 3 medium carrots, cut into large pieces approximately two inches across
  • 3 medium parsnips, cut similarly
  • 2 medium turnips, cut into large wedges
  • 1 small celery root, peeled and cut into large pieces, if available — celery root is a flavor contributor rather than a textural element in this stew, dissolving almost completely into the braising liquid during the long cook and contributing a savory depth that is perceptible but not identifiable by most tasters as celery specifically
  • 1 cup water or light broth — not a deeply flavored broth, which would compete with the flavor development of the braising lamb itself; water is in fact preferable if you do not have a genuinely light broth available
  • 2 teaspoons fine salt, adjusted to taste
  • 1 teaspoon coarse black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 2 bay leaves
  • Optional: a small handful of fresh parsley, added in the last five minutes of cooking

Method:

Season the lamb pieces generously with salt and pepper on all surfaces. Heat the fat in a wide, heavy-bottomed pot or braising vessel over medium-high heat until the fat shimmers and a small piece of meat placed in it sizzles immediately. Work in batches — do not crowd the pan — and brown the lamb pieces on all surfaces until they are deeply caramelized: not merely colored, but genuinely browned to a dark, mahogany richness on each surface. This browning step is the single most important factor in the depth of flavor of the finished stew, and it cannot be rushed or abbreviated without proportionally diminishing the result. A pale, quickly browned piece of lamb will produce a pale, thin-flavored stew. A deeply caramelized piece will produce a stew of the kind that the festival table deserves. Take the time. Brown each surface properly before turning.

As the pieces are browned, transfer them to a plate and set aside. When all pieces are browned, reduce the heat to medium and add the onions to the fat remaining in the pot. Cook the onions, stirring occasionally, until they are soft and beginning to color at their edges — ten to twelve minutes. Add the crushed garlic and cook for two minutes more.

Return the browned lamb to the pot, along with any juices that have accumulated on the plate. Add the water or light broth, the thyme, and the bay leaves. The liquid should come approximately halfway up the sides of the meat: this is a braise, not a boil, and the meat should be partially submerged rather than swimming in liquid. If your pot is wide and the liquid does not reach halfway, add additional water in small increments until it does.

Bring to a simmer over medium heat, then reduce to the lowest possible heat that maintains a gentle, intermittent bubbling — not a full simmer, but a lazy, occasional bubble that indicates the liquid is hot enough to do its work without being so agitated that the meat becomes tough from the turbulence. Cover the pot with a tight-fitting lid and cook at this gentle heat for one and a half hours.

After one and a half hours, add the carrots, parsnips, turnips, and celery root. Replace the lid and continue cooking for an additional forty-five minutes to one hour, until the lamb is completely tender — the meat should offer no resistance when pressed with a spoon and should be beginning to fall away from the bones at the joints — and the root vegetables are cooked through but still holding their shape.

Remove the bay leaves. Taste the braising liquid and adjust the seasoning: it should be well-salted, deeply savory, and rich enough to coat the back of a spoon. If the liquid tastes thin or lacks body, remove the lid and increase the heat to a moderate simmer for ten to fifteen minutes, reducing the liquid until it concentrates and the flavor deepens. This reduction step is important if the stew has produced more liquid than expected — perhaps because the lamb had a higher water content than usual — and it is the correct remedy for a braising liquid that lacks presence.

If using fresh parsley, add it now and stir through. Taste once more and adjust.

Serve in deep bowls alongside the plain or oil-enriched Level 3 flatbread of Chapter 11 or the wraps of Chapter 6. The correct way to eat this stew with unleavened bread at the festival table — and I say this as a practical instruction rather than a cultural prescription, though it is both — is to use pieces of the flatbread to scoop and carry the meat and vegetables and to mop the braising liquid from the bowl at the end. This is not inelegant eating. It is what the bread was made for.

On the Passover table specifically: For the Passover table itself, the lamb stew is served after the bitter herbs and the ceremonial portion of the service, as the main meal. Some households serve a portion of the lamb roasted rather than stewed, keeping the roasted presentation for the ceremonial significance of the Passover lamb’s traditional association with the oven or fire. Others serve entirely from the stew. Both are practiced throughout Bravia, and neither is more correct than the other from a culinary or theological standpoint. The tradition of the individual household is the appropriate guide.

Hill country variation: In the hill country communities, the root vegetables in the stew typically include dried beans that have been soaked overnight and added to the pot alongside the vegetables, which produce a heartier and more filling stew appropriate for the cooler spring temperatures of the upland communities. A cup of soaked dried beans added with the vegetables and cooked for the full vegetable cooking time produces a stew of considerably more body and a more complete protein character that needs no other accompaniment to constitute a full meal.

A note on the quantity of fat on the finished stew: Lamb shoulder is a well-fatted cut, and the surface of the finished stew will carry a layer of rendered fat that varies in quantity depending on the specific shoulder used. Some Bravian cooks skim this fat from the surface of the stew before serving, both for aesthetic reasons and to moderate the richness of the dish. Others leave it entirely, on the grounds that the fat is part of the preparation’s character and that those who prefer less of it can simply avoid dipping their bread into the fatty top layer. I belong to the latter camp in principle and the former in practice, removing approximately half the surface fat before serving and leaving the rest, which I find produces a stew that is rich without being excessive and that the bread can carry without the fat becoming the primary impression rather than the meat and vegetables and braising liquid beneath it.


Recipe 42 — Slow-Braised Poultry with Bitter Greens and Lemon

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the poultry preparation is the festival table alternative to the lamb for those days of the feast when a lighter main preparation is desired, or for those households that are serving a large number of guests and are supplementing the lamb with an additional main course. It is also, in the port-town and coastal tradition, sometimes served as the main preparation of the Passover table itself in households that do not keep sheep and for whom lamb is a purchased rather than a household product, making the decision about which meat to center the table around partly a matter of theology and partly a matter of what is practically accessible and affordable.

The combination of braised poultry with bitter greens is a specifically coastal preparation, influenced by the Mediterranean cooking traditions that reached Bravia through its extensive maritime trade, and the addition of lemon — available in the port-town markets throughout the year through the citrus trade — is characteristic of this tradition. The bitter greens in this preparation are not the ceremonial bitter herbs of the Passover service but the culinary bitter greens — endive, chicory, or whatever bitter green is in season — that are cooked as a vegetable accompaniment to the braised bird and that provide a counterpoint to the richness of the braising liquid in the same way that the bitter herbs of the Passover service provide a counterpoint to the richness of the lamb.

Serves 6 to 8

Ingredients:

  • 1 whole roasting bird — chicken or a larger fowl as available — cut into eight pieces, or an equivalent weight of bone-in poultry pieces. The skin should remain on the pieces during the braise, because the collagen in the poultry skin contributes to the body of the braising liquid and the fat beneath the skin keeps the meat moist during the extended cook; the skin can be removed before serving if preferred, but it should remain during the cooking
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 medium onions, thinly sliced
  • 4 cloves garlic, crushed
  • Juice of one large lemon and the peel of that lemon, cut into broad strips with the pith removed as thoroughly as possible — the pith of the lemon carries bitterness that, accumulated over the cooking time, can overwhelm the other flavors in the preparation; the zest and the juice contribute brightness and the aromatic compounds of the lemon oil without this excessive bitterness if the pith is carefully removed
  • 1 cup water or light broth
  • 1 teaspoon fine salt, adjusted to taste
  • ½ teaspoon coarse black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme or 2 teaspoons fresh thyme, if available
  • 2 heads of bitter endive or the equivalent in chicory or radicchio, cut into quarters through the root end so that the leaves hold together at the base — the cutting through the root end is important, because leaves that separate from the head during braising become soft and dispersed through the liquid rather than retaining their identity as a vegetable component; held together at the base, they braise as coherent units that are served alongside the meat as a distinct element of the plate

Method:

Season the poultry pieces with salt and pepper. Heat the olive oil in a wide, heavy braising pot over medium-high heat and brown the pieces on both sides until the skin is deep golden and the flesh beneath it shows the beginning of color at the edges — eight to ten minutes total for the browning of all pieces, working in batches. Transfer browned pieces to a plate.

Reduce the heat to medium and add the sliced onions to the fat remaining in the pot. Cook until soft and translucent, approximately eight minutes. Add the garlic and cook for two minutes. Return the browned poultry pieces to the pot, nestling them among the onions. Add the lemon juice, the lemon peel strips, the water or broth, and the thyme. Bring to a gentle simmer, cover, and cook over low heat for forty-five minutes.

After forty-five minutes, nestle the quartered endive heads among the poultry pieces. Replace the lid and continue cooking for an additional twenty minutes, until the endive is tender and beginning to collapse at its outer leaves while retaining its structure at the root end, and the poultry is completely cooked through.

Remove the lemon peel strips before serving — they have given their flavor to the braising liquid and are not pleasant to eat in quantity. Taste the liquid and adjust seasoning: it should be bright with lemon, savory from the poultry, and with a pleasant background bitterness from the endive that elevates rather than dominates the other flavors.

Serve in deep dishes alongside the soft wraps of Chapter 6 or the egg-and-flour flatbreads of Recipe 21 from Chapter 8, which are particularly well-suited to this preparation because their slight richness from the egg complements the lemon-bright braising liquid in a way that a plainer flatbread does not.


Recipe 43 — Roasted Root Vegetable Spread

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the roasted root vegetable spread is the preparation I find most consistently useful across the full seven days of the feast, because it is infinitely variable in its specific ingredients — whatever root vegetables are in the spring pantry are the correct root vegetables for this preparation — and because it improves significantly in the days after it is made, as the roasted flavors develop and deepen in the cold room. A batch made on the first day of the feast will be notably better on the third day than it was when first prepared, and a batch made on the third day will serve well through the seventh. It is the spread of the patient baker, and patience during the feast season, when there is much to prepare and much to attend to, is always rewarded.

Makes approximately 2 cups of spread

Ingredients:

  • 2 pounds mixed root vegetables — parsnip, carrot, sweet turnip, beetroot, celery root, or any combination available from the winter stores; I use whatever is in the pantry in whatever proportion it presents itself, because this is a preparation whose character benefits from variety and whose ingredient list is more a suggestion than a specification
  • 4 tablespoons olive oil, divided — two tablespoons for roasting, two tablespoons for finishing the spread
  • 1 teaspoon fine salt, divided
  • ½ teaspoon coarse black pepper
  • 4 cloves garlic, unpeeled — roasted whole alongside the vegetables and squeezed from their skins after roasting; roasted garlic is sweet and mellow where raw garlic is sharp and volatile, and the roasted version is entirely appropriate here while raw garlic would be too assertive
  • Optional additions for flavor variation: a tablespoon of good honey stirred in after roasting for sweetness; a teaspoon of ground cumin roasted with the vegetables for a warmer character; fresh herbs stirred through the finished spread for brightness

Method:

Preheat the oven to hot. Cut the root vegetables into pieces approximately an inch and a half across — large enough to develop good caramelization on their surfaces without cooking through before the exterior has browned, small enough to cook fully within a reasonable roasting time. Place in a single layer on a heavy baking sheet. If the vegetables are crowded on the sheet they will steam rather than roast, and steamed vegetables do not develop the caramelization that is the entire point of this preparation: use two baking sheets if necessary to achieve a single layer.

Drizzle two tablespoons of olive oil over the vegetables, scatter half the salt and all the pepper over them, and toss to coat every piece. Add the unpeeled garlic cloves among the vegetables. Roast in the hot oven for thirty-five to forty-five minutes, turning the vegetables once at the midpoint, until they are deeply caramelized at their edges and undersides — dark golden to brown at the high points and the contact surfaces, tender and yielding throughout. The caramelization is what you are after: pale, merely tender root vegetables produce a bland spread, while properly caramelized ones produce something of considerable sweetness and depth.

Remove from the oven and allow to cool for ten minutes. Squeeze the roasted garlic from its skins into a bowl or a mortar. Add the roasted vegetables in batches and crush them — by mortar and pestle for a rough, textured spread with visible pieces; by pressing through a sieve for a smoother preparation; or by simply mashing with a fork for the rustic and immediate version that most Bravian households produce, which lies between the two in texture and requires no special equipment.

Work in the remaining two tablespoons of olive oil and the remaining salt, taste, and adjust seasoning. The spread should be well-salted, deeply savory and sweet from the caramelization, and rich enough from the olive oil to hold a slight sheen on its surface.

Stir in any optional additions at this stage. Transfer to a container, cover, and store in the cold room. Serve at room temperature — remove from the cold room thirty minutes before serving — alongside any of the crackers, flatbreads, or hand pies from Parts Two through Four. This spread is particularly good on the shortbread crackers of Recipe 24, on the plain Level 3 matzah of Recipe 15 with a drizzle of additional oil, and on the twice-baked slices of Recipe 27, where its moisture softens the dry cracker slightly in a way that improves both preparations simultaneously.

On beetroot in the spread: Beetroot in the roasted spread produces a preparation of deep crimson color that is visually striking and of a sweetness somewhat greater than the other root vegetables, and it pairs particularly well with fresh soft cheese and fresh herbs. However, beetroot’s color bleeds into the other vegetables during roasting and produces a spread that is uniformly deep red regardless of the original variety mix, which some bakers find a limitation. Roasting beetroot separately on its own sheet and combining with the other vegetables in the mashing stage is the solution: the color of the combined spread will still be influenced by the beetroot but the other vegetables will retain their individual characters more fully.


Recipe 44 — Garlic Confit with Herbs and Oil

Level: appropriate for all observance levels

A note on this recipe: the garlic confit is a preparation of remarkable simplicity that produces a result of great utility at the festival table. Whole garlic cloves cooked slowly in olive oil until completely tender and sweet are one of the most versatile festival preparations available: they can be spread directly on flatbread as an accompaniment, stirred into the lamb stew of Recipe 41 to add depth, used as a base for the herb-and-oil preparations that follow this recipe, or simply set at the center of the table in their cooking oil for guests to use as they please. The oil in which the garlic has cooked is itself a useful ingredient, carrying the aromatic compounds released during the slow cooking into a deeply flavored oil that is excellent for bread dipping and for finishing the festival table’s savory preparations.

This preparation keeps remarkably well — up to a week in the cold room in a sealed container covered with enough oil to submerge the garlic completely — and is best made at the beginning of the feast season and used throughout the seven days, where it becomes a reliable and deeply flavored background resource for the festival kitchen.

Makes approximately one cup of confit garlic in oil

Ingredients:

  • 3 full heads of garlic, cloves separated and peeled — the patience required to peel three heads of garlic is the primary labor of this preparation and should be approached with equanimity; some Bravian cooks soak the unpeeled cloves in warm water for fifteen minutes before peeling, which loosens the skins and speeds the process considerably, and I recommend this approach
  • 1 cup good olive oil — the oil is as much a finished product of this preparation as the garlic itself, and its quality will be evident in both components; do not use oil of lesser quality than you would use for direct table service
  • 3 sprigs of fresh thyme, or 1 teaspoon dried thyme if fresh is not available at this early point in the spring season
  • 2 sprigs of fresh rosemary
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 6 whole black peppercorns

Method:

Combine all ingredients in a small, heavy-bottomed saucepan. The garlic should be submerged or nearly submerged in the oil; if the saucepan is too wide and the oil does not cover the garlic, use a smaller vessel or increase the oil quantity. Place over the lowest possible heat — the oil should barely shimmer and should produce occasional tiny bubbles around the garlic cloves, but it should not bubble steadily and should never approach a simmer. This very gentle heat is what distinguishes a confit from a fry: the garlic is being slowly poached in oil rather than fried in it, and the difference in result is substantial.

Cook at this barely-warm heat for forty-five minutes to one hour, until the garlic cloves are completely tender throughout — a clove pressed gently between two fingers should yield completely, with no firm center — and are pale golden in color. They should not be browned; browning indicates the oil was too hot and the garlic has fried rather than confited. If browning occurs at any point during cooking, remove the pan from the heat immediately and allow it to cool before continuing at a lower temperature setting.

Remove from the heat and allow to cool completely in the oil. Transfer the garlic and all of its cooking oil, including the herbs and peppercorns, to a clean jar or container. Store in the cold room with the garlic completely submerged in the oil at all times.

To serve: bring to room temperature. Place a small dish of the garlic cloves and their oil at the table alongside the festival flatbreads, with a small knife for spreading. The cloves spread effortlessly onto flatbread and melt against the tongue with a sweetness and depth that is utterly different from raw garlic and that is among the most simple and most satisfying of the festival table’s pleasures.


Recipe 45 — Fresh Herb and Oil Preparations: A Framework

A note on this recipe: the herb-and-oil preparation is not a single recipe but a framework within which a baker can compose an unlimited number of preparations from the herbs available in her spring garden or her dried herb stores, combined with good olive oil and appropriate seasoning. I present it as a framework rather than a fixed recipe because the specific herbs available at the beginning of the feast season vary considerably by region and by the progress of the spring, and a framework that the baker can apply to whatever she has is more useful than a recipe whose specific ingredients may or may not be accessible to her.

The essential structure of the herb-and-oil preparation is: fresh or dried herbs of the baker’s choosing, combined with good olive oil, seasoned with salt and perhaps with a small quantity of acid — lemon juice or apple cider vinegar — and left to macerate for at least thirty minutes before service so that the herb flavors infuse the oil. This structure can be varied almost infinitely within its basic parameters, and the following examples represent the range of what is possible rather than a definitive list.


Preparation A — Fresh Herb Oil for Immediate Service (spring garden)

When the spring garden is producing its first fresh herbs — which in the Western Reaches occurs during or just after the feast season, and in the Delta region and the southern coastal communities somewhat earlier — the fresh herb oil is the simplest and most immediate of the herb preparations.

Combine a generous handful of fresh herbs — parsley, thyme, chives, or a combination — very finely minced, with half a cup of good olive oil, a generous pinch of coarse salt, and a few drops of lemon juice if available. Stir to combine and allow to rest for thirty minutes before serving. The preparation will be bright green from the fresh herbs and brilliantly aromatic. It does not keep beyond one day, because the fresh herbs begin to discolor and lose their vibrancy within a few hours of cutting, and the preparation should be made as close to serving as possible and consumed at the meal for which it is made.

Serve in a small shallow dish with pieces of festival flatbread for dipping, or drizzle over the roasted vegetable spread of Recipe 43 immediately before serving.


Preparation B — Dried Herb and Garlic Oil for Storage (available throughout the feast week)

Where fresh herbs are not yet available at the beginning of the feast season, the dried herb preparation serves as the working herb oil of the festival kitchen and is made in a larger quantity at the beginning of the week rather than freshly for each meal.

Combine in a jar: two teaspoons dried rosemary, crumbled; one teaspoon dried thyme; half a teaspoon dried oregano; two cloves of garlic from the confit of Recipe 44, pressed through the oil and mashed to a paste; one cup good olive oil; half a teaspoon fine salt; a pinch of coarse black pepper. Stir thoroughly, cap the jar, and allow to infuse at room temperature for at least four hours before service, shaking the jar occasionally to redistribute the herbs. This preparation keeps in the cold room for the full seven days of the feast and improves in character through the first two to three days as the herbs continue to release their flavor compounds into the oil.

The dried herb oil is the preparation I set at the Stone Hearth Bakery’s festival table counter throughout the feast week: a jar of it beside the basket of flatbreads, replenished as needed, available to every customer who comes in during the feast days for whatever they have come to buy. More than once I have had a customer tell me that the oil is the best thing we make during the feast season, which I take as a comment on the quality of the oil and the herbs rather than on the baking, and which I accept as the highest compliment I could receive on behalf of a preparation that takes five minutes to assemble.


Preparation C — Roasted Garlic and Walnut Paste (a substantial spread)

This preparation moves from the light herb oils into the territory of a substantial spread, appropriate as an accompaniment to the plainer flatbreads of Chapter 11 where a richer and more filling preparation is wanted.

Combine in a mortar: six roasted garlic cloves from the confit of Recipe 44; half a cup of fresh walnuts, toasted briefly in a dry pan until fragrant and roughly crushed; two tablespoons of the garlic confit oil; half a teaspoon of fine salt; a pinch of dried thyme. Pound and press the ingredients together until a rough paste forms — not a smooth cream but a textured paste with visible walnut pieces. Taste and adjust seasoning.

This paste keeps in the cold room for three to four days and is particularly good on the walnut flatbreads of Recipe 37, where the walnut-to-walnut resonance in the pairing produces a preparation of considerable coherence, and on the plain wheat matzah of Chapter 11, where the paste’s richness and complexity provides everything the plain bread’s simplicity invites.


Preparation D — Bitter Herb and Oil Dressing (for the Passover table)

On the Passover table itself, the herb-and-oil preparation takes on a specific commemorative character when it is made with the bitter herbs rather than with culinary herbs. This preparation is not a spread for the festival flatbread in the ordinary sense but a dressing for the bitter greens of the ceremonial service — a way of presenting the bitter herbs in a form that acknowledges their commanded function while making them as pleasant to consume as possible within the constraint of genuine bitterness.

If your household uses bitter endive or chicory as the bitter herb preparation: combine the quartered endive or chicory with a dressing of two tablespoons of olive oil, one tablespoon of apple cider vinegar, a pinch of fine salt, and a very small quantity of honey — a quarter of a teaspoon, not enough to sweeten the preparation but enough to provide a background that keeps the bitterness from being one-dimensional. Toss to coat and serve immediately, because dressed bitter greens begin to wilt quickly and are best at the moment of combination.

If your household uses freshly grated horseradish: no dressing is appropriate or needed, because the assertiveness of the horseradish preparation is itself its most important quality and any addition would moderate what should not be moderated. The horseradish stands alone.


A Note on Broth as the Foundation of the Festival Table

I want to close this chapter with a word about the preparation that underlies several of the stews and soups of the feast season but that I have not addressed as a recipe in its own right, because it is less a recipe than a practice: the keeping of a good cooking broth throughout the seven days of the feast.

The Bravian household tradition of the feast week, at least in the communities I know best, includes the maintenance of a broth pot that is refreshed daily with the bones and vegetable trimmings of each day’s cooking. The bones of the lamb from the Passover table go into the pot on the first evening; the parsnip and carrot trimmings from the root vegetable preparations go in throughout the week; a handful of dried herbs and a head of garlic, halved crosswise, go in each morning when the pot is refreshed. The resulting broth, skimmed of its fat and seasoned with salt, is the liquid base for the soups and stews of the subsequent days and the moistening medium for preparations that have dried overnight in the cold room.

This is not a complicated practice and it requires no special knowledge beyond the habit of paying attention to what would otherwise be discarded and directing it instead to the pot. The reward is a festival table whose savory preparations all share an underlying depth of flavor that comes from the accumulated cooking of the week — the lamb bones’ richness, the vegetable trimmings’ sweetness, the herbs’ aromatic persistence — and that gives the feast’s later days a continuity with its earlier ones in a way that individual preparations made from scratch each day cannot achieve.

My mother kept a broth pot throughout the feast week. She skimmed it every morning with a ladle and added to it every evening after the dinner preparations were cleared, and the broth from the seventh day tasted of every meal that had preceded it in the week, which she considered appropriate: the feast is seven days, not seven separate one-day events, and the broth was her way of cooking the whole feast as a single continuous act rather than a series of disconnected preparations.

I have tried to do the same in my own kitchen, and I recommend the practice without qualification to every baker who has followed this book from the foreword to this point in Part Five. You have learned, over the preceding fourteen chapters, to pay very close attention to what ingredients are doing and why. Apply that same attention to the accumulated materials of the feast week, and let nothing that could contribute to the table go to waste. The feast provides for the feast, if the cook is paying attention.


Chapter 16: Dairy and Egg Accompaniments begins on the following page.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 14 — Grain-Free Level 3 Preparations

There is a woman who has come to the Stone Hearth Bakery every feast season for as long as I have operated it — more than twenty years now — and who cannot eat wheat. She cannot eat barley or spelt or rye either, and she cannot eat corn, and for the first several years of our acquaintance she came to the bakery during the feast week not to buy anything but simply to look, because she had grown up in a household where the feast season meant, among other things, that she went without bread entirely for seven days while her family ate the preparations her mother made, and she had internalized this absence as simply the shape of the feast for a person with her particular body.

I do not know exactly when I decided that this was not acceptable. It was not a single moment so much as an accumulating dissatisfaction with the premise, which is that the feast season and its unleavened preparations belong fully to people whose bodies can accommodate grain and only partially or not at all to those whose cannot. This premise has never seemed to me to be supported by the commandment, which does not specify grain as the substance of the unleavened preparation but rather the absence of leaven from whatever is prepared and eaten, and which nowhere suggests that those who cannot eat grain are exempt from the feast’s observances or excluded from its table. The commandment is about the removal of leaven. It is not about the mandatory presence of wheat.

I began working on grain-free preparations in the context of this book’s development and in response to the accumulated evidence of many years of watching people who needed them go without. This chapter is the result. It is addressed to the baker who is preparing the feast table for someone who cannot eat grain, to the person with grain sensitivity who has always assumed the feast season required her to simply go without, and to any baker who is curious about what the Level 3 kitchen can produce when grain flour is removed from the toolkit entirely and the ancient framework of fat, protein, moisture, and heat is applied to different base ingredients.

The results are good. I say this without qualification and with some surprise at my own certainty, because when I began this work I expected to produce preparations that were serviceable but compromised — adequate substitutes rather than genuine preparations in their own right. What I produced instead, through many batches and many adjustments and considerable consultation with the woman who has been coming to my bakery for twenty years, is a set of preparations that are not substitutes for anything. They are what they are, and what they are is genuinely very good.

She buys them every feast season now. She has told me, more than once, in the particular manner of a Bravian who considers a compliment worth giving but not worth embellishing, that they are fine. I consider this high praise and accept it accordingly.


On the Grain-Free Level 3 Framework

Before the recipes begin, I want to establish the framework within which the grain-free preparations in this chapter operate, because it is different enough from the grain-based framework of the previous chapters that the baker who approaches these preparations with the assumptions of grain-based baking will find herself confused by the behavior of the ingredients.

The grain-based Level 3 preparations of Chapters 11 and 12 derive their structure from two primary mechanisms: gluten development, in which the proteins of wheat or other gluten-bearing grains form a network when hydrated and worked; and starch gelatinization, in which the starch granules of the grain absorb water and swell under heat, setting the structure of the baked product. Both of these mechanisms are specific to grain flours that contain gluten-forming proteins and appropriate starches, and neither is available in a preparation that contains no grain.

The grain-free preparations in this chapter achieve their structure through different mechanisms, all of which are available at Level 3 without any mechanical leavening:

Nut and seed protein networks: The proteins in ground nuts and seeds coagulate under heat in a manner analogous to the coagulation of egg proteins, setting the structure of the preparation around the fat and starch content of the nut or seed base. This is the primary structural mechanism of the almond and walnut preparations in this chapter, and it produces a finished product with a dense, slightly chewy texture that is quite different from grain-based preparations but is structurally coherent and satisfying in its own right.

Egg protein coagulation: At Level 3, eggs may be used in the grain-free preparations in the same manner as in the grain-based preparations: added without beating, contributing structural protein, fat from the yolk, and the coagulating network that sets under heat. The egg in these preparations does more of the structural work than it does in grain-based preparations where gluten carries most of the structural load, and its contribution is correspondingly more legible in the finished product.

Fat and moisture management: The fat content of nut and seed bases is inherently high — much higher than grain flour — and this fat plays a structural role in the finished preparation in addition to its flavor contribution. The management of fat in the grain-free preparations is therefore somewhat different from fat management in grain-based preparations: rather than adding fat to a lean base, the baker is managing the fat already present in the base ingredient and supplementing it to achieve specific textural goals.

Heat and time: The same principles of heat management that govern the Level 3 grain-based preparations apply in the grain-free kitchen: intense heat for thin preparations that benefit from rapid surface setting and steam lift, moderate heat for thicker preparations whose interior protein network needs time to coagulate before the surface has fully set.

The combinations of these mechanisms available in the grain-free Level 3 kitchen produce a narrower range of preparations than the grain-based kitchen — there are no grain-free equivalents of the thin, crisp, near-translucent plain matzah of Recipe 15, for example, because the gluten network that makes such extreme thinness possible in a wheat preparation has no equivalent in the nut and seed world — but within the range that is achievable, the preparations are distinctive, genuinely good, and entirely appropriate for the Level 3 feast table.


On Ingredients: A Guide to the Grain-Free Pantry

The grain-free Level 3 baker works from a pantry that is somewhat different from the grain-based pantry, and the ingredients available in that pantry vary by region across Bravia in ways that the baker should understand before choosing which preparations to make.

Almonds are the most versatile and most widely available nut ingredient in the Bravian grain-free pantry, and they are the base ingredient for more of the preparations in this chapter than any other single ingredient. Ground to a fine, even texture — either by mortar and pestle, which produces a somewhat coarser result with more textural character, or by a grist mill equipped with an appropriate grinding surface, which produces a finer and more uniform meal — almonds provide a mild, slightly sweet base that is neutral enough to accept a wide range of flavoring additions without competition and rich enough in fat and protein to produce structurally coherent preparations without additional binders beyond egg. Almonds are cultivated in the southern coastal regions and are available throughout Bravia through trade, though their price increases significantly with distance from the coastal production areas. In the port towns, almonds are an everyday ingredient; in the interior Amphoe communities and the hill country, they are a somewhat more special purchase that may be reserved for specific occasions, of which the feast season is certainly one.

Walnuts are more widely cultivated throughout Bravia than almonds and are therefore available at a lower price and in greater quantity in the interior regions and the hill country, where walnut trees grow readily in the rocky upland terrain. Ground walnuts produce a preparation of more assertive and more complex flavor than almond preparations — earthier, slightly bitter in the skin, with a depth of flavor that is particularly well-suited to savory preparations and to sweet preparations that include spices robust enough to stand alongside the walnut’s own character. Walnuts for grinding should be fresh and without rancidity: as I noted in the nut-and-seed bar recipe of Chapter 7, rancid walnut flavor is impossible to correct once the nuts are incorporated into a preparation, and tasting before grinding is non-negotiable.

Hazelnuts are the hill country nut, grown abundantly in the understory of the deciduous forests that cover the upper elevations of the Western Reaches and gathered in quantity by the hill country communities every autumn. Ground hazelnuts produce a preparation of considerable flavor complexity — sweet and rich from the nut’s high fat content, slightly toasty from the characteristic hazelnut flavor that develops fully only when the nuts are properly roasted before grinding. Hazelnut preparations are the most regionally specific in this chapter: they are a hill country preparation, associated with the particular pantry of those communities, and they carry the character of that pantry directly and without apology.

Sesame seeds provide a different category of grain-free base than the nuts: smaller in particle size, higher in calcium and in certain minerals, and with a flavor that is distinctly more savory and more intense than any of the nut bases. Sesame preparations in the grain-free Level 3 kitchen tend to be thinner and crisper than nut-based preparations, because the very fine particle size of sesame paste allows it to be spread and dried to a degree of thinness not achievable with coarser nut meals. Sesame-based preparations are associated primarily with the Delta settlements and the southern coastal communities where sesame cultivation is established, but sesame paste — ground sesame seeds worked with a small quantity of oil to a smooth, spreadable consistency — travels well and is available in preserved form through trade channels in most Bravian markets.

Sunflower and pumpkin seeds are the practical, economical grain-free base ingredient of the interior Amphoe communities and the frontier settlements, where almonds are expensive and walnuts may not be grown locally in sufficient quantity for baking use. Ground sunflower seed produces a preparation of mild, slightly sweet flavor and a texture that is somewhat more coarse and less cohesive than almond preparations of comparable formula. It requires more binder — more egg, typically — to achieve structural coherence, and the finished preparation is somewhat more crumbly than almond-based equivalents. Pumpkin seed produces a preparation with a more assertive, slightly green and earthy flavor and a higher moisture content in the ground state that affects the preparation’s behavior in baking. Both are valid grain-free base ingredients, and both appear in the recipes below in formulations calibrated to their specific characteristics.

Root vegetable preparations — specifically, preparations based on dried and powdered root vegetables such as parsnip, dried carrot, and certain tubers that are cultivated in the agricultural regions of Bravia — occupy a distinct category in the grain-free kitchen as a carbohydrate source that is neither grain nor nut. I address these briefly at the close of the chapter rather than as primary preparations, because their use as the primary base of an unleavened preparation is less common in the Bravian tradition than nut and seed preparations and because their behavior in baking is somewhat more variable and less predictable than the nut and seed bases whose properties are better documented and more consistently managed.

Vegetable-based wraps using large fresh or lightly cooked leaves — the large outer leaves of cabbage, certain broad-leafed greens that grow throughout the agricultural regions, and in the southern coastal communities the large pliable leaves of certain cultivated plants — are the simplest grain-free alternative to the unleavened wrap and require almost no preparation beyond the selection and, in some cases, light wilting of the leaves. I include guidance for these at the end of the chapter as the most immediately accessible grain-free option for the household that has not prepared in advance and needs a grain-free wrap substitute quickly.


Recipe 36 — Plain Almond Flatbreads

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the plain almond flatbread is the foundational preparation of the grain-free Level 3 chapter, in the same way that Recipe 15 is the foundational preparation of Chapter 11. It is the simplest possible expression of what ground almond combined with egg and heat can produce, and it is the preparation I recommend that every baker who is working with grain-free preparations for the first time make first and make several times before attempting the more complex preparations that follow. Its simplicity is not a limitation but a clarity: it shows you exactly what the almond base does in a baked preparation without the complicating contributions of additional flavoring, secondary ingredients, or complex technique, and what the almond base does, understood clearly, is the foundation of everything else in this chapter.

Makes 8 flatbreads

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups finely ground blanched almonds — the fineness of the grind is more important in this preparation than in the almond-flour preparations of Chapter 10, because a coarser grind produces a flatbread with visible nut pieces that prevents the even rolling and the structural coherence this preparation requires; if the ground almond available to you is coarser than fine meal, pass it through the finest sieve available before measuring
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 2 eggs — added without beating for Level 3; lightly beaten for Level 1 and Level 2
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil or melted butter
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons cold water, if needed to bring the dough together — the almond base absorbs liquid differently from flour and the correct hydration must be assessed by feel rather than by a fixed quantity; begin without water and add it only if the mixture does not cohere

Method:

Combine the ground almonds and salt in a mixing bowl and stir. Add the eggs — unbeaten for Level 3, as they will be worked into the almond mixture by hand — and the olive oil or melted butter. Work the mixture together with your hands, pressing and folding rather than kneading in the gluten-development sense, because there is no gluten to develop: what you are doing is distributing the egg protein and the fat through the almond meal evenly, which takes approximately one to two minutes of sustained pressing. The mixture will come together into a mass that is considerably more cohesive than you might expect from a preparation without any flour: the fat and protein of the almonds themselves, combined with the egg, produce a mass that holds together firmly when pressed and does not crumble in the hand.

Assess the cohesion: if the mixture holds its shape when a small piece is pressed firmly between the fingers without crumbling, it requires no additional water. If it crumbles at the edges when pressed, add cold water one teaspoon at a time until cohesion is achieved. Do not add more water than necessary: an over-hydrated almond preparation will spread during baking and lose the defined shape of the rolled flatbread.

Cover the mixture and rest for ten minutes — shorter than the grain-based preparations, because there is no gluten network to relax, but the resting allows the egg proteins to begin their initial interaction with the almond fat and produces a more uniform and more workable mixture than one that is rolled immediately after mixing.

Preheat the oven to moderate — not the high heat of the Level 3 grain-based preparations, because the almond flatbread does not benefit from the same intense initial heat. The almond preparation needs sufficient time in the oven for the egg proteins to coagulate throughout its thickness, and too high a heat sets the surface before the interior has had time to set, producing a flatbread with a brittle shell and an unset, crumbly interior. Moderate heat, applied patiently, produces the correct result.

Divide the mixture into eight equal portions. Working with one portion at a time and keeping the remainder covered, place the portion between two pieces of parchment or between two sheets of clean cloth and roll with a rolling pin to a round of approximately six to seven inches in diameter. The between-parchment rolling technique is essential for almond flatbreads: the mixture will adhere to a bare bench surface and tear when lifted, because it lacks the structural integrity of a gluten-based dough. The parchment provides the release surface necessary for clean rolling and clean transfer.

Roll to a thickness of approximately a quarter of an inch — thicker than the grain-based Level 3 flatbreads, because the almond preparation does not have the structural strength to survive handling at near-translucent thinness and will crack and crumble if rolled too thin. The correct thickness produces a flatbread that is rigid when fully baked but with a slight interior give when pressed in the center.

Transfer the rolled preparation, still on its parchment base, directly to the baking sheet: peel away the top parchment and leave the bottom parchment in place, because the almond flatbread baked directly on a hot stone surface without parchment will adhere and cannot be removed cleanly. This is the most significant practical difference between grain-based and almond-based Level 3 flatbreads in terms of baking surface management, and ignoring it will result in the loss of the preparation.

Bake for twelve to fifteen minutes at moderate heat, until the surface is a pale golden color and the edges are visibly set and slightly darker than the center. The almond flatbread will not develop the characteristic spotty browning of the grain-based preparations: its browning is more even and more gradual, and the visual cues for doneness are different from those the grain-based baker is accustomed to. The correct finish is a uniform pale gold across the surface with slightly deeper coloring at the edges, and a preparation that is completely rigid when a corner is lifted from the parchment. If the preparation is still flexible when lifted, it requires additional baking time regardless of its surface color: flexibility indicates that the egg proteins in the interior have not yet fully set.

Allow to cool completely on the parchment before handling. The fully cooled almond flatbread is considerably more fragile than any of the grain-based preparations and must be handled with care: lift from the parchment using a broad, thin spatula rather than by hand, and support the full surface area of the flatbread during transfer to the serving cloth or the storage basket.

The flavor of the plain almond flatbread is clean and mild: the gentle sweetness and nuttiness of the almond are present without being assertive, the egg contributes a background richness that rounds the flavor, and the salt provides the definition that keeps the preparation from being simply bland. It is a quiet preparation, honest in its flavor as the Level 3 standard demands, and it is genuinely good with the festival table accompaniments described in Part Five: particularly with soft fresh cheese, with honey, and with the bitter herb preparations that are traditional at the Passover table.

Regional variations:

The plain almond flatbread accepts regional flavoring additions as naturally as any of the herb-seasoned grain flatbreads in Chapter 5, and I offer the following regional combinations as starting points for the baker who wants to vary the preparation across the seven days of the feast.

Western coastal: Add the finely grated zest of half an orange and a pinch of ground cardamom to the almond mixture before working together. The citrus-almond combination requires no further explanation — it is simply one of the great natural flavor pairings — and the cardamom provides a warmth that makes the preparation appropriate for both the savory and sweet festival table contexts.

Hill country: Add a teaspoon of finely crumbled dried thyme and a tablespoon of very finely minced dried apricot to the almond mixture. The dried apricot must be minced to a near-paste as in other preparations in this book where whole fruit pieces would create textural inconsistencies in a thin preparation. The thyme-almond combination in a baked flatbread is unexpectedly harmonious: the herb’s slight bitterness moderates the almond’s sweetness, and the two flavors produce a result that is more interesting than either alone.

Interior Amphoe: Add a teaspoon of ground cinnamon and a quarter teaspoon of ground allspice to the almond mixture. The warm spices are the interior communities’ characteristic contribution to any sweet-adjacent preparation and produce an almond flatbread of considerable fragrance and warmth that is particularly appealing during the cooler spring evenings of the feast week in the inland communities.

Delta settlement: Add a tablespoon of sesame seeds, toasted until golden and cooled, to the almond mixture. Press additional sesame seeds into the surface of the rolled preparation before baking. The sesame-almond combination is the Delta region’s contribution to the grain-free repertoire and reflects the same sesame abundance in that region’s pantry that produces the sesame-crusted crackers of Chapter 12 in the grain-based preparations.


Recipe 37 — Walnut Flatbreads with Savory Herbs

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the walnut flatbread is the savory preparation of this chapter in the same way that the almond flatbread is its sweet-leaning one, and the distinction reflects the inherent characters of the two nut bases: almonds mild and slightly sweet, walnuts assertive and complex and particularly well-suited to robust savory flavoring. This is not to say that the walnut flatbread cannot appear in sweet contexts — it can, and a walnut flatbread with a drizzle of honey and a scatter of coarse salt is a preparation of real distinction — but its primary role at the Level 3 grain-free festival table is as a savory accompaniment to the meat preparations and bitter herbs of the Passover table and the subsequent days’ festival meals.

Makes 8 flatbreads

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups finely ground walnuts — the walnuts should be ground from fresh, unrancid nuts with their skins intact for the most characterful preparation, or blanched to remove the skins for a milder and somewhat less bitter result. I use the skin-on preparation in my own kitchen, because the slight bitterness of the walnut skin is part of the flavor character I am seeking, but I note the blanched option for the baker whose household preferences lean toward a milder result.
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 1 teaspoon dried rosemary, crumbled to as fine a texture as possible — the rosemary should be crumbled rather than powdered; it should be present as identifiable but small fragments that distribute through the preparation rather than as a coarse garnish that creates uneven texture
  • ½ teaspoon dried thyme
  • ¼ teaspoon coarse black pepper, freshly ground
  • 2 eggs, added without beating for Level 3
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons cold water if needed

Method:

Combine the ground walnuts, salt, rosemary, thyme, and pepper in a mixing bowl and stir to distribute the seasoning evenly through the nut meal. Add the eggs and olive oil and work together by hand as in Recipe 36, pressing and folding until the mixture is cohesive and uniform. The walnut mixture will come together somewhat less readily than the almond mixture because walnuts contain somewhat less fat and somewhat more moisture than almonds, and the mixture may require one to two teaspoons of cold water to achieve the correct cohesion even before the water specification applies. Add cold water carefully to the point of cohesion and no further.

Cover and rest for ten minutes. Roll between parchment as in Recipe 36 to approximately a quarter of an inch thickness. Transfer on parchment to the baking sheet.

Bake at moderate heat for thirteen to sixteen minutes — slightly longer than the almond preparation because the walnut base’s higher moisture content requires somewhat more baking time to fully set the egg protein network throughout the preparation’s thickness. Use the same visual and tactile doneness tests as Recipe 36: uniform pale golden coloring across the surface, with slightly deeper coloring at the edges, and complete rigidity when a corner is lifted.

The flavor of the walnut-herb flatbread is considerably more assertive than the plain almond flatbread: the earthy depth of the walnut, the aromatic intensity of the rosemary, and the warmth of the pepper combine to produce a preparation that announces itself clearly at the festival table and that pairs best with robust accompaniments. I serve this preparation alongside the lamb stew preparations of Chapter 15, where the walnut’s savoriness and the lamb’s richness are in direct and harmonious conversation, and alongside hard aged cheese, which provides the salt and the sharper flavor that makes the complexity of the walnut preparation legible in the clearest possible way.

On the saltiness balance: Ground walnuts carry a natural bitterness that requires more assertive salting than ground almonds to produce a well-balanced preparation. The half-teaspoon of fine salt in the formula above is calibrated to this requirement, and the baker who is accustomed to the smaller salt quantities appropriate for almond preparations should not reduce it. Taste the ground walnut mixture before adding eggs and fat and assess the salt level: it should taste seasoned and slightly forward in salt at the raw stage, because baking will moderate the apparent saltiness and a preparation that tastes correctly salted raw will taste undersalted when baked.


Recipe 38 — Hazelnut Festival Rounds

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the hazelnut round is the most distinctly regional of the grain-free preparations in this chapter, associated as I noted above with the hill country communities of the Western Reaches where hazelnuts are gathered in autumn and stored for winter and festival-season use. It differs from the almond and walnut flatbreads in one important preparatory step: the hazelnuts must be roasted before grinding, because raw hazelnuts lack the depth of flavor that the roasted nut achieves, and the difference between a hazelnut preparation made from raw nuts and one made from properly roasted nuts is the difference between a preparation that is mildly nutty and one that is deeply, richly, unmistakably hazelnut in character.

The roasting must be done before the feast season begins, because the roasting of hazelnuts — heating them in a dry pan or a moderate oven until the skins crack and the nut beneath is golden and fragrant — is a preparation that involves heat and attention and is best completed unhurriedly rather than in the context of the festival kitchen where many other preparations are competing for the baker’s time. Roasted and ground hazelnuts can be stored in a tightly covered container in a cool, dark place for up to two weeks, so preparing them before the feast begins is entirely practical.

Makes 8 rounds

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups finely ground roasted hazelnuts — roast whole hazelnuts in a dry pan over medium heat or in a moderate oven for eight to twelve minutes, stirring frequently, until the skins crack and the nuts are deep golden. Rub the hot nuts in a clean cloth to remove as much of the cracked skin as will come away easily — not every bit of skin needs to be removed, and the attempt to remove every trace of skin by rubbing is counterproductive and damages the nuts; remove approximately half to two-thirds of the skin and accept the rest as a contribution to flavor complexity rather than a flaw to be corrected. Cool completely before grinding.
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 2 tablespoons honey, warmed until very runny — the honey-hazelnut combination is one of the oldest and most natural flavor pairings in the hill country kitchen, and its presence in the grain-free round gives this preparation a character simultaneously sweet and savory that is appropriate for the festival table in multiple contexts
  • 2 eggs, added without beating for Level 3
  • 1 tablespoon rendered lamb fat or melted butter — the additional fat beyond what the hazelnuts themselves contain is smaller in proportion than in the almond and walnut preparations because hazelnut is an inherently fatter nut, and the smaller addition prevents the preparation from being excessively rich while still contributing the fat’s structural and flavoring roles

Method:

Combine the ground roasted hazelnuts and salt in a mixing bowl. Combine the honey and the rendered fat or melted butter and stir together until the honey is distributed through the fat. Add the honey-fat mixture and the eggs to the ground hazelnut and work together by hand until cohesive, adding cold water only if necessary for cohesion. The roasted hazelnut mixture will typically cohere with no added water, because the fat released during roasting makes the ground nut somewhat more plastic and self-binding than the raw nut preparations.

Cover and rest for ten minutes. Roll between parchment to a round of approximately six to seven inches in diameter — slightly smaller than the almond and walnut preparations, because the hazelnut round is intentionally thicker and more substantial, reflecting its role as a festival table preparation rather than a flatbread accompaniment. The correct thickness is approximately three-eighths of an inch.

Bake at moderate heat for fifteen to eighteen minutes — the thicker profile and the honey content both contribute to a longer required baking time than the thinner almond and walnut preparations. The honey’s natural sugars caramelize against the surface of the preparation during baking and produce the most pronounced surface browning of any grain-free preparation in this chapter: the hazelnut round will emerge from the oven a deep, rich, golden brown, considerably darker in color than either the almond or walnut preparations, and this color is correct and desirable rather than a sign of overbaking. The surface should look deeply golden and slightly glossy from the caramelized honey, and the preparation should be completely rigid when a corner is lifted from the parchment.

The fully cooled hazelnut festival round has a depth of flavor that I find among the most impressive in this chapter: the roasted hazelnut character, the honey sweetness, the lamb fat’s gentle savoriness, and the salt combine to produce something that is complex without being complicated, rich without being excessive, and genuinely distinctive in a way that earns its place at the festival table on its own terms rather than as a substitute for anything else. My hill country students have consistently described it as tasting like home, which I take to be the highest possible compliment a regional preparation can receive.


Recipe 39 — Sesame-Based Thin Preparations

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the sesame-based preparation is the most technically distinctive of the grain-free preparations in this chapter, because sesame paste — the ground sesame base from which these preparations are made — behaves quite differently from ground nuts in the mixing, rolling, and baking stages, and the baker who approaches it with the same technique used for the nut preparations will find the results inconsistent. The specific handling requirements of sesame paste are worth understanding before beginning, and I address them in some detail below before the recipe itself.

Sesame paste, made from sesame seeds ground with a small quantity of sesame oil to a smooth, pourable consistency, is an ingredient that has been used in the cooking traditions of the southern coastal and Delta communities for as long as sesame has been cultivated in those regions. In the grain-free Level 3 context, it serves as both the base ingredient and the primary fat source, which means the preparation requires no additional fat beyond what the sesame paste itself contains — a practical simplification relative to the nut preparations that require separately added fat.

The handling challenge of sesame paste is its tendency to separate: the oil in the paste rises to the surface during storage, and the paste at the bottom of the container becomes progressively stiffer while the surface oil accumulates above it. A separated sesame paste incorporated into a preparation without thorough recombination will produce uneven fat distribution and an erratic baked result. Before measuring the sesame paste for this preparation, stir it thoroughly from the bottom of the container until the oil and the ground sesame are uniformly recombined into a smooth, pourable consistency.

Makes approximately 20 thin preparations

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup well-stirred sesame paste — at room temperature, not cold, because cold sesame paste is considerably stiffer than room-temperature paste and does not spread and roll as needed for thin preparations
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • ½ teaspoon ground cumin — the traditional spicing for savory sesame preparations in the Delta settlement context; omit for a plain preparation and substitute ground cinnamon and a teaspoon of honey for a sweet version
  • 1 egg, added without beating for Level 3
  • 2 to 3 tablespoons cold water — the sesame paste base requires more added water than the nut preparations to achieve a spreadable consistency

Method:

Combine the sesame paste, salt, and cumin in a mixing bowl and stir until the spice is uniformly distributed through the paste. Add the egg and work it in by hand until the mixture is cohesive and smooth: unlike the nut preparations, the sesame preparation will not form a dough-like mass but will remain in a thick paste consistency throughout the preparation and baking process. This is correct and should not be corrected by adding more of any ingredient to make it stiffer.

Add cold water one tablespoon at a time, stirring well after each addition, until the mixture reaches the consistency of very thick porridge: spreadable with the back of a spoon but not pourable, holding its shape when a spoonful is dropped back into the bowl but settling gradually rather than holding a rigid peak.

Preheat the oven to moderate, with a parchment-lined baking sheet inside. Parchment is essential for these preparations and cannot be substituted: sesame paste bakes into one of the most adhesive surfaces produced by any preparation in this book, and the attempt to bake sesame preparations on any surface other than parchment will result in the loss of the preparation to the baking surface with a reliability that I can guarantee from personal experience.

Drop the paste by tablespoonfuls onto the parchment-lined baking sheet, spacing the mounds approximately three inches apart. Using the back of a spoon or a small offset spatula dipped in cold water, spread each mound into a thin, even round of approximately three to four inches in diameter. The spreading motion should be circular and smooth, working from the center of the mound outward, and the wet spatula prevents the paste from adhering to the spreading tool. The correct thickness for the sesame preparation is thinner than the nut preparations — approximately an eighth of an inch — because the paste’s high fat and moisture content means a thicker preparation will not dry to complete rigidity during a reasonable baking time, and an insufficiently dried sesame preparation is unpleasantly soft and sticky rather than crisply finished.

Bake for sixteen to twenty minutes at moderate heat until the preparations are deeply golden — darker than the almond preparations and somewhat darker than the walnut preparations, because the sesame sugars caramelize readily — and are completely dry when pressed gently in the center with a fingertip. The completely baked sesame preparation should release cleanly from the parchment when gently lifted at one edge with a thin spatula: if it sticks, it requires additional baking time, and the baker should not attempt to force it from the parchment before it is ready, as it will tear.

Allow to cool on the parchment until completely room temperature before lifting or stacking. The fully cooled sesame preparation is brittle and crisp, with a deep, intensely nutty sesame flavor and a slight savory warmth from the cumin. It is particularly good alongside the soft dairy preparations of Chapter 16 and alongside roasted vegetable preparations of the kind described in Chapter 15.

The sweet variation: Omit the cumin. Add one teaspoon of honey and half a teaspoon of ground cinnamon to the paste along with the egg. The sweet sesame preparation has a warm, sweet character that pairs very well with the honey cake of Recipe 11 and with fresh soft cheese on the sweet festival table, and it is the version I most commonly offer to guests who have not previously encountered a grain-free sesame preparation, because the honey-sesame combination is more immediately approachable than the savory cumin version for palates unfamiliar with this style of preparation.


Recipe 40 — Sunflower and Pumpkin Seed Flatbreads

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the seed flatbread is the grain-free preparation most accessible to the household in any region of Bravia regardless of proximity to nut-producing agricultural areas, because sunflower and pumpkin seeds are cultivated in the kitchen gardens and small holdings attached to virtually every Amphoe grange community throughout the nation. It is the most democratic of the grain-free preparations and the one I would recommend first to a baker who has not worked with grain-free preparations before and who wants to begin with ingredients that are reliably available and familiar rather than with the specialty nut ingredients that the previous recipes require.

The seed flatbread is less delicate in flavor and somewhat more substantial in texture than the almond or hazelnut preparations, reflecting the characteristics of its base ingredients: sunflower and pumpkin seeds are earthier, more savory, and slightly more moisture-rich than the nut bases, and the preparation reflects these qualities directly.

Makes 10 flatbreads

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup finely ground sunflower seeds — dry-roasted before grinding to develop their flavor; raw sunflower seeds ground without roasting produce a preparation with a faint green bitterness that is not desirable; toast in a dry pan over medium heat until just golden, cool completely, then grind
  • 1 cup finely ground pumpkin seeds — also dry-roasted before grinding, which reduces the natural moisture content of the pumpkin seed and concentrates its flavor; the green color of the pumpkin seed will be visible in the ground meal and will produce a preparation of distinctly greenish-grey color that is unusual in appearance but normal and correct for this preparation
  • ¾ teaspoon fine salt
  • ½ teaspoon dried dill seed, crumbled — the interior Amphoe seasoning for seed flatbreads; substitute caraway for the hill country version or coriander for the Delta version
  • 2 eggs, added without beating for Level 3
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil or rendered fat
  • 2 to 3 tablespoons cold water, as needed

Method:

Combine the ground sunflower seeds, ground pumpkin seeds, salt, and dill seed in a mixing bowl and stir to distribute. The mixed seed meal will be somewhat more coarse and more variable in texture than the almond or walnut meals if the grinding has been done by mortar rather than by mill, and this coarseness is acceptable in this preparation where some textural variation is part of the preparation’s honest character.

Add the eggs and olive oil or rendered fat and work together by hand until the mixture coheres. Seed flatbread mixture typically requires more added water than almond preparations to achieve cohesion — begin with two tablespoons of cold water and add more if needed. The correct consistency is a mass that holds together when pressed but does not feel sticky or overly moist.

Cover and rest for fifteen minutes — slightly longer than the nut preparations, because the higher moisture content of the pumpkin seed requires time to distribute through the mixture and stabilize before rolling.

Roll between parchment to a round of approximately six to seven inches at approximately a quarter of an inch thickness. The seed flatbread mixture is more fragile during rolling than the nut preparations: the coarser particle size and lower fat content of the seed base mean that the mixture holds together under direct pressure but may crack at the edges if the rolling pin is applied too firmly at the extreme edges of the preparation. Work with moderate, even pressure across the full surface of the preparation rather than pressing firmly at the center and less at the edges.

Bake at moderate heat for fifteen to eighteen minutes until the surface is golden-brown and the preparation is completely rigid when lifted. The pumpkin seed’s natural color produces a preparation that is somewhat darker than the almond preparations even when correctly baked, and the baker should use the tactile rigidity test rather than color alone as the primary doneness indicator for this preparation.

The flavor of the seed flatbread is more robustly savory than the nut preparations: the toasted sunflower and pumpkin seeds produce an earthy, slightly smoky depth of flavor that is very good alongside the lamb and root vegetable preparations of Chapter 15 and alongside the hard aged cheese preparations of Chapter 16. It is an honest, substantial preparation — not elegant in the way of the hazelnut festival round or the almond flatbread — but good in the direct, uncomplicated way of a preparation that knows exactly what it is and has no ambition to be anything else.


Vegetable-Based Wraps: A Practical Guide

As I noted in the introductory section of this chapter, large fresh leaves used as wraps represent the simplest grain-free alternative to the unleavened wrap preparations of Chapter 6, requiring no preparation beyond the selection and, in some cases, light treatment of the leaves. I address them here not as recipes in the full sense but as practical guidance for the household that needs a grain-free wrap option quickly.

Cabbage leaves are the most widely available and most structurally reliable of the vegetable wrap options. The large outer leaves of a fresh head of cabbage, separated carefully to keep them intact, can be used raw as wraps for cool or room-temperature preparations, or briefly wilted in hot water for thirty to sixty seconds to make them more pliable for warm or cooked fillings. A wilted cabbage leaf is a surprisingly capable wrap: it folds without tearing, holds a generous filling without losing its structural integrity, and has a mild, slightly sweet flavor that pairs well with the lamb, poultry, and vegetable preparations appropriate for the festival table.

Broad-leafed greens such as large beet greens, chard leaves with their stems removed, and the outer leaves of large-headed lettuces can all be used in the same manner as cabbage leaves. They are more delicate than cabbage and should be wilted more briefly — fifteen to twenty seconds in hot water — and filled with drier preparations than cabbage leaves can accommodate, because their thinner leaf surface does not support the weight of a very moist filling without tearing.

Romaine lettuce leaves, used without wilting, provide a crisp, cup-like vessel for preparations that are better served in a container than wrapped: a large romaine leaf cupped in the hand and filled with a spoonful of lamb preparation or soft cheese and herb mixture is a perfectly serviceable grain-free preparation that is made in seconds and requires no baking or heat management of any kind.


Root Vegetable and Alternative Base Preparations: A Note

I want to briefly address the use of dried root vegetable preparations as grain-free baking bases, which I described in the chapter introduction as a category that exists in the Bravian tradition but is less common and less well-documented than the nut and seed preparations.

Dried and finely powdered parsnip, dried carrot, and certain tubers can be used as partial or primary bases in grain-free Level 3 preparations, combined with egg as a binder, and the results are preparations of interesting and pleasant character. The primary challenge of root vegetable preparations is their high natural sugar content, which causes them to brown very rapidly under oven heat and requires significantly lower temperatures and more careful monitoring than the nut and seed preparations. The secondary challenge is their high moisture content even in the dried state, which requires precise calibration of the liquid addition and more conservative spreading to prevent preparations that spread excessively before the egg protein sets around them.

I have made root vegetable preparations in my own kitchen and found them good, but I have not developed them to the degree of specification and reliability that I hold as the standard for recipes included in this book, and I do not include them as full recipes here for that reason. The baker who wishes to explore root vegetable grain-free preparations is encouraged to do so using the principles established in this chapter: moderate heat, parchment, egg as the primary binder, patient observation of the doneness indicators, and a willingness to adjust the preparation across several batches before expecting a consistent result. It is genuinely interesting territory, and the Bravian kitchen is always, in the end, improved by the baker who ventures into it with curiosity and without excessive attachment to the outcome of any single batch.


The Grain-Free Kitchen in the Wider Context of the Feast

I want to close this chapter, and with it Part Four of this book, by returning to the woman who comes to my bakery every feast season.

Her name is Hedwig, and she has, since I began producing the preparations in this chapter, become one of my more informed and more opinionated customers in the specific area of grain-free Level 3 baking. She has opinions about the grinding of almonds — finer than I typically produce in the bakery’s production batches, which she has communicated to me on several occasions with the particular directness that characterizes the Bravian critique when it is offered by someone who considers you capable of improvement. She has opinions about the roasting of hazelnuts, specifically that they benefit from a slightly longer roasting time than I use, which produces a deeper color and a more assertive flavor. She has opinions about sesame paste and its storage and the importance of the recombination step that I have included in Recipe 39 specifically because of what she told me when she watched me prepare it once and observed that my paste was inadequately stirred.

She has, in other words, become something of an authority on the subject, which is what happens when a person pays close attention to something for decades and is given, at last, adequate material to pay attention to.

Last feast season she brought me a preparation she had made herself from the almond recipe, with the orange zest and cardamom variation, and it was excellent — better than my bakery’s production version in the specific quality of the almond meal, which she had ground herself with considerably more patience and a finer result than my production grinding achieves. I told her so, in the unelaborated manner in which Bravians acknowledge a thing they mean without wanting to make too much of it, and she accepted this with equivalent brevity and went home.

She belongs at the feast table. She always did. Every person who keeps the feast belongs at the feast table, and the baker who understands her craft fully enough to ensure that all of them can be there — whoever they are, whatever their bodies can accommodate, across all three levels and all grain categories and all regional traditions — is doing the work the feast season calls for, which is not only the baking of good bread but the setting of a table where everyone has a place.

That is what this book has been trying to do, from the foreword to this final chapter of Part Four. I hope it has done so.


Part Five: Complementary Foods and the Unleavened Table begins on the following page.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 13 — Level 3 in the Communal and Temple Kitchen

There is a particular kind of knowledge that lives in the hands of a person who has baked bread for a hundred people, and it is not the same knowledge that lives in the hands of a person who has baked bread for eight. The difference is not merely arithmetic. It is not the case that everything you know about baking for eight translates to baking for a hundred simply by multiplying the quantities by twelve and proceeding as before. The baker who approaches large-scale production with this assumption will discover its inadequacy within the first hour of her first communal baking session, probably at the moment when she realizes that her largest mixing bowl holds perhaps a quarter of the flour she needs, or that her single griddle will require four hours of continuous attention to produce the quantity of flatbread the occasion demands, or that the dough she mixed first has been sitting resting for twice the time it needs while she mixed the subsequent batches and has become so relaxed it is practically liquid against the bench.

Large-scale unleavened baking at Level 3 is not difficult in the way that the egg-white preparations of Chapter 10 are difficult — it does not require the kind of precise, attentive technique that those preparations demand in the moment of execution. It is difficult in a different and, I would argue, more fundamental way: it requires organizational intelligence, physical endurance, and the ability to manage multiple parallel processes simultaneously without losing track of where any of them are. It requires the baker to think not only about what she is doing at any given moment but about what she will need to be doing in fifteen minutes, and in thirty minutes, and in an hour, and to have arranged her materials and her workspace so that each of those future moments is set up for success by the decisions she makes now.

This is the kind of intelligence that the professional baker and the institutional kitchen worker develop through experience and that the home baker, however skilled at her domestic scale, must consciously develop when she enters the communal kitchen context for the first time. It is teachable, and this chapter is my attempt to teach it, with specific application to the Level 3 unleavened preparations appropriate for the feast season communal and institutional contexts in which they are most commonly required.


The Contexts of Communal Level 3 Baking

Before addressing the techniques and logistics of large-scale production, I want to identify the specific contexts in the Bravian communal life in which Level 3 unleavened baking at scale is required, because each context has somewhat different requirements and understanding the context is necessary for calibrating the production correctly.

The Passover table of a large household or extended family is the most common context for home bakers who are moving from domestic to semi-communal scale for the first time. A household of eight is a domestic baking operation; a household of twenty-five to thirty, which is entirely normal for a Bravian family gathering at the Passover, is a semi-communal one, and the organizational demands increase disproportionately with the increase in numbers. The Passover table requires a specific set of preparations — the festival flatbread, the bitter herbs, the roasted lamb — and the timing of the baking must be coordinated with the timing of the other preparations so that the flatbread arrives at the table warm and fresh at the same moment as everything else. This coordination across a large household preparation is one of the primary planning challenges of the large-scale Passover table, and I address it specifically in the timing section below.

The Amphoe grange hall gathering is the most common context for baking at the intermediate community scale: gatherings of fifty to one hundred and fifty people that take place throughout the seven days of the feast at the grange facilities that are at the center of Amphoe community life. The grange hall gathering is typically a shared meal in which each household contributes preparations and the grange kitchen supplements with centrally produced bread and other staples. The grange kitchen baker — usually a rotating role among the community’s more capable bakers, organized by the grange master’s household — is responsible for producing sufficient Level 3 flatbread to supplement what the individual households have brought, and the scale of this production ranges from a few dozen flatbreads to several hundred depending on the size of the community and the degree to which individual households are supplementing with their own productions.

The provincial temple kitchen is the highest-scale institutional context in the Bravian communal baking world, and it operates under specific requirements that do not apply to either the household or the grange hall context. The provincial temple at Porterville, whose catering staff I consulted in the preparation of this chapter, produces unleavened bread not only for the feast-week communal meals associated with the temple but for the priestly and Levitical households that are resident at the temple complex, for the pilgrimage households that come to the temple during the feast season and require provisions, and for the commanded preparations associated with the ritual calendar of the temple itself. The temple kitchen produces Level 3 flatbread continuously for the full seven days of the feast, in quantities that can reach several hundred individual preparations per day, and the organizational systems it uses to manage this production are the most refined and most instructive examples of large-scale Level 3 baking available to the Bravian baker seeking to understand how this kind of work is done at its most accomplished.

I am grateful to the head baker of the Porterville provincial temple kitchen, a woman of remarkable capability and extraordinary patience with an academic visitor who had rather more questions than she had expected, for the time she gave to explaining those systems. Several of the organizational approaches in the sections that follow are drawn from or inspired by what I observed in her kitchen, and I have credited specific observations where I have drawn on them directly.


Scaling Level 3 Formulas: The Principles

The scaling of Level 3 formulas for large production is, in the most basic mathematical sense, straightforward: the ingredient ratios do not change, and the baker who wishes to make six times the yield of Recipe 31 simply multiplies every ingredient by six. The difficulties of scaling are not mathematical but practical, and they cluster around three specific areas: mixing volume, bench management, and heat management.

On mixing volume: The fundamental constraint of mixing at large scale is that dough cannot be worked effectively in a container that is too full to allow the baker’s hands or tools to move freely through it. A dough that fills its mixing vessel to the rim is a dough that cannot be kneaded in that vessel, which means it must be either transferred to the bench for kneading — creating additional handling — or mixed in a vessel large enough to allow kneading within it. The template kitchen of the grange hall and the temple kitchen typically use large wooden mixing troughs rather than bowls: troughs approximately thirty inches long and fifteen inches wide that can accommodate the mixing and kneading of ten to twelve pounds of flour at a time, which is roughly the quantity required for forty to fifty standard flatbreads. For the baker working at the grange scale without access to such troughs, the practical solution is to divide the total formula into batches that can be managed in the largest available bowl, mix each batch separately, and combine them on the bench for final kneading.

The division of a large formula into manageable mixing batches creates a sequencing question that I want to address explicitly: in what order should the batches be mixed, and how should they be managed while subsequent batches are being prepared? The answer, which the Porterville temple kitchen uses as a standing protocol, is to work in a cycle that keeps each batch in the same stage of the process at any given time, rather than a linear sequence in which the first batch is fully baked before the second is mixed. The cycle works as follows: mix batch one and begin its rest; immediately mix batch two and begin its rest; begin rolling and baking batch one when its rest is complete; mix batch three while batch one bakes; begin rolling and baking batch two when batch one is finished; and so on. In this way, the griddle or oven is never idle and the resting doughs are never waiting longer than they should. This cycling approach requires the baker to maintain awareness of where each batch is in the process simultaneously, which is the organizational demand of large-scale baking that I described in the chapter introduction, and it cannot be managed by instinct alone at this scale: it requires explicit tracking.

On bench management: The bench space available in a home kitchen is typically adequate for rolling one to two flatbreads at a time. The grange hall kitchen’s work tables, which are typically eight to ten feet long and three feet wide, can accommodate four to six simultaneous rolling operations if the bakers working at them are organized and efficient. The temple kitchen has multiple work tables and multiple bakers working simultaneously, each responsible for a specific stage of the process — one baker mixing, two rolling, one or two managing the baking surfaces — in a division of labor that is among the most efficient organizational approaches available for continuous large-scale production.

For the home baker who is scaling up for the first time and working alone, the bench management challenge is primarily one of flow: ensuring that rolled flatbreads are moved to the baking surface efficiently and that the space vacated by the removed dough is prepared for the next rolling without delay. A rhythm of mix-rest-roll-bake-repeat, with the bench cleared and refloured between each portion, is the basic organizing principle, and developing a smooth personal rhythm within this framework is the primary skill that distinguishes the experienced large-scale baker from the novice.

For the baker who is working with one or two assistants, the optimal division of labor at the grange hall scale is: one person mixing and managing the resting doughs, one person rolling, and one person managing the baking surfaces. If only two people are available, the most effective division is mixing and bench management to one person and rolling and baking to the other. Working with two people who do not share this division of labor — who both roll and both bake without specific role assignments — typically produces a less efficient result than either a single organized baker or a properly divided two-person team, because the coordination overhead of two people working the same stage simultaneously without clear assignment exceeds the efficiency gained from the additional hands.

On heat management: The single greatest logistical constraint of large-scale Level 3 flatbread production is baking capacity, and it is the constraint that the beginning large-scale baker most consistently underestimates. A single griddle of standard household size can produce approximately six to eight flatbreads of the standard eight-inch diameter per hour, assuming continuous operation with no delays for griddle reheating or dough management. This yield is adequate for a household table but woefully insufficient for a grange hall gathering of a hundred people, which requires perhaps two hundred flatbreads to provide a generous serving to every guest across the duration of the meal. At six to eight flatbreads per hour, a single griddle would require twenty-five to thirty hours of continuous operation to produce this quantity — which is not a practical approach.

The solution, which both the grange hall and the temple kitchen employ, is parallel baking capacity: multiple griddles or multiple baking surfaces operating simultaneously. The Porterville temple kitchen runs six griddles during the peak production days of the feast season, staffed by two bakers who alternate between managing the griddles and managing the rolling station, and this arrangement produces approximately forty-five to fifty flatbreads per hour — sufficient to produce the daily requirement of several hundred flatbreads in a single production session of four to five hours. The grange hall kitchen typically operates two to four griddles depending on the size of the community, which brings the hourly yield to twelve to thirty flatbreads and makes the production of two hundred flatbreads feasible within a baking session of eight to fifteen hours — a long day’s work for the grange kitchen baker, but a manageable one.

For the household baker scaling up for a large Passover table, the practical recommendation is to assess how many baking surfaces are available — whether griddles, stovetop burners on which griddles can be placed simultaneously, or a large oven with multiple stones — and calculate the required production time based on the yield per surface per hour described above, then begin production early enough that the final batch emerges from the oven or griddle at the time the meal is to be served. A table of thirty requiring sixty flatbreads, baked on two griddles at a combined yield of twelve to sixteen per hour, requires three to five hours of baking time, which means the first batch of dough should be mixed approximately four to five and a half hours before the meal is scheduled to begin.


Large-Scale Formula: Communal Festival Flatbread

The following is the communal-scale formula for the plain Level 3 festival flatbread appropriate for the Passover table and the grange hall gathering. It is based on Recipe 15 from Chapter 11, scaled to produce approximately sixty flatbreads — sufficient for a gathering of twenty-five to thirty people with a generous serving of two flatbreads per person. This is the quantity I would produce for a large household Passover table; for a grange hall gathering of one hundred, multiply by three to four and organize production accordingly.

Yields approximately 60 flatbreads of eight inches diameter

Ingredients:

  • 20 cups hard wheat flour — weigh this rather than measuring by volume if a scale is available; large-scale measurements by volume accumulate small inaccuracies in each measure that compound across twenty cups into a significant total error. One cup of hard wheat flour weighs approximately four and three-quarter ounces; twenty cups therefore weighs approximately ninety-five ounces, or just under six pounds.
  • 2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons fine salt — the scaling of salt from the single-batch recipe of Recipe 15 produces this quantity; measure it carefully and distribute it through the flour before beginning the water addition
  • Approximately 6⅔ cups water, heated until steaming — this is the scaled water quantity for Recipe 15; in practice, large-scale mixes may require slightly more or less water than the mathematically scaled amount, because flour absorption varies with ambient humidity and temperature, and the baker should use this figure as a starting point and adjust as needed for the specific conditions of the baking day

Working method for large-scale production:

Divide the total formula into working batches of four cups of flour each, which yields approximately twelve flatbreads per batch and is a comfortable working volume for a large mixing bowl or a two-person mixing operation. This produces five working batches from the full formula.

Prepare the salt-to-flour ratio for each batch: approximately one teaspoon of fine salt per four cups of flour. Measure the salt for each batch in advance and set it in small bowls near the mixing station so that each batch is seasoned correctly without requiring repeated measurement under production conditions.

Prepare all hot water in a single large vessel at the beginning of production and keep it hot throughout the session by maintaining it near a heat source: a pot set on a low burner at the side of the stove is adequate. Hot water added to dough must be genuinely hot — steaming, not merely warm — and water that has been allowed to cool to lukewarm does not produce the starch gelatinization that hot water provides.

Organize the baking surfaces and preheat all of them before beginning to mix the first batch: griddles take time to reach the correct temperature, and the production cycle should not be interrupted by waiting for a baking surface to preheat. All griddles should be at temperature before the first rolled flatbread is ready to bake.

Begin mixing batch one: combine four cups of flour with one teaspoon of salt, add approximately one and one-third cups of hot water, and bring together as in Recipe 15. Knead for three minutes and set to rest covered. Without pausing, begin mixing batch two using the same method. If a second baker is available, she should begin mixing batch two while the first baker is kneading batch one, so that both batches reach their resting period as nearly simultaneously as possible.

Begin rolling and baking batch one when its rest is complete, approximately fifteen minutes after mixing. Do not allow any batch to rest for more than twenty-five minutes before rolling begins, because over-relaxed dough at scale becomes increasingly difficult to manage and begins to absorb bench flour excessively. Keep the production cycle moving: the rest period should be used for mixing the next batch, not for standing idle.

On the organization of the baking surface attendant: The person managing the griddles during large-scale production has a physically demanding and attentionally demanding role that is distinct from the rolling and mixing roles. Her responsibilities are: maintaining the heat of the griddles at the correct level throughout the session, managing the timing of each flatbread on each griddle simultaneously, removing finished flatbreads to the holding cloth, and communicating clearly to the rolling station when the baking surfaces are ready for the next batch of rolled doughs. At the two-griddle scale, this role can be managed by one person operating both griddles alternately; at the four-griddle scale, two people should share the role. At the six-griddle scale of the temple kitchen, two experienced bakers with complete familiarity with each other’s working rhythm manage the baking stations while a third baker manages the rolling station and a fourth manages mixing and dough sequencing — a four-person team that the head baker of the Porterville temple kitchen described to me as the minimum effective staffing for their production requirements during the feast season.


Large-Scale Formula: Communal Oil-Enriched Festival Round

For feast gatherings where the oil-enriched festival round of Recipe 31 is to be offered alongside or instead of the plain flatbread, the following scaled formula produces approximately forty rounds of the eight-inch size — sufficient for a gathering of twenty to twenty-five people with two rounds per person, or for a larger gathering where the oil-enriched round is offered as a supplement to the plain flatbread rather than as the primary preparation.

Yields approximately 40 rounds of eight inches diameter

Ingredients:

  • 16 cups hard wheat flour
  • 2 tablespoons fine salt
  • 3 cups good olive oil — this is a very large quantity of oil and represents a significant portion of the festival kitchen’s olive oil budget; the communal oil-enriched preparation is appropriately reserved for specific days or specific occasions within the feast week rather than produced in this quantity daily
  • 4 cups water, heated until steaming

Working method: The same batch-and-cycle approach described above applies here. Work in batches of four cups of flour with three-quarters cup of oil and one cup of hot water — four batches from the full formula. The oil-enriched dough mixes more quickly and requires less kneading than the plain dough, which partially compensates for the longer rest time it benefits from: the cycle of mixing, kneading, resting, rolling, and baking can be managed at approximately the same pace as the plain formula despite the different resting time specification.

A note on oil economy at communal scale: The oil requirement for large-scale enriched production is substantial, and the communal kitchen that is producing both plain and enriched flatbreads across several days of the feast should plan its olive oil supply carefully before the feast season begins rather than discovering mid-week that the oil stores are insufficient. The grange hall kitchen in the Porterville Amphoe community maintains a reserve specifically designated for feast-week enriched production and does not use it for any other purpose; the household equivalent is to calculate the total oil requirement for the enriched preparations planned for the full seven days and set that quantity aside at the beginning of the feast, treating it as reserved rather than available for general kitchen use.


Storage and Distribution of Large-Scale Production

The storage and distribution of Level 3 flatbreads produced in large quantity requires different thinking from the storage of domestic-scale production, and getting it wrong is costly in a way that getting small-scale storage wrong is not: a stack of improperly stored flatbreads that soften or become damp or that break excessively during handling represents a significant loss of labor and materials at the communal scale, and the communal kitchen that has produced two hundred flatbreads in a day’s baking and then allowed them to absorb moisture overnight has wasted that day’s work in a way that cannot be quickly remedied before the next meal.

Cooling before storage is the first requirement, and it is more demanding at scale than at domestic production because the volume of hot product generates more ambient heat and steam that must be managed. Flatbreads stacked directly on top of each other while still hot will trap steam between them and soften their surfaces in a way that is difficult to reverse without returning them to the oven, which adds handling and time that the communal kitchen does not have to spare. The Porterville temple kitchen cools all flatbreads on long cloth-covered wooden racks before stacking: each flatbread is laid flat on the cloth surface of the rack with no other flatbread immediately above or below it, and the racks are arranged so that air circulates freely around each piece. The flatbreads remain on the cooling racks for a minimum of fifteen minutes before being handled further.

Storage in the cloth-lined basket system is the standard communal approach in both the grange hall kitchen and the temple kitchen. Large, shallow baskets lined with clean, dry cloth — one cloth layer at the base, one cloth layer between each group of ten to twelve flatbreads, one cloth layer over the top — provide both the protection from moisture that the flatbreads need and the accessibility that distribution to the table requires. The cloth absorbs any residual surface moisture from the flatbreads without holding it against the bread surface, which is the critical advantage of cloth over any sealed container: sealed containers trap moisture against the product and accelerate softening, while cloth allows moisture to escape while protecting the flatbreads from dust and from the adhesion to each other that unprotected stacking produces.

The cloth used in the basket system should be clean, dry, and unscented: laundered with no soap residue that might transfer to the flatbreads, and thoroughly dried before use. The grange hall kitchens typically maintain a dedicated set of cloths used only for flatbread storage, laundered immediately after each feast season and stored separately from general kitchen linens. This is a practice worth adopting in any communal kitchen context.

The distribution of flatbreads to the table at the communal scale involves specific logistical considerations that the domestic table does not face. The basket system described above serves as both the storage vessel and the serving vessel: the baskets can be brought to the table directly and passed among the guests, with each guest taking one or two flatbreads as the basket passes. This approach is efficient and convivial, appropriate to the shared table character of the feast gathering, and it minimizes the handling of individual flatbreads by kitchen staff during service.

For the Passover table specifically, the temple kitchen protocol is to reserve a separate, smaller basket containing the finest quality flatbreads — those that are most evenly rolled, most evenly baked, and most visually appealing — for the ceremonial portion of the Passover service, in which the flatbread is handled liturgically rather than simply eaten. The larger production baskets containing flatbreads of good but not necessarily ceremonial quality are used for the meal itself. This separation of ceremonial and meal-service flatbreads is a practical organizational refinement that I commend to any kitchen producing for the Passover service as well as the subsequent meal.


The Temple Kitchen’s Approach to Level 3 Quality Control

Quality control at scale is a different problem from quality control at domestic production, because at domestic scale the baker’s personal attention to each piece is sufficient to catch and correct most problems before they result in a poor product reaching the table. At the communal and temple scale, the volume of production makes personal attention to each individual piece impossible, and quality must be maintained through systems rather than through individual attention.

The Porterville temple kitchen maintains quality at Level 3 flatbread production through three specific systems that I observed and that I describe here for the benefit of the communal kitchen baker who is working to establish similar practices at the grange hall scale.

The rolling standard is maintained through a simple physical gauge: a wooden frame of the correct diameter — eight inches in the standard production, twelve inches for the communal herb rounds — through which each rolled flatbread must pass before it goes to the baking surface. A flatbread that is too large passes through but bakes unevenly because it extends beyond the optimal heat zone of the griddle; a flatbread that is too small does not pass through and must be rerolled. The gauge is not used for every piece in a production run of experienced bakers, but it is used consistently at the beginning of each session to calibrate the rolling team’s eye, and it is used whenever a new baker joins the rolling station or whenever the visual consistency of the rolled pieces appears to be deteriorating.

The temple kitchen also maintains a thickness standard, gauged not by a physical tool but by training: every baker who works at the rolling station is trained to roll to the specified thinness by holding the rolled piece to a window or a lamp and checking that the light passes through it in the correct way. This training takes several baking sessions to fully internalize but becomes reliable and consistent once established, and the temple head baker told me that she considers this eye for thinness the single most important quality control skill she trains in new rolling-station bakers, because uneven thinness is the primary source of quality variation in the baked flatbread.

The baking quality standard is maintained by a simple visual check: each batch of finished flatbreads coming off the griddles is evaluated by the baking-surface attendant against a reference sample — one flatbread from the first successful batch of the session, kept at the station as a visual standard — before being moved to the cooling racks. Flatbreads that deviate significantly from the reference sample in color, surface texture, or overall appearance are set aside for a secondary evaluation that determines whether they are appropriate for the communal table, appropriate only for the provision context where appearance is less important than nutritional value and keeping quality, or so significantly deficient that they should be returned to the kitchen for their staff’s own consumption or disposed of. The proportion of production that falls into the latter two categories in a well-run temple kitchen is very small — the head baker told me it rarely exceeds two to three percent of total production in a session — but the existence of the evaluation step maintains the baking team’s awareness of quality standards in a way that the absence of any formal evaluation would not.

The storage standard is maintained by the cloth-and-basket system described above, with one additional requirement specific to the temple context: all flatbreads intended for the feast-week communal meals are dated at the basket level — a small piece of cloth marked with the baking date is placed in each basket at the time of filling — so that the distribution team can ensure that earlier production is used before later production, and that no flatbread reaches the table more than two days after its baking. The two-day maximum is the temple kitchen’s standard for acceptable quality at Level 3; beyond two days the flatbreads are considered appropriate for distribution to households that can consume them promptly or for the provision context, but not for the communal feast table.


On Working with Volunteer and Inexperienced Bakers

The grange hall kitchen during the feast season typically draws on volunteer labor from the community rather than on a permanent paid baking staff, and the communal kitchen baker who is organizing the feast-week production must be prepared to work with bakers of widely varying skill and experience. The head baker of the Porterville grange, whom I interviewed during my research for this chapter, described this as the greatest ongoing challenge of the grange kitchen management role: the bakers available on any given day may range from experienced household bakers with decades of Level 3 festival baking practice to enthusiastic beginners who have never made a flatbread in their lives, and the production system must be capable of producing good results across this full range.

Her approach, which I found genuinely instructive, is to design the production system so that the most technically demanding tasks — managing the baking surfaces, maintaining heat consistency, making the judgment calls about when a flatbread is correctly done — are always assigned to the most experienced bakers available, and the tasks that are more easily taught and more quickly learned — mixing dough to a standard formula, rolling to a physical gauge, moving finished flatbreads to the cooling racks — are assigned to whoever is available regardless of prior experience. This division of labor allows inexperienced bakers to contribute meaningfully to the production without being placed in positions where their inexperience is likely to result in poor-quality product, and it concentrates the most critical judgments in the hands of those best qualified to make them.

She also told me something that I think is worth passing on to every baker who will work in a communal kitchen context during the feast season: the teaching moment is the most valuable product of the communal kitchen, more valuable in the long run than any number of well-baked flatbreads. Every inexperienced baker who works alongside an experienced one during the feast-week production learns something that she will carry into her own kitchen for the rest of her life, and the community of skilled bakers that results from this annual shared learning is the foundation of the Bravian household baking tradition’s perpetuation across generations. The communal kitchen is not merely a production facility. It is a school, and the experienced baker who teaches a younger one to roll to the correct thinness or to read the color of a finished flatbread is doing something more important than baking bread, though she is doing that as well.

I thought of my own mother when the grange head baker said this. My mother was not a communal kitchen baker — she did her baking privately, at home, on her own terms — but she taught me, and I have been teaching others for most of my adult life, and the chain of transmission that connects the ancient practice to my own hands and to the hands of my students runs through exactly this kind of patient, daily, unglamorous knowledge transfer. The Level 3 kitchen at communal scale is the place where that chain is most visibly and most deliberately maintained.


Preparing for the Full Seven Days: A Production Calendar

One of the most useful services the communal kitchen can provide to the households it serves is a production calendar that plans the feast-week baking against the quantities required, so that the baking is distributed across the seven days in a way that makes both the labor and the freshness of the product manageable. The following is the calendar approach used by the Porterville grange hall kitchen, adapted here for general application.

Day one — the day before the feast begins: This is the heaviest production day, when the provision preparations are made in quantity: the hard tack of Recipe 5, the twice-baked slices of Recipe 27, and any other preparations intended for extended storage throughout the week. These preparations keep for the full seven days without quality deterioration and do not need to be made fresh, so producing them before the feast begins means the feast-week kitchen can focus on fresh preparations during the feast itself. The plain matzah for the Passover table is also baked on this day, for the table service that evening — baked as late in the day as possible to ensure it is as fresh as can be managed for the Passover meal itself.

Days one through three of the feast: Fresh flatbread production runs daily, producing the plain and oil-enriched preparations in quantities sufficient for each day’s communal meals. The grange hall kitchen produces a fresh batch each morning, timed so that the flatbreads are complete by midday and available for the afternoon and evening meals. The morning production session of approximately three to four hours, running two to four griddles, is sufficient for a community of fifty to eighty people.

Days four and five: The midpoint of the feast, when the household stores are still well-stocked and the communal kitchen can reduce its daily production volume somewhat. A smaller production session on each of these days supplements the household stores rather than providing the primary supply.

Days six and seven: The closing days of the feast, when the communal kitchen typically produces its most varied and most celebratory preparations: the oil-enriched communal rounds of Recipe 34, the honey-oil flatbreads of Recipe 32, and any other enriched preparations that the kitchen has designated for the final days. This is also when the remaining provision preparations — the twice-baked slices and hard tack — are distributed from the communal stores to any household that needs them, since the communal store is wound down at the end of the feast and any remaining provision preparations are appropriate for distribution rather than storage.

The end of the seventh day marks the formal conclusion of the feast, and the grange head baker’s tradition — which she described to me with what I understood to be a combination of genuine relief and genuine affection — is to end the last production session of the feast week by making one final batch of plain matzah from whatever flour remains in the baking batch, eating it warm at the kitchen table with the baking team, with good oil and coarse salt, before the sourdough starter is brought back out of the cold room and the ordinary kitchen year resumes.

I find this tradition genuinely moving. The last flatbread of the feast season, eaten at the kitchen table with the people who baked it, warm from the griddle that has been running all week: it is a quiet and entirely appropriate ending to a week of work that has been, in the fullest sense of the word, observant. Not merely observant of a rule, but observant in the deeper meaning — attentive, present, awake to what was being done and why.

My mother would have approved of that kitchen table, I think. She understood, as the grange head baker clearly does, that the best meals are often the simplest ones, eaten with the right people, at the right moment, when the work is done.


A Note on the Temple Kitchen’s Ritual Preparations

I want to close this chapter by addressing the temple kitchen’s production of the commanded priestly preparations associated with the feast calendar, which are distinct from the communal meal productions and which I have described in their theological context in Chapter 1 and the front matter of this book but have not yet addressed in their practical, technical dimension.

The commanded priestly unleavened preparations of the Levitical calendar — the minchah offerings, the unleavened cakes and wafers associated with specific ritual observances of the feast season — are prepared in the temple kitchen by the designated priestly bakers under the authority of the provincial head priest and according to specifications that are derived from the Levitical descriptions of those preparations. These specifications govern the type of grain, the grade of milling, the quantity of oil, and in some cases the specific form of the preparation — whether a baked cake, a griddle preparation, or a wafer anointed with oil — in ways that distinguish them clearly from the communal meal preparations.

It is not within the scope of this book to provide detailed instructions for the priestly preparations themselves, because those preparations are within the authority and responsibility of the temple kitchen and the priestly establishment rather than the household or communal kitchen, and the reader who is interested in the priestly preparation traditions should consult the relevant religious authorities rather than a cookbook. What I can say, as someone who observed the Porterville temple kitchen at work and who spoke at some length with its head baker about the relationship between the ritual preparations and the communal meal preparations, is that the practical baking knowledge required to produce the ritual preparations is not fundamentally different from the knowledge required to produce the communal meal preparations: the same understanding of flour and fat and heat that produces an excellent festival flatbread produces an excellent unleavened priestly offering, because both are Level 3 preparations governed by the same physical principles.

The difference is not in the technique but in the intention and the authority. The priestly baker producing the commanded preparations does so under specific religious obligation and within a specific ritual framework that gives her work a character quite different from the communal kitchen baker producing flatbread for the grange hall table. Both are doing good work. The authority and the accountability under which that work is done is what distinguishes the two contexts, and it is a distinction that I respect without claiming any special competence in the ritual dimension that falls outside my own professional and personal knowledge.

What I can say with some authority is that the women who staff the Porterville temple kitchen baking station are among the finest Level 3 bakers I have met anywhere in the Western Reaches, and that their command of the techniques described in Chapters 11 and 12 of this book — the assessment of flour quality, the management of dough hydration at scale, the reading of heat and color at the baking surface — is as complete and as accomplished as any professional baking competence I have observed in forty years of teaching and practice. If this book serves them in any way, it will be as a record of what they already know rather than as instruction in anything they have yet to learn. I am grateful for what their generosity taught me.


Chapter 14: Grain-Free Level 3 Preparations begins on the following page.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 12 — Oil-Enriched Level 3 Breads

The distinction between Chapter 11 and this chapter is, in the most literal sense, a matter of proportion. The oil-enriched matzah of Recipe 16 in the previous chapter contains three tablespoons of olive oil in a dough of two cups of flour — a modest enrichment whose primary purpose is to improve workability and produce a somewhat more pliable and flavorful flatbread than the water-only preparation of Recipe 15. The preparations in this chapter carry considerably more fat than that. They are not flatbreads with a little oil added. They are fat-enriched preparations in which the oil or rendered fat is a primary ingredient rather than a modifier, and in which the character of the fat — its flavor, its effect on gluten development, its influence on the way the dough behaves under rolling and under heat — is as much a part of the preparation’s identity as the character of the grain.

This distinction matters because it changes what these preparations are for, how they are made, and what one can reasonably expect from them. A lightly enriched flatbread is versatile and neutral, a good accompaniment to almost anything that appears on the festival table. A heavily fat-enriched Level 3 preparation is more specific: it has a presence of its own, a richness and a depth of flavor that makes it an appropriate centerpiece of a meal in a way that a plain matzah is not, and it pairs best with preparations that have been chosen to complement rather than compete with its richness. Understanding this difference before beginning the preparations in this chapter will help the baker use them correctly — to know when to reach for the oil-enriched round rather than the plain matzah, and what to serve alongside it.

I want to address one more preliminary matter before the recipes begin, because it has come up with sufficient regularity in my teaching that I know it will come up in the reader’s mind as well. The preparations in this chapter are richer than those in Chapter 11, and richness, in some quarters of Bravian religious life, is occasionally treated as incompatible with the spirit of the Days of Unleavened Bread, which are associated — as I addressed in Chapter 7’s discussion of sweet festival baking — with humility, austerity, and the bread of affliction. I want to be plain about my position on this.

The oil-enriched unleavened bread is not a modern indulgence smuggled into the festival kitchen. It is among the oldest unleavened preparations in the Bravian and biblical traditions. The commanded priestly preparations of the Levitical law include oil-enriched unleavened cakes as explicit items in the festival calendar: unleavened cakes mingled with oil, unleavened wafers anointed with oil, an unleavened offering of fine flour mingled with oil. The oil-enriched preparation is not a deviation from the pattern established by the law. It is one of the patterns the law itself specifies. The baker who produces these preparations during the Days of Unleavened Bread is not softening the austerity of the season but participating in a tradition whose roots reach as deep into the biblical record as anything else we do in the festival kitchen, and she should do so with confidence and without apology.

That said: these preparations are rich, they are substantial, and they are best consumed in appropriate quantities. The festival table that offers oil-enriched Level 3 rounds alongside plain matzah is offering the full range of what the Level 3 kitchen provides, and this range is the correct one. Not all oil all the time, and not all plain all the time. Both together, in the proportions that suit the meal and the household, is the ancient Bravian way.


On Fat Selection and Its Consequences at Level 3

The fat selection question, which I addressed in the context of Chapter 11 and at various points throughout the book, takes on additional significance in the preparations of this chapter because the fat content is high enough that its specific character is one of the dominant flavors in the finished product. I want to address the three primary fats of the Bravian tradition — olive oil, rendered lamb fat, and butter — with particular attention to how each behaves at the high fat-to-flour ratios of this chapter’s preparations, because the behavior at high incorporation levels is not simply an amplification of the behavior at low incorporation levels but something qualitatively different in several respects.

Olive oil at high incorporation produces a dough that is extremely pliable and extensible, almost to the point of being sticky, and that requires more bench flour during rolling than the lightly enriched preparations of Chapter 11. It also produces a finished flatbread with a noticeably different character from the plain or lightly enriched preparations: richer in the mouth, with a clean fat flavor that is bright and slightly fruity in the case of good quality cold-pressed oil, and with a surface that develops a more pronounced caramelization and browning during baking because the oil at the surface of the dough promotes Maillard reactions more aggressively than a lean surface does. Olive oil at high incorporation also contributes to a finished preparation that is more resistant to staling than any other fat in this chapter: the oil coats the gluten and starch network so completely that moisture loss from the interior of the flatbread is significantly slowed compared to a lean preparation, and oil-enriched Level 3 rounds keep their quality for a day or two longer than plain matzah under the same storage conditions.

Rendered lamb fat at high incorporation produces a dough with a different texture from olive oil: it is less sticky and somewhat more pliable in the cold state but becomes noticeably stiffer as it cools during rolling, because rendered lamb fat solidifies at a higher temperature than olive oil and its behavior on the bench is therefore more sensitive to the ambient temperature of the kitchen. In the cool spring kitchen of a hill country household, lamb-fat dough will firm up during rolling in a way that olive-oil dough does not, and the baker who works with lamb fat should keep the dough covered between portions and work relatively quickly with each piece to minimize cooling before baking. The flavor contribution of lamb fat at high incorporation is deep, savory, and distinctly animal in a way that is tremendously appropriate for the Bravian festival table and for the kinds of accompaniments — braised meats, roasted root vegetables, robust herb preparations — that are traditional at the feast season. Lamb fat and plain matzah together on the festival table is a combination of enormous antiquity in the Bravian tradition. Lamb fat enriched into the matzah itself is simply the next step in a well-established direction.

Butter at high incorporation produces the most tender of the three fat options, because butter contains a small but significant proportion of water — typically around sixteen percent by weight — that interacts with the gluten network during mixing in a way that the anhydrous fats of olive oil and rendered lamb fat do not. This water contributes both to gluten development and to steam generation during baking, and the steam lift in a butter-enriched Level 3 preparation is somewhat more active than in an equivalent olive-oil preparation, producing slightly more visible blistering and surface variation. Butter also produces the most neutral fat flavor of the three options, which makes it the most versatile choice for preparations that will accompany a wide range of festival table foods, and it is the fat I most commonly use in the Stone Hearth Bakery for the oil-enriched Level 3 rounds that are offered to customers who have not specified a fat preference, because butter’s neutrality offends no one’s palate while olive oil’s distinctiveness and lamb fat’s savory depth are both polarizing in ways that a retail product cannot afford to be.


Recipe 31 — The Festival Oil Round

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the festival oil round is the preparation I consider the true centerpiece of the oil-enriched Level 3 chapter, and it is the preparation that has been made in Bravian households for longer than any other in this section. It is made from flour, fat, salt, and hot water in proportions that give it a character substantially richer and more substantial than any of the Chapter 11 preparations, and it is traditionally associated with the Passover table itself as well as the subsequent days of the feast — the companion preparation to the plain matzah, present at the same table, serving different functions and occupying different positions in the meal.

I have written this recipe to be appropriate at all three levels of observance, which is possible because the oil incorporation technique I specify — a brief rubbing of liquid fat into the flour before the addition of hot water — does not constitute mechanical leavening at any level. The fat is being distributed for the purpose of enrichment and gluten modification, and the technique produces no meaningful air incorporation. The baker at Level 1, Level 2, or Level 3 may make this preparation without modification and without any theological concern.

Makes 8 rounds

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups hard wheat flour — hard wheat rather than soft, because at this level of fat enrichment the dough needs the structural capacity of a strong gluten network to prevent it from being so short and fragile that it tears during rolling; the fat will soften the gluten sufficiently to produce a tender finished preparation without any contribution from soft wheat
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 6 tablespoons good olive oil, or melted rendered lamb fat for the hill country variation — six tablespoons is approximately twice the quantity used in the lightly enriched matzah of Recipe 16, and this doubling produces a qualitatively different dough rather than simply a richer version of the same dough
  • ½ cup water, heated until steaming
  • Coarse salt for the surface, applied after baking

Method:

Combine the flour and fine salt in a mixing bowl. Add the olive oil all at once and work it into the flour with your fingertips using the brief rubbing technique: fifteen to twenty seconds of firm rubbing that distributes the oil through the flour without the sustained working of a pastry fat incorporation. At the end of this brief rubbing, the flour should look uniformly damp and slightly sandy — different from dry flour, different from the crumbly mixture produced by cold fat rubbed thoroughly in, more like flour that has been very lightly moistened throughout. This is the correct appearance.

Pour the hot water into the oiled flour in a thin stream, stirring as you pour. The dough will come together immediately and with notable ease: the oil that already coats the flour particles facilitates rapid and even hydration, and the gelatinization of the starch by the hot water begins immediately on contact, producing a dough that is smooth and workable within seconds of the water being fully incorporated. Turn onto a lightly floured bench while the dough is still warm from the hot water — this is important, because the starch gelatinization is most effective while the dough retains heat — and knead gently for two minutes. The dough will be noticeably softer and more yielding than the lightly enriched matzah dough and will feel rich and slightly oily against the hands, which is entirely correct.

At the high fat content of this recipe, the dough benefits from a somewhat longer rest than the lightly enriched preparations: cover and rest for twenty-five minutes at room temperature. During this rest, the oil will continue to distribute through the dough and the gelatinized starch network will set into the extensible, pliable structure that makes this dough so pleasant to roll.

Divide the rested dough into eight equal portions. Roll each portion on a lightly floured bench — and here I want to note that the oil-enriched dough requires more bench flour than any of the Chapter 11 preparations, because the oil at the surface of the dough is slightly adhesive against a clean bench surface in a way that the drier Chapter 11 doughs are not. Do not be sparing with the bench flour, but also do not incorporate it into the dough by pressing it in: it should sit between the dough and the bench surface as a barrier, not become part of the dough’s formulation.

Roll each portion to a round of approximately eight inches in diameter. The correctly enriched dough will reach this diameter with significantly less resistance than the plain or lightly enriched preparations of Chapter 11: the oil’s lubrication of the gluten strands means the dough extends readily and does not spring back insistently. Roll to a thinness somewhat greater than the Chapter 11 preparations — not quite as thin as the near-translucency of Recipe 15, but thin enough to see the general shape of your hand through the dough when held to the light. At this fat content, excessive thinness produces a preparation that is too fragile to handle after baking, and the slightly greater thickness of the festival oil round compared to the plain matzah is part of its character rather than a compromise.

Dock thoroughly with the same spacing described in Chapter 11. The docking is particularly important in the oil-enriched preparation, because the steam generated by the water content of the dough is joined by steam from the water component of the butter if butter is used, and the combined steam generation in an undocked oil-enriched round produces vigorous and uncontrolled blistering that, while visually dramatic, results in a fragile and uneven preparation.

Bake on a preheated griddle or stone at high heat. The oil-enriched preparation will brown faster than the Chapter 11 preparations — watch from the forty-second mark rather than the sixty-second mark — and the correct final color is a deep, warm, golden brown with more even coverage than the spotty browning of the lean preparations, because the oil at the surface of the dough conducts and distributes heat more evenly than the drier surface of a plain matzah. The round should be completely rigid and slightly shiny on its surface when fully baked, with a surface that catches the light differently from the matte surface of the lean preparations.

Immediately after removing from the griddle, scatter a small quantity of coarse salt over the surface and allow it to dissolve slightly against the hot oiled surface. As I noted in the Chapter 11 surface treatment section, this post-bake salting produces a distribution of salt flavor across the surface that is qualitatively different from salt incorporated into the dough and is one of the most effective single flavor improvements available at Level 3. The oil still active on the hot surface carries the salt into the uppermost layer of the preparation rather than simply sitting on top of it, and the result is a preparation whose surface has a clean, bright intensity of flavor that the interior’s broader and more rounded grain-and-fat character complements beautifully.

Allow to cool for five minutes before serving. The festival oil round is best eaten warm — within fifteen to twenty minutes of baking — when the oil is still fragrant and active and the surface salt is at its most vivid. It cools to a very good room-temperature preparation as well, and it keeps its quality overnight in a cloth covering.

Hill country variation with rendered lamb fat: Substitute melted rendered lamb fat for the olive oil throughout. The dough will feel slightly different under the hands — less immediately silky than the olive oil version, with a marginally more yielding quality — and it will stiffen somewhat during rolling if the kitchen is cool, as described in the fat discussion above. The finished preparation has a depth of savory fat flavor that is the most ancient and most austere expression of the oil-enriched Level 3 tradition in the Bravian record, and it is the preparation I imagine when I try to reconstruct what was made in the oldest kitchens of the Western Reaches before olive oil became a regular presence in the inland communities through trade. It is very good with the lamb and roasted onion preparations of Part Five — the lamb fat in the bread and the lamb in the accompanying stew produce a coherence of flavor that is entirely satisfying and that feels, in some way I cannot precisely articulate, entirely right at the Passover table.

Butter variation: Substitute melted unsalted butter for the olive oil. Cool the melted butter slightly before adding to the flour — it should be liquid but not hot, because the water content of the butter will interact differently with the flour at very high temperatures and can produce a less workable dough than the olive oil or rendered fat versions. The butter version is the most versatile of the three and the one best suited to households that are preparing a wide range of accompanying preparations, because its neutrality allows the bread to function alongside sweet preparations as readily as savory ones.


Recipe 32 — Honey-Oil Festival Flatbreads

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the honey-oil flatbread is one of the most directly biblically grounded preparations in this book, because the combination of oil and honey in an unleavened preparation appears explicitly in the Levitical priestly calendar as a description of unleavened preparations made with fine flour mingled with oil and sweetened with honey. I am not suggesting that these preparations are direct reconstructions of what was made in the ancient temple context — the flour would have been different, the honey may have been different, and the baking surface and method were certainly different. But the combination of oil and honey in an unleavened flatbread is one whose pedigree in the tradition of covenant-keeping households is longer than almost anything else in this book, and making it during the Days of Unleavened Bread is an act of continuity with that tradition that I find genuinely moving in a way that I do not feel about most preparations, however good they are.

The preparation is subtle rather than sweet: the quantity of honey is calibrated to produce a gentle background sweetness that complements the oil and the grain without making the flatbread into a dessert preparation. It pairs as well with savory accompaniments as with sweet ones, because the honey is present as a flavor note rather than as the dominant character, and it is this versatility — simultaneously appropriate at the savory main table and at the sweet festival spread — that makes it, in my judgment, the most generally useful preparation in this chapter for the household that wants one oil-enriched preparation to serve across the full range of festival meals.

Makes 8 flatbreads

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups soft wheat flour — soft wheat rather than hard in this preparation, because the honey contributes to the tenderizing of the crumb in a way that reduces the need for the structural capacity of hard wheat, and the softer, more delicate texture of a soft wheat enriched flatbread is appropriate to the gentle character of this preparation
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 5 tablespoons good olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons honey, warmed until very runny — the honey must be fully liquid before it is incorporated; cold thick honey will not distribute evenly through the dough and will produce sweet and plain patches in the finished flatbread rather than the even background sweetness that is the preparation’s defining character
  • ½ cup water, heated until steaming

Method:

Combine the soft wheat flour and salt in a mixing bowl. In a small bowl, combine the olive oil and the warmed honey and stir until the honey is fully distributed through the oil — they will not combine to a uniform emulsion, because oil and honey do not mix in this way, but the honey will break into droplets distributed through the oil that will incorporate into the flour more evenly than honey added separately would.

Add the oil-honey mixture to the flour and work in briefly with the fingertips, as in Recipe 31, until the flour is uniformly dampened by the fat-honey mixture. Add the hot water in a thin stream, stirring as you pour. The dough will come together quickly. Turn onto a lightly floured bench and knead gently for two to three minutes: the soft wheat flour and the honey will together produce a dough that is noticeably more supple and softer than the hard wheat preparations of Recipe 31, and the kneading should be lighter in touch than for the firmer preparations of Chapter 11.

Cover and rest for twenty-five minutes. The honey continues to distribute through the dough during the resting period, and the dough at the end of twenty-five minutes will be slightly more uniform in its sweetness distribution than immediately after mixing.

Divide into eight portions and roll each on a lightly floured bench to a round of approximately eight to nine inches. The soft wheat and high-fat dough of this preparation is the most extensible dough in this chapter: it will roll to the correct size with minimal resistance and minimal spring-back, and the baker who has been working with the firmer preparations of Chapter 11 will find this dough almost startlingly cooperative on the bench.

Dock thoroughly. Bake on a preheated griddle at slightly lower heat than the plain preparations of Chapter 11 — the honey in the dough promotes surface browning more aggressively than oil alone, because the natural sugars of the honey caramelize rapidly against the hot surface, and the baker who uses the same heat for this preparation as for the lean Chapter 11 preparations will find the surface darkens before the interior has fully set. The correct heat is one step below the high heat of the plain preparations: hot enough to produce the characteristic blistering and spotty browning, not so hot that the honey-enriched surface moves immediately from golden to charred. Watch from the thirty-five second mark and flip when the surface color is a warm, deep golden brown rather than waiting for the full sixty seconds appropriate for the lean preparations.

The second side will bake faster than the first, because the preparation has already been partially heated through during the first side’s baking. Thirty to forty seconds on the second side, with the same attentiveness to surface color.

The finished honey-oil flatbread has a slightly glossy surface from the caramelized honey and a distinctly more aromatic character than the plain preparations, even before any surface treatment is applied. Serve warm. A small drizzle of additional honey across the surface immediately after baking is traditional in some households and excessive in others, and I offer it as an option rather than a requirement: the preparation is good without it, and very good with it, and the decision is one of personal and household preference.

On the character of the honey used: I specified in the festival honey cake of Chapter 7 that honey selection matters considerably when honey is the primary flavor of a preparation. Here, where honey is a background contributor rather than the featured ingredient, the selection matters somewhat less, but not entirely. A very strongly flavored dark honey — the robust hill country variety whose assertive character I recommend for the honey cake — will overpower the grain and oil flavors of this flatbread and produce a preparation that tastes primarily of that honey rather than of the balanced combination of grain, fat, and gentle sweetness that this recipe intends. A mild to medium honey — the wildflower honey of the coastal regions, or a clover honey from the agricultural grange communities — is the correct choice here. The honey should be felt rather than prominently tasted.


Recipe 33 — Thin Sesame-Crusted Level 3 Crackers

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the sesame-crusted Level 3 cracker is the preparation in this chapter that sits closest to the boundary between the oil-enriched breads and the plain crackers of Chapter 11, because it is thinner and drier than the festival oil round or the honey-oil flatbread and more cracker-like in its intended use and eating character. It is not the same preparation as the soda cracker of Recipe 4 or the shortbread cracker of Recipe 24: it contains no chemical leavening, no creamed fat, and no egg, and it belongs fully to the Level 3 category. What distinguishes it from the plain crackers of Chapter 11 is its fat content — higher than the lightly enriched matzah of Recipe 16 but lower than the full enrichment of Recipe 31 — and its defining surface characteristic: a thorough coating of sesame seeds pressed into the surface before baking that toasts against the hot stone to a deep, nutty, almost caramelized intensity.

Sesame in the Bravian culinary tradition has a long association with both festival food and provision food: it is cultivated throughout the warmer agricultural regions of Bravia and is particularly abundant in the Delta settlements and the southern coastal areas where the growing season is long enough to support its full maturation. It appears on the festival table in every region of Bravia in one form or another, and the sesame-crusted cracker is the form that travels best across all three levels of observance and all regional traditions.

Makes approximately 40 crackers

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups hard wheat flour — hard wheat for the structural integrity needed in a cracker that must be very thin and must not fracture in ways other than where the baker intends
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • ¼ teaspoon coarse black pepper, very finely ground, optional — this small quantity of pepper is barely perceptible as a distinct flavor in the finished cracker but contributes a warmth to the background that the preparation is noticeably better for; I include it and note its optional status because I have encountered some households where it is excluded as a matter of tradition
  • 4 tablespoons olive oil
  • 5 to 7 tablespoons water, heated until steaming — begin with five and add carefully
  • ½ cup sesame seeds, toasted in a dry pan over medium heat until deep golden, then cooled completely before use — the toasting before baking is not redundant with the toasting that occurs against the hot baking surface; the pre-toasted sesame has developed its flavor compounds more fully than a raw sesame seed and produces a depth of sesame character in the finished cracker that raw sesame pre-baking and oven-toasting alone cannot achieve

Method:

Combine the hard wheat flour, fine salt, and black pepper if using, in a mixing bowl and stir to distribute. Add the olive oil and work in briefly — the same fifteen-to-twenty-second rubbing technique as in Recipe 31 — until the flour is uniformly dampened by the oil. Add five tablespoons of hot water and bring the dough together, adding more water carefully until it coheres into a firm, smooth ball. This dough is somewhat drier than the festival oil round dough: it should hold its shape firmly when pressed and should not feel sticky or yielding, because the extra firmness is necessary for rolling very thin without the dough tearing or sticking to the bench.

Cover and rest for fifteen minutes — shorter than the bread preparations because the cracker dough requires less relaxation time for its thinner rolling target, and the slightly lower hydration of this dough means the water distributes through the flour fairly quickly without extended rest.

Preheat the oven to its highest temperature with a baking stone or heavy sheet inside for at least forty minutes.

Divide the rested dough into four portions. Working with one portion at a time and keeping the remainder covered, roll on a very lightly floured bench to a sheet of near-translucency — thinner than the festival oil round, thinner than the honey-oil flatbread, approaching the thinness of the Chapter 11 plain preparations. The oil in the dough makes this thin rolling considerably more manageable than rolling a lean dough to the same thinness, because the oil’s lubrication prevents the tearing that a lean dough would be prone to at this degree of thinness.

Scatter the cooled toasted sesame seeds generously over the surface of the rolled sheet: approximately two tablespoons per quarter of the dough, spread as evenly as possible across the surface. Press the seeds firmly into the dough with the palm of your hand, using a definite, flat pressing motion rather than a rolling motion: the palm-press pushes the seeds below the surface of the dough so that they are partially embedded rather than simply sitting on top, which ensures they remain attached to the surface during baking rather than falling off when the cracker is handled. A seed that is only resting on the surface of the dough and has not been pressed in will detach during the baking as the dough around it sets and contracts slightly.

Cut the seeded sheet into the desired cracker shapes before transferring to the baking surface. Rectangles of approximately three by two inches are the traditional shape in the coastal and port-town tradition; the hill country tradition prefers irregular shapes broken along natural fracture lines after baking. Both are correct. For rectangular shapes cut before baking, the cut edges will be clean and even; for shapes determined by fracture after baking, the edges will be irregular and rustic. Both approaches produce crackers of identical quality.

Transfer to the preheated baking stone using the rolling-pin transfer method described in the Chapter 5 cracker recipes: roll the sheet loosely around the rolling pin, carry to the baking surface, and unroll carefully. The sesame-weighted surface will be heavier than a plain dough sheet and the rolling-pin transfer requires a slightly firmer initial roll to ensure the sheet adheres to the pin evenly.

Bake for seven to nine minutes at the oven’s highest temperature, watching from the six-minute mark. The crackers are done when the surface sesame seeds are a deep, rich brown — darker than the golden brown of pre-toasted sesame, approaching a deep chestnut color that indicates the seeds have developed their full depth of roasted flavor — and the dough between the seeds is a pale, even golden. This color contrast between the dark sesame crust and the pale dough is the defining visual characteristic of a well-made sesame-crusted Level 3 cracker.

Transfer to a rack and cool completely before handling. The fully cooled crackers should be completely rigid with a surface texture that varies between the crunchiness of the toasted sesame and the dry crispness of the plain dough between the seeds. They keep well for five to six days in a dry, loosely covered container.

On the role of the sesame in flavor balance: I want to address something about this preparation that is not obvious from reading the recipe but becomes immediately apparent when the cracker is eaten: the sesame seed does more than contribute its own flavor to the cracker. It changes the flavor of the dough beneath it as well, because the oils released from the toasting sesame seeds penetrate the surface of the dough during baking and imbue the upper surface of the cracker with a sesame character that is present even in the pale dough between the seeds. The cracker is sesame-flavored throughout its upper surface, not only where the seeds sit, and this penetration is one of the reasons the pre-toasting step matters: a pre-toasted seed releases its oils more readily and more completely than a raw seed, and the dough penetration is correspondingly more thorough.

Delta settlement variation: In the Delta communities where sesame is most abundantly grown, the sesame-crusted cracker is sometimes made with a blend of white and black sesame seeds, which produces a surface of striking visual character — the pale golden and the deep charcoal seeds distributed across the pale cracker surface — and a somewhat more complex sesame flavor, because black sesame has a slightly more bitter and more intensely nutty character than white sesame that contributes a dimension to the flavor combination that white sesame alone does not provide. If black sesame is available in your market, this variation is well worth attempting.


Recipe 34 — Festival Olive-Oil and Herb Rounds for the Communal Table

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: this preparation occupies a specific position in the Level 3 festival kitchen that none of the other preparations in this chapter quite fills. Where the festival oil round of Recipe 31 and the honey-oil flatbread of Recipe 32 are preparations of the intimate household table — relatively small in yield, personal in character, appropriately sized for a family or a small group — the communal herb round is designed to be made in quantity and presented at the center of a large shared table. It is the preparation I bring to the grange hall gatherings that the Amphoe community holds during the feast week, the preparation that feeds a crowd without apology and that presents the oil-enriched Level 3 tradition at its most generous and most welcoming.

The communal context changes some of the preparation’s specifications in ways that are worth understanding before beginning. The rounds in this recipe are larger than those in previous recipes — approximately twelve inches rather than eight — which requires adjustments to baking time and heat management. They are also more generously herb-seasoned than the personal preparations, because the herb character must be present firmly enough to carry across a shared table and to complement the range of dishes that a communal festival meal will include.

Makes 6 large rounds, each serving 4 to 6 as part of a shared table

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups hard wheat flour
  • ¾ teaspoon fine salt
  • 8 tablespoons good olive oil — a more generous enrichment than Recipe 31, appropriate to the communal serving context where the richness of the bread must be visible and appealing rather than subtle
  • ¾ cup water, heated until steaming

For the surface herb mixture:

  • 3 tablespoons olive oil, for the surface — separate from the oil incorporated into the dough
  • 2 teaspoons dried rosemary, crumbled between the fingers to a fine, even texture
  • 1½ teaspoons dried thyme
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1 teaspoon coarse salt
  • ½ teaspoon coarse black pepper

Combine the surface herbs, coarse salt, and pepper in a small bowl and stir to distribute. Add the surface olive oil and stir to a thick paste. Set aside.

Method:

Prepare the dough as in Recipe 31, using the hard wheat flour, fine salt, eight tablespoons of olive oil, and hot water. The larger quantity of flour and correspondingly larger quantity of oil will produce a dough of similar character to Recipe 31 but in greater volume: it will be soft and supple from the oil, slightly warm from the hot water, and will knead to smoothness quickly. Cover and rest for twenty-five minutes.

Divide into six equal portions. Roll each portion on a generously floured bench to a round of approximately twelve inches in diameter and a thinness somewhat greater than the eight-inch preparations of earlier recipes — the larger diameter requires a slightly greater thickness to maintain structural integrity during the transfer to the baking surface, which is more physically demanding at twelve inches than at eight. The correct thickness is approximately that of a modest thinness: not approaching translucency, but thin enough to see the bench color through the dough clearly.

Dock the rolled round thoroughly across its entire surface. Spread approximately one tablespoon of the herb-oil paste across the entire surface of the docked round using the back of the spoon, working from the center outward and distributing the herbs as evenly as possible. The paste should cover the surface in a thin, even layer rather than being concentrated in the center and sparse at the edges, which requires deliberate attention to the edges and rim of the round.

Transfer to a preheated griddle or stone using the rolling-pin method: at twelve inches, this transfer requires particular care, because the larger diameter of the round makes it more prone to tearing during handling. Roll slowly and firmly, and unroll with equal care.

Bake with the herb surface facing up: do not flip this preparation as you would a plain flatbread. The herb paste surface is intended to toast in place under the oven’s ambient heat rather than against the direct contact heat of the griddle, which would scorch the herbs before the dough beneath them had time to bake through. If using a griddle rather than an oven stone, place a heavy lid or an inverted pan over the flatbread for the first two minutes of baking to trap heat around the herb surface and encourage it to cook through the top without direct contact with the hot griddle.

In the oven, bake for six to eight minutes at the oven’s highest temperature until the edges of the round are deeply golden, the bottom surface (visible at the edges when the round is gently lifted) shows characteristic spotty browning, and the herb paste surface is toasted and fragrant with some slightly darker color at the thinnest points of the surface paste. Remove from the oven and allow to rest on the stone or a rack for three minutes before cutting.

Cut into wedges at the table, or break into irregular pieces if the rustic character of a torn presentation suits the occasion. This is food for a shared table and needs no ceremony beyond good accompaniments and good company.

Presented cold or at room temperature: The communal herb round, unlike most of the preparations in this chapter that are best warm, is also very good at room temperature and can be made two to three hours ahead of a gathering without significant loss of quality, because the herb paste surface protects the dough beneath it from the rapid staling that a plain surface preparation undergoes as it cools. This make-ahead capability is one of the practical advantages of the communal preparation over the intimate household preparations and makes it particularly suited to the grange hall gathering context where preparations must be made before the gathering begins and carried to the hall.


Recipe 35 — Small Oil-Enriched Bites for the Festival Table

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the small oil-enriched bite is the Level 3 answer to the filled pocket preparations of Chapter 6, and I want to be precise about what I mean by that comparison before the recipe begins. The pocket preparations of Chapter 6 are enclosed preparations — dough wrapped around a filling and sealed — and the Level 3 small bite is not enclosed in the same way. It is an open preparation: a small, thick, oil-enriched disk of dough, baked until the surface is set and the interior is still slightly yielding, and served with a savory topping pressed into the slightly soft surface immediately after it comes from the heat. The topping adheres to and partially melds with the warm, oil-rich surface of the bite in a way that is quite different from a filling sealed inside a pastry shell, and the preparation has a character that is simultaneously simpler — no assembly, no sealing, no crimping — and more generous, because the open surface displays the topping rather than concealing it.

These bites are appropriate at all three levels of observance and require no modification across levels, because they contain no leavening of any kind and no mechanical technique beyond the simple mixing of the dough. They are among the most practical preparations in this chapter for the household managing a festival table across seven days, because they are made quickly, require no advance preparation of a filling that must be sealed inside the dough, and can be varied daily by changing the topping combination.

Makes approximately 24 small bites

Ingredients:

For the dough:

  • 1½ cups hard wheat flour
  • ¼ teaspoon fine salt
  • 4 tablespoons olive oil or melted rendered fat
  • 4 tablespoons water, heated until steaming

For the toppings — choose one or prepare all three for a varied presentation:

Topping A — Roasted garlic and herb: Six cloves of garlic, roasted whole in their skins until soft and sweet, then squeezed from the skins and mashed to a rough paste; one tablespoon of olive oil; a pinch of coarse salt; a small quantity of fresh or dried thyme crumbled over.

Topping B — Soft cheese and preserved preparation: Three tablespoons of fresh soft cheese, lightly salted; a small quantity of thick fruit preserve or caramelized onion placed on top of the cheese; a pinch of coarse salt.

Topping C — Anchovy and olive oil (port town tradition): One small preserved anchovy fillet per bite, placed directly on the warm surface; a drop of good olive oil over the anchovy; a pinch of coarse black pepper. This topping is specific to the port-town tradition where preserved fish from the merchant marine’s trade connections are available throughout the year, and it is a preparation of considerable assertiveness not suited to every palate. I include it because it is genuinely traditional and genuinely good for those who enjoy it.

Method:

Prepare the dough using the standard oil-and-hot-water method: combine flour and salt, work in the oil briefly, add the hot water, bring together, and knead for two minutes. The dough quantity is smaller than in the previous recipes and will come together and smooth out very quickly — barely two minutes of kneading is needed. Cover and rest for fifteen minutes.

Preheat the oven to moderate-to-hot, with a baking stone or sheet inside.

Divide the rested dough into approximately twenty-four small pieces. Roll or press each piece between the palms into a thick disk of approximately one and a half inches in diameter and a thickness of approximately three-eighths of an inch — considerably thicker than any of the flatbread preparations in this chapter, because the small bite is intentionally substantial: it needs enough interior depth to retain some softness after baking, which provides the yielding surface that accepts and holds the topping.

Do not dock these preparations: the thicker profile and the smaller surface area mean that the controlled steam blistering of a docked preparation is not needed, and the slight irregular surface variation produced by unbaked steam in a small preparation is not a structural problem in the way it would be in a large thin flatbread.

Place on the preheated baking surface. Bake for ten to twelve minutes at moderate-to-hot heat — lower and longer than the thin flatbread preparations, because the additional thickness requires more time at lower heat to cook through to the center without scorching the surface. The bites are done when the edges are golden and set and the top surface, while not as deeply colored as the edges, has lost its raw appearance and looks dry and slightly golden. The interior at this point should be set but still very slightly yielding when pressed gently in the center with a fingertip: not raw, but not as completely dry as a cracker.

Remove from the oven and apply the chosen topping immediately, pressing it gently but firmly into the warm surface. The warmth of the preparation softens the topping slightly and the oil-enriched surface accepts and absorbs a small amount of any moist topping ingredient, so that after five minutes of cooling the topping is partially set into the surface rather than simply resting on top of it. Serve warm, within fifteen minutes of topping.

On the thickness specification: The slightly yielding interior of the small bite, which I specified above, is the characteristic that makes this preparation function as it should: the slight softness of the interior allows the topping to adhere properly and produces a more interesting textural contrast between the crisp edge, the slightly yielding interior, and the moist or soft topping than a completely dry and rigid preparation would provide. This is a deliberate choice and not a partially cooked result. A baker who returns these preparations to the oven because the interior seems not quite done has misunderstood the intended character of the preparation and will produce a cracker rather than a small bite — still good, but different from what is intended.


The Oil-Enriched Kitchen in Perspective

The five preparations in this chapter represent the full range of what high fat enrichment can achieve in the Level 3 kitchen: from the personal intimacy of the festival oil round eaten warm at the family table, through the background sweetness and gentleness of the honey-oil flatbread, the deep nutty intensity of the sesame crust, the generous herb richness of the communal round, and the convivial immediacy of the small topped bite. They are all of them descended from a tradition older than the chemical leavening whose absence defines the Level 3 standard, a tradition rooted in the commanded preparations of the Levitical calendar and the practical wisdom of the Bravian household kitchen across many generations.

What unites them is the oil — not as a modifier or a compensating agent for the absence of leavening, but as an ingredient of genuine presence and positive contribution. The Level 3 kitchen, in its most austere expression, produces the plain matzah of Chapter 11: two or three ingredients, heat, simplicity carried to its honest conclusion. In the oil-enriched preparations of this chapter, that same Level 3 kitchen produces something that is still simple, still honest, still governed by flour and fat and heat and nothing else, but that is not spare or austere in any diminished sense. It is rich and present and very much alive in the eating.

My mother did not make these preparations during the feast season, because she kept a strict Level 3 kitchen by the plain standard of Chapter 11 for the full seven days without enrichment. She would not have objected to these preparations on theological grounds — the theology, as I have said, is sound — but they were not her way, and the plainness of her way was its own kind of richness that I have tried to honor throughout this book even as I have described and commended a wider range of what Level 3 can produce.

I think she would have tried the sesame cracker, if someone had put one in front of her without announcing what it was. She had a genuine appreciation for sesame in all its forms. She would have eaten it without comment, which was her particular form of high praise, and then perhaps reached for another.

I am confident of this. I knew her well.


Chapter 13: Level 3 in the Communal and Temple Kitchen begins on the following page.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 11 — The Classic Level 3 Flatbread


A note before beginning: the recipes in Part Four are written for the Level 3 kitchen, the most austere standard of unleavened observance, in which no biological leavening, no chemical leavening, and no deliberate mechanical incorporation of air for the purpose of lift is used. Every preparation in this part contains only ingredients that contribute to flavor, structure, fat content, hydration, and surface character — nothing whose purpose is to make the product rise. The techniques employed are those available to every baker across every level: rubbing fat into flour, mixing dough with hot liquid, resting, rolling, and baking at appropriate heat. None of them constitutes mechanical leavening in any theologically meaningful sense, and all of them are consistent with the strictest standard of Level 3 observance as it is understood in the most conservative communities of Bravia, including those communities whose interpretation of the standard I consulted before finalizing these recipes.

Each recipe in this part is labeled Level 3. Where a preparation is appropriate at Level 1 and Level 2 as well — as most of the preparations in this part are, since removing leavening is an additive constraint and a Level 3 preparation satisfies Level 1 and Level 2 requirements automatically — this is noted at the head of the recipe. Adaptations for the specific qualities that Level 1 and Level 2 bakers might wish to emphasize differently are noted at the close of each recipe where relevant.

These are not simplified recipes. They are the most demanding recipes in this book, because they depend entirely on the baker’s understanding of flour, fat, heat, and time, with nothing else to carry them. They reward practice and punish inattention. They are also, when made well, among the most satisfying preparations I know.


My mother made her festival flatbread on the morning of the first day of the feast, before anything else. Before the table was set, before the bitter herbs were prepared, before the lamb was brought out of the cold room: the flatbread came first, because in her kitchen the bread was not an accompaniment to the feast but its foundation, and everything else was arranged around it. She would be at the bench by the time the first light came through the kitchen window, her flour already measured and waiting in the bowl she used for nothing else, her griddle already on the fire beginning its long slow climb to the temperature she wanted. She did not speak much on those mornings. She worked.

I watched her for years before I understood what I was watching, and then I watched for years more before I could do it myself with anything approaching her consistency. The ancient Bravian matzah — which is what Level 3 flatbread is, in the most precise and direct sense, whatever name any given household gives it — is technically the simplest preparation in this book: flour, water, fat if you use it at all, salt if your tradition includes it, heat. Five ingredients at most, often fewer. The technique is minimal by design. And yet it is the preparation that exposes every weakness in the baker’s understanding most completely, because there is nothing in it that hides anything.

If your flour is poor, the bread will taste of poor flour. If your water is wrong in proportion, the dough will fight you. If your heat is insufficient or inconsistent, the bread will be pale and gummy or charred and brittle. If your rolling is uneven, the bread will cook at different rates in different places and you will have some patches that are done and some that are not, and there is no correcting this once the dough is on the griddle. The ancient matzah is honest in the way that a mirror is honest: it shows you exactly what you brought to it, no more and no less.

This chapter covers the classic preparations: the plain wheat matzah in its salted and unsalted forms, the regional grain variations that reflect the agricultural diversity of Bravia’s provinces, and the technique principles that govern all of them. Chapter 12 covers the enriched Level 3 preparations — the oil-laden and fat-enriched rounds that represent a somewhat more forgiving but equally ancient tradition — and Chapters 13 and 14 cover the communal and grain-free preparations respectively. But everything in those chapters rests on the foundation of what is in this one, and the baker who has not mastered the classic Level 3 flatbread before attempting the enriched preparations or the communal-scale production of Chapter 13 will find those chapters more difficult than they should be. Begin here. Return here. The classic preparation is the curriculum.


On the Question of Oil in the Classic Matzah

Before we encounter the recipes themselves, I want to address a question that students ask with some regularity and that deserves a direct answer: does the classic Level 3 flatbread include fat or not?

The answer, historically and practically, is: it depends on the tradition of the household.

The most austere version of the Level 3 flatbread contains nothing but flour and water and, where tradition includes it, salt. This is the preparation that most directly echoes the literal description of the bread our fathers made in haste: unleavened cakes, produced from whatever dough they carried with them, with no addition beyond the grain itself and the water to combine it. Some of the most strictly observant Bravian households, particularly among certain of the older hill country communities, maintain this absolute minimalism for the flatbreads served at the Passover table itself on the evening that begins the feast, reserving the oil-enriched preparations for the subsequent days.

A second tradition, equally ancient and equally well-documented in the Bravian record, includes a small quantity of oil or rendered fat in the classic flatbread dough. This tradition rests on the observation that the commanded unleavened preparations described in the Levitical law — the minchah offerings, the breads of the priestly calendar — frequently include oil as a component, and that the presence of fat in an unleavened bread therefore has explicit scriptural precedent in the context of commanded preparation. The oil-inclusive tradition produces a somewhat more pliable and tender flatbread with a more complex flavor than the water-only version, and it is the tradition followed by the majority of Bravian households, including my own.

Both traditions are represented in this chapter. Recipe 15 is the water-only preparation in its pure form. Recipe 16 incorporates a small quantity of oil. Both are correct Level 3 preparations. The reader should follow the tradition of her household and her community, and if she has no established tradition to follow because she is observing the feast at Level 3 for the first time, I recommend beginning with Recipe 16 because it is marginally more forgiving on the bench and will allow her to develop the rolling and heat management skills that both preparations require before she encounters the additional challenges of the water-only dough.


On Timing and the Eighteen-Minute Question

The observant reader who is familiar with the strictest traditions of unleavened bread preparation will have encountered the eighteen-minute rule: the principle, held in some Bravian communities and in certain traditions outside Bravia, that matzah must be mixed, rolled, and baked within eighteen minutes of the water contacting the flour, because after eighteen minutes a fermentation process may have begun that would render the bread leavened. I want to address this directly because it affects the practical management of the Level 3 baking session in those households where it is observed.

The eighteen-minute tradition has a long history and I respect it, and I note that the water-only preparation in Recipe 15 can be made well within this constraint by an experienced baker working with a properly preheated griddle. The oil-enriched preparation in Recipe 16 also falls within the constraint in its basic form, though the baker should be aware that the addition of fat slows the development of any fermentation, which is itself an argument — held by some scholars — that the time constraint is less pressing for oil-enriched preparations than for water-only ones.

For the practical management of a Level 3 baking session within the eighteen-minute constraint: work in small batches. Mix dough for two or three flatbreads at a time, roll and bake them entirely, then mix the next batch. Do not mix a large quantity of dough at once and then roll it all before baking. The griddle should be preheated and ready before the first batch of dough is mixed, and the rolling should proceed directly to the griddle without any intervening rest period. This is genuinely possible with practice, and the Level 3 baker who works in this sequential manner — mix, roll immediately, bake, repeat — will find that the discipline of the time constraint produces a very consistent product, because each batch receives the same treatment and the same heat.

For the households that do not observe the eighteen-minute constraint, the recipes below include a brief rest period that improves the extensibility of the dough and produces a slightly better result. Both approaches produce good bread. Choose according to your household’s tradition.


Recipe 15 — The Passover Table Matzah: Plain Water and Flour

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: this is the most ancient and most minimal of the preparations in this book. It is two ingredients — three if you include salt, which I do and will discuss below — and one technique. There is nothing to hide behind and nothing to adjust if the result is not right. What is right is learned through repetition rather than through explanation, and no amount of reading this recipe will substitute for making it six or eight times before the feast season arrives. I have been making this preparation for most of my adult life and I still consider each batch of the feast-season to be a learning experience. This is not false modesty. It is the nature of a preparation that has no margin.

Makes 6 to 8 flatbreads, depending on the size and thinness achieved

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups hard wheat flour — hard wheat rather than soft is essential in this water-only preparation, because without fat to tenderize the crumb, the gluten structure of hard wheat is what holds the flatbread together during the vigorous rolling that this preparation requires and during the rapid, intense baking that gives it its character. Soft wheat flour in a water-only matzah produces a dough that is difficult to roll thin without tearing and a finished product that is less structurally coherent than the baker wants.
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt — the question of salt in the classic matzah is one on which Bravian household traditions differ considerably. The water-only matzah as I make it and as my mother made it includes salt, on the practical grounds that an unsalted flatbread of such simplicity has almost no flavor beyond the wheat itself, and that salt does not constitute leaven in any sense of the word. The unsalted tradition exists and is observed in some communities as a form of additional austerity; I note it and do not dispute it, but I salt mine. The unsalted variation is noted at the end of this recipe for those who observe it.
  • ⅔ cup cold water — begin with slightly less than this and add more carefully, because the correct hydration for this dough is on the dry side and the difference between manageable and unworkably sticky is a small quantity of water

Method:

Measure the flour and salt into a clean bowl. Stir once to distribute the salt. Add slightly more than half the water and begin working the mixture together with your hands. Add additional water a tablespoon at a time, working after each addition, until the dough barely coheres. This dough should feel considerably drier than any other dough in this book: it should be rough and somewhat crumbly when first brought together, smoothing and becoming more coherent under sustained pressure from your hands but never feeling soft or slack. If it feels soft, you have added too much water, and the remedy is difficult — a small additional quantity of flour can be worked in, but the distribution of that flour will be uneven and the dough will be stronger in some places than others as a result. It is far better to add the water cautiously from the beginning than to correct an over-hydrated water-only matzah dough after the fact.

Once the dough coheres, knead it firmly for three minutes on an unfloured bench. The absence of flour on the bench surface is deliberate: the dry, stiff dough benefits from the friction of direct contact with the bench surface, which helps to develop the gluten network more efficiently than a floured surface would. The dough will feel tight and demanding under your hands throughout this kneading, which is as it should be.

If you are not observing the eighteen-minute constraint, cover the dough and rest for fifteen minutes. If you are observing the constraint, proceed immediately to rolling.

Preheat the griddle over high heat until a pinch of flour scattered on the surface browns in six to eight seconds — hotter than the griddle temperature for the Level 1 flatbreads, because the water-only matzah requires more aggressive initial heat to produce the rapid surface setting and steam lift that give it its correct texture and character.

Divide the dough into six to eight pieces, depending on the size you intend. Work with one piece at a time, keeping the remainder covered. On a very lightly floured bench, roll each piece with a firm rolling pin, pressing decisively rather than tentatively: this dough does not respond well to hesitant rolling. Work from the center outward and rotate the piece a quarter turn frequently. The dough will resist rolling at first and then, as the gluten relaxes slightly under the pressure, become more cooperative. Roll until the piece is approximately seven to eight inches across and at a thinness that approaches translucency — thinner than you think is correct, because this dough puffs slightly in the oven and a thick piece will be doughy at the center regardless of how hot the griddle is.

Dock the rolled piece thoroughly with a fork or a docking tool: rows of perforations approximately three-quarters of an inch apart across the entire surface, including the edges. The docking controls the way in which steam escapes from the dough during baking, directing it upward through the perforations rather than forcing it to accumulate and create uncontrolled blistering. A matzah that has been adequately docked will be relatively flat with small, uniform surface irregularities; one that has been inadequately docked will balloon unevenly and develop large hollow blisters that collapse on cooling to produce a fragile, uneven product.

Transfer the docked round directly to the hot griddle. Bake for sixty to ninety seconds on the first side, until the surface shows the characteristic spotty browning of a properly baked Level 3 flatbread: uneven areas of golden brown and deeper brown against pale stretches, with small dark spots at the thinnest points. The dough will have stiffened and become rigid to the touch at the edges. Flip decisively using a broad flat spatula and bake the second side for forty-five to sixty seconds, until it is similarly spotted and the flatbread feels completely rigid when lifted from the griddle. There should be no flex in a properly baked water-only matzah.

Transfer to a clean cloth. Do not stack the matzahs on top of each other while they are still hot, because the trapped steam will soften them. Lay them side by side on the cloth, or prop them at a slight angle against each other as many hill country bakers do, to allow air to circulate around them as they cool.

A properly made water-only matzah will be rigid and completely dry within five minutes of coming off the griddle. It will have a clean snap when broken and a flavor of toasted grain that is direct and unembellished. It is not a complex flavor, but it is a genuine one, and it is the flavor that has been at the center of the Bravian Passover table since before any of us were born.

The unsalted variation: Omit the salt entirely. The dough will be fractionally more extensible without the tightening effect of salt on the gluten network, which is a minor practical advantage that does not offset the loss of flavor. I record this variation in full conscience but do not recommend it on culinary grounds. Those who observe it do so on theological grounds that are theirs to hold.

On oven baking versus griddle baking: While the griddle is the traditional tool for Level 3 matzah in most Bravian regional traditions, oven baking on a preheated stone produces an equally good result with some practical differences. The oven stone distributes heat more evenly across the entire surface of the flatbread simultaneously, which produces more uniform browning and slightly more consistent results across a batch than the griddle, where the baker must monitor each piece continuously and manage the heat of the griddle between batches. The oven method is somewhat better suited to the baker working alone who is producing large quantities, because multiple flatbreads can be baked on the stone simultaneously. The griddle method is better suited to the small household production of the classic Passover table matzah, where immediate attention to each piece and the smell of bread baking directly over fire are part of the experience as much as the product itself.

For oven baking, preheat the oven to its highest possible temperature with the baking stone inside for at least forty-five minutes before the first piece goes in. Place the rolled and docked flatbreads on the stone and bake for four to five minutes total, watching from the three-minute mark, until the surface shows thorough spotty browning. The shorter baking time achievable on a griddle is not available in the oven, but the result is equally good in character if slightly different in appearance.


Recipe 16 — The Daily Festival Matzah: Oil and Flour

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: this is the preparation I make most frequently during the feast season, and the preparation that the Stone Hearth Bakery produces in the largest quantities during the seven days of the feast. It is, in my judgment, the most practically useful Level 3 preparation in this chapter: it is more forgiving on the bench than the water-only matzah, more complex in flavor, and more versatile as an accompaniment to the range of savory and sweet preparations that appear on the festival table across seven days. It is also the preparation I would give to a baker who has never attempted Level 3 work before and who wants a preparation that will teach her the essential skills of this level of baking without setting her up for the particular frustrations of the water-only dough on her first attempt.

This is the bread I believe my grandmother’s grandmother brought with her on the ships, though whether it was made with olive oil or with rendered animal fat I cannot say with certainty. Both traditions exist in the Western Reaches communities, and both produce excellent bread.

Makes 8 flatbreads

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups hard wheat flour — hard wheat remains essential here as in Recipe 15, though the presence of oil will provide enough tenderness that the slightly lower structural demands of the soft wheat are not needed
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil, or melted rendered lamb fat for the hill country version — the quantity is deliberately modest; this is not an oil-enriched flatbread in the sense of the preparations in Chapter 12, which carry a much higher fat content, but a classically lean preparation in which the oil is present as a modest modifier of texture and flavor rather than as a dominant ingredient
  • ½ cup water, heated until steaming — unlike the cold water of the water-only matzah, the hot water of this preparation works with the oil to gelatinize the starches and produce a more extensible dough, and this is the technical reason why this preparation is more forgiving on the bench than Recipe 15

Method:

Combine the flour and salt in a mixing bowl and stir to distribute. Add the olive oil or melted fat and work it briefly into the flour with your fingertips — twenty to thirty seconds of rubbing, not the sustained rubbing of the pastry fat-incorporation technique but a light initial distribution to coat some of the flour particles with fat before the water is added. This brief rubbing is what distinguishes this preparation from simply adding oil and water together to flour and produces a somewhat more even fat distribution in the finished dough.

Add the hot water in a thin stream, stirring as you pour, until the dough comes together. Turn onto a lightly floured bench and knead for two to three minutes. The dough will be noticeably softer and more pliable than the water-only matzah dough, and it will come together more cleanly and become smooth more quickly under kneading. This is the oil’s contribution, and it is a real one.

If not observing the eighteen-minute constraint, cover and rest for fifteen to twenty minutes. If observing the constraint, proceed immediately to rolling on a preheated griddle.

Divide into eight equal pieces. Roll each piece on a lightly floured bench to a round of approximately eight to nine inches, using the same decisive, rotation-based rolling method described in Recipe 15 but with notably less resistance from the dough. The oil-enriched matzah dough will extend more readily and more evenly than the water-only dough, and the baker who has practiced Recipe 15 will find Recipe 16 rolls considerably more cooperatively.

Roll to the same degree of thinness: approaching translucency, thinner than instinct suggests is necessary. Dock thoroughly with the same spacing described in Recipe 15. The docking is equally important in this preparation, because the oil contributes enough moisture to produce more vigorous steam during baking than the water-only dough generates, and undocked oil-enriched matzah will blister more aggressively and more unevenly than the water-only preparation.

Bake on a hot griddle for the same timing as Recipe 15 — sixty to ninety seconds per side — or on a preheated oven stone for four to five minutes. The oil-enriched matzah will brown somewhat faster than the water-only version because the fat promotes surface browning, and the baker should be slightly more attentive to color during the baking of Recipe 16 than of Recipe 15. The correct final color is the same: deep, uneven golden brown with darker spotting at the thinnest points.

The finished oil-enriched matzah will be completely rigid but marginally less brittle than the water-only version, with a slightly richer flavor in which the grain character is still primary but the oil provides a background note of richness that makes the bread more immediately appealing as a standalone preparation and more versatile as an accompaniment. It keeps slightly better than the water-only matzah as well, because the oil slows the staling process that makes a thoroughly dried flatbread gradually less pleasant to eat over the course of several days.

On the choice between olive oil and rendered fat: I have made this preparation with both and have specific recommendations for specific contexts. For the Passover table, served alongside the lamb and the bitter herbs, rendered lamb fat produces a preparation of greater coherence with the other elements of the table: the fat character of the bread and the fat character of the meat complement rather than contrast. For the subsequent days of the feast, when the preparation will accompany a wider range of savory and sweet preparations, olive oil’s more neutral and versatile character is the better choice. For the festival table of a household in the interior Amphoe communities where lamb is the dominant fat and olive oil is an imported luxury, rendered lamb fat throughout is entirely traditional and produces an excellent result. Choose according to your tradition, your occasion, and your pantry.


Recipe 17 — Barley Matzah of the Hill Country

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: barley matzah has a longer documented history in the Bravian tradition than wheat matzah, because barley is the earlier grain of the year — it is harvested first, its sheaf is the omer offering that begins the count to Pentecost, and it was almost certainly the grain of the earliest Bravian settlers in those first difficult years before the wheat cultivation was fully established in the new land. In the hill country communities of the Western Reaches, barley matzah has never been displaced by wheat, and some of the oldest families in those communities make their Passover table matzah from barley in preference to wheat as a deliberate connection to the most ancient layer of their tradition. I have enormous respect for this practice, and the recipe below is as close as I can come to the preparation I have watched made in hill country kitchens over the years, adapted slightly for the home baker who may be encountering barley matzah for the first time.

Barley matzah is a demanding preparation. It requires more patience than wheat matzah, more attention to hydration, and a more experienced eye for the correct degree of thinness, because barley’s gluten is weaker and more fragile than wheat’s and the dough will tear more readily during rolling if it is not handled with appropriate care. The result, when the preparation succeeds, has a flavor that I find genuinely unlike anything else in the unleavened repertoire: nutty, slightly earthy, with a pleasant bitterness in the toasted surface that makes it a particularly apt bread for the Passover table, where the bitter herbs are also present and where the overall flavor profile of the meal leans toward the complex and the slightly austere.

Makes 6 flatbreads

Ingredients:

  • 1¼ cups barley flour — stone-ground if possible, because the coarser particle distribution of stone-ground barley flour produces a more textured and more characterful bread than the finely milled commercial barley flour that is beginning to appear in some of the port-town markets
  • ¾ cup hard wheat flour — this addition of wheat flour is the adaptation I referred to above; pure barley matzah, which does exist in some of the most traditional hill country kitchens, requires considerable skill to produce successfully, and the addition of wheat flour provides enough gluten strength to make the dough manageable for the baker who is not working with barley regularly. Those who wish to attempt pure barley matzah will find guidance in the variation note below.
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 2 tablespoons rendered lamb fat, melted — olive oil can be substituted but the hill country tradition is emphatically lamb fat for this preparation, and the lamb fat and barley combination has a flavor coherence that olive oil and barley does not quite match
  • ½ cup plus 2 tablespoons water, heated until steaming — barley flour absorbs water differently from wheat flour and generally requires more liquid per unit of flour to achieve a workable dough; begin with half a cup and add more carefully

Method:

Combine the barley flour, hard wheat flour, and salt in a mixing bowl and stir to distribute. Work in the melted lamb fat briefly with your fingertips as in Recipe 16. Add the hot water in a thin stream, stirring, until the dough comes together. The dough will feel different from the wheat matzah doughs immediately: it will be somewhat grainier in texture and will not develop the same smooth, elastic surface that wheat dough achieves under kneading. This is normal and correct. Knead gently for two to three minutes — more firmly than feels comfortable will risk overworking the weak barley gluten and producing a dough that falls apart during rolling.

Cover and rest for twenty minutes regardless of the eighteen-minute consideration, because barley dough requires this full rest to become workable; the gluten development that wheat achieves quickly under kneading takes longer and requires rest rather than additional kneading in a barley-dominant dough.

Divide into six pieces. Roll each piece on a well-floured bench — more flour on the bench than for wheat matzah, because the weaker gluten of the barley dough tears more easily when it sticks to the surface during rolling. Work gently and with smaller movements of the rolling pin than the decisive pressing used for wheat matzah. Rotate frequently. If the dough tears, press it back together immediately with gentle pressure from your fingers and allow it to rest for two minutes before continuing.

The correct thinness for barley matzah is slightly greater than for wheat matzah: somewhat less thin, because the weaker structure of the barley dough cannot support rolling to near-translucency without tearing. The dough should be thin enough to see the shadow of your hand through it when held up to the light, but not thin enough to see the shape of your fingers clearly.

Dock thoroughly. Bake on a preheated griddle or stone at the same high heat called for in Recipes 15 and 16, for the same approximate timing — perhaps ten seconds less on the second side, because barley flatbread at the slightly greater thickness specified sets slightly faster than wheat flatbread at the same heat.

The finished barley matzah will be darker than the wheat preparations — a deep golden brown with pronounced dark spotting — and will have a more pronounced and complex surface aroma, because the oils and starches of barley caramelize and develop flavor at slightly different rates from wheat. It will also be slightly more fragile than wheat matzah when cooled, because the barley gluten network is less structurally robust. Handle the finished flatbreads gently and do not stack them until they are fully cooled.

Pure barley matzah variation: For the household with a strong hill country tradition that prefers to make the Passover table matzah from pure barley without the wheat addition: use two cups of barley flour, increase the water by two additional tablespoons, and handle the dough with extreme gentleness throughout rolling and transfer. Do not attempt to roll it as thin as the wheat-barley blend. Thickness of approximately three millimeters — a modest thinness rather than an extreme one — is the correct target for pure barley matzah, because the dough will tear before it reaches the translucency achievable with wheat. The result will be denser than the blended version and more demanding to eat, in the sense that it is more substantial against the tooth. It is very much its own preparation and should be approached as such rather than as an inferior version of the blended recipe. Several Bravian bakers I admire greatly make nothing else for the Passover table.


Recipe 18 — Spelt Matzah of the Eastern Settlements

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: spelt matzah is the newest of the classic Level 3 preparations in the Bravian tradition, having developed primarily in the Delta settlements and the eastern colonies where spelt has been planted in the river-enriched soil with considerable success over the past generation. I hesitated to include it in this chapter alongside the more ancient preparations because it does not yet have the depth of tradition behind it that the wheat and barley preparations carry. I decided to include it because I have been to the Delta settlements and eaten the spelt matzah being made there, and it is genuinely excellent — not simply a variation on wheat matzah but a preparation with its own distinct character that I believe will eventually find its place in the wider Bravian tradition as the eastern communities mature and their culinary identity develops. I include it here as a document of that developing tradition as much as a recipe.

Spelt matzah is, of the three classic preparations in this chapter, the most immediately appealing to the baker who is new to Level 3 work. Spelt’s extensible, forgiving gluten produces a dough that is easier to roll thin than either the wheat-only or the barley-dominant preparations, and its natural sweetness and nutty character produce a finished flatbread of very pleasant flavor without any of the earthy austerity of the barley preparation. It is gentle bread, and it is good bread, and the eastern settlements that are developing it as a tradition are doing good work.

Makes 8 flatbreads

Ingredients:

  • 1½ cups spelt flour — whole spelt flour if it is available, because the bran in whole spelt contributes a pleasant nuttiness and a slightly more complex surface flavor when the bread toasts against the griddle; white spelt flour if whole is not available, which will produce a slightly more delicate bread with a milder flavor
  • ½ cup hard wheat flour — included to provide structural reinforcement for the spelt, which, as noted in Chapter 2, has an extensible but somewhat fragile gluten that benefits from the additional network strength of hard wheat, particularly when the dough must be rolled very thin
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil — olive oil rather than rendered fat is the tradition of the Delta settlements and the eastern colonies, reflecting both the availability of olive cultivation in the southern portions of the Delta region and the influence of the port-town culinary tradition on the communities that settled the area from coastal regions of Bravia
  • ½ cup water, heated until steaming

Method:

Combine the spelt flour, hard wheat flour, and salt and stir. Work in the olive oil briefly. Add the hot water and bring together into a dough. Knead for two to three minutes — the spelt gluten will develop quickly under kneading and the dough will become smooth and pliable with relatively little effort compared to the wheat-only preparations. This apparent ease is, as I noted in Chapter 2, slightly deceptive: the spelt gluten develops quickly but also breaks down quickly under sustained working, and the baker should stop kneading at the point of smoothness rather than continuing past it in search of greater development.

Cover and rest for twenty minutes. The rest period is particularly beneficial with spelt dough, which relaxes significantly during resting and becomes noticeably more extensible as a result.

Divide into eight pieces and roll each on a lightly floured bench to a round of approximately eight to nine inches. Spelt dough will roll to this size without significant resistance, and the baker who is used to the more demanding wheat-only matzah dough will find the rolling of spelt matzah somewhat startlingly easy. Do not interpret this ease as an invitation to rush: roll deliberately and evenly, rotating frequently, and achieve the correct thinness — approaching translucency — with patience rather than speed.

Dock thoroughly and bake on a preheated griddle or stone at high heat for the same timing as Recipe 16 — sixty to ninety seconds per side on a griddle, four to five minutes in the oven. Watch the color carefully: spelt matzah browns faster than wheat matzah because the natural sugars in spelt caramelize more readily than those of hard wheat, and the difference between beautifully golden and beginning to char is a smaller window of time than in the wheat preparations. The correct finish is a warm, deep golden brown — slightly deeper in average tone than the wheat matzah — with scattered dark spots at the thinnest points, and a surface aroma that is distinctly sweeter and nuttier than the wheat preparations.

The finished spelt matzah will be more tender and slightly more pliable when warm than the wheat preparations, firming fully to rigidity as it cools. It has a better keeping quality than the barley matzah and a somewhat richer initial flavor than the wheat preparations, and it is the flatbread I would choose to serve alongside the sweet preparations of Chapter 7 if I were building a Level 3 festival table from this chapter alone.


Recipe 19 — Surface-Treated Level 3 Flatbreads: A Framework

Level: 1, 2, and 3

A note on this recipe: the preparations above are all plain flatbreads, seasoned internally with salt and flavored primarily by the character of the grain and the fat. The following is not a recipe in the strict sense but a framework for the application of surface treatments to any of the Level 3 flatbreads in this chapter — treatments that remain fully appropriate at Level 3 because they involve no leavening of any kind and no mechanical technique beyond a gentle pressing of surface elements against the rolled dough before baking.

Surface treatments at Level 3 do more work than they do at Levels 1 and 2, because the interior of the Level 3 flatbread is intentionally simple and the surface is therefore proportionally more important as a source of flavor, texture, and aromatic complexity. The baker who masters the surface treatments available at Level 3 will find that the range of preparations this chapter can produce is considerably wider than the list of recipes suggests.

The surface treatments available at Level 3 are those that can be applied to a rolled, uncooked flatbread by pressing, scattering, or brushing without any mechanical technique that incorporates air:

Seeds, scattered over the surface of a rolled flatbread and pressed very lightly with the palm of the hand to encourage adhesion before the piece goes onto the griddle, contribute flavor, texture, and aromatic complexity that develop further as the seeds toast against the hot iron. Sesame, black sesame, caraway, nigella, poppy, and dried coriander are all appropriate. A light scattering is more effective than a heavy one: too many seeds prevent the dough surface from contacting the griddle directly and reduce the characteristic spotty browning of the plain flatbread.

Coarse salt, applied as a light scattering over the surface of an oil-enriched preparation before baking, produces the small intensifications of salt flavor distributed across the surface that I described in Chapter 4. It is one of the single most effective flavor improvements available at Level 3 and is underused in most household productions because it seems too simple to be worth noting. It is worth noting.

Dried herbs, crumbled and pressed gently into the surface of a rolled flatbread before baking, toast against the griddle and develop a concentrated, slightly caramelized herb character that is distinctly different from and considerably more complex than the character of herbs incorporated into the dough itself. Rosemary, thyme, dried marjoram, and dried oregano all work well in this application. The herbs should be applied after rolling and before transfer to the griddle rather than pressed into the dough before rolling, because rolling over surface herbs produces uneven dough thickness around the herb pieces and irregular browning as a result.

A light brush of olive oil or melted fat, applied to the surface of a fully baked hot flatbread immediately after it comes off the griddle, produces a result quite different from oil incorporated into the dough: the oil on the surface toasts against the residual heat of the flatbread and develops a bright, clean fat flavor that is more immediately aromatic than the fat incorporated into the interior. This treatment is particularly effective on the water-only matzah of Recipe 15, where the interior fat content is minimal and the surface oil provides a welcome enrichment. It is applied after baking and therefore involves no technique that could be confused with mechanical leavening.

Garlic, rubbed over the surface of a hot flatbread directly from a cut clove immediately after baking, produces one of the most characteristically Bravian of all flatbread preparations. The heat of the flatbread releases the garlic oils onto the surface in a way that raw garlic pressed into the dough before baking does not achieve, and the combination of toasted flatbread surface and fresh garlic oil is deeply savory and deeply good. This treatment requires no recipe beyond the instruction to cut a garlic clove in half and rub it firmly across the surface of the hot bread immediately after it comes off the griddle, then add a drizzle of good oil and a pinch of salt. It is the preparation I make for myself at the end of a long day of festival baking, and I have never tired of it.


Storing and Serving Level 3 Flatbreads

The storage and serving of Level 3 flatbreads requires somewhat different consideration from the Level 1 and Level 2 preparations, because the absence of any fat enrichment in the water-only preparations of Recipe 15 means those preparations stale and become more brittle with time in a way that oil-enriched preparations do not.

The water-only matzah of Recipe 15, once fully cooled, should be stored in a dry place in a loose cloth covering that allows air circulation. It will remain at its best quality for two to three days after baking and will continue to be serviceable for the full seven days of the feast, becoming progressively more brittle and more cracker-like in character as the days pass. Some households consider the increasing dryness of the feast-week matzah over the seven days to be part of the character of the season and make no effort to slow it, baking a fresh batch on the first day only and eating through it over the week. Others bake every other day to maintain a fresher product. Both are sound approaches.

The oil-enriched matzah of Recipe 16, the barley preparation of Recipe 17, and the spelt preparation of Recipe 18 all keep better than the water-only preparation because their fat content slows staling. These preparations will be at their best for three to four days after baking.

Serving Level 3 flatbreads at the Passover table requires no elaboration beyond what the table itself provides: the bread is what it is, and it is served as it is. For the subsequent days of the feast, the flatbreads are appropriate alongside any savory preparation, broken into pieces for dipping and scooping, or rolled loosely around a filling as an approximation of the wraps of Chapter 6, though the Level 3 flatbread will not flex as freely as a purpose-made wrap without cracking. For the sweet festival table, the oil-enriched preparations pair well with honey and with soft fresh cheese in a combination that is among the oldest and most naturally occurring on the Bravian festival table.


A Final Word on the Classic Preparations

The preparations in this chapter are, as I said at the beginning, a curriculum more than a collection of recipes. The baker who works through them — who makes the water-only matzah of Recipe 15 until she can produce a consistent result without consulting the instructions, who learns to feel the difference between a barley dough that is ready to roll and one that needs more rest, who develops an eye for the color that indicates a fully baked Level 3 flatbread at high heat — will have learned something about baking that cannot be learned in any other way and cannot be learned quickly.

My mother knew this, though she would not have expressed it in these terms. She simply made the bread, year after year, with the full attention of her capable and serious hands, and the bread was always good in the way that things made with full attention and long practice are always good: not because they are flashy or elaborate, but because they are exactly what they are and nothing less.

That is the aspiration of this chapter and of this level of baking. To be exactly what you are and nothing less. I leave it with you to practice.


Chapter 12: Oil-Enriched Level 3 Breads begins on the following page.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 10 — Egg-White and Beaten Preparations

I want to begin this chapter with a confession that I suspect will surprise some readers who have followed the argument of this book from the beginning and have come to expect a certain consistency of position from their author.

I did not, for many years, make the preparations in this chapter.

This is not because I was unaware of them. The egg-white preparations of the Level 2 festival kitchen have a documented history in Bravian baking that is nearly as long as the history of the Level 2 standard itself, and I encountered them in historical recipe books and in the teaching materials of my own Home Economics training long before I had any professional or pedagogical reason to develop them myself. The technique was not unknown to me. The ingredients were entirely familiar. The theology, as I have laid it out in this book, is clear and well-reasoned: beaten egg whites do not constitute biological or chemical leavening, they are mechanical technique of a kind that the Level 2 standard explicitly permits, and a baker who observes at Level 2 may use them with a clear conscience and sound theological justification.

I still did not make them. Not during the feast season. For years.

The reason, when I finally examined it honestly enough to articulate it, was my mother. She did not make them, and I had absorbed, somewhere in the decades of watching her kitchen and inheriting her habits and her unspoken standards, the feeling that beaten egg whites during the feast season were not quite right — not forbidden, exactly, not theologically indefensible, but not quite right in some way that I could not precisely identify and therefore could not precisely dispute. It was the feeling rather than the argument, and the feeling was strong enough that I let it stand unexamined for longer than I should have.

What changed my mind was a student — the same kind of student who changed my mind about several things I had held too comfortably for too long, which is perhaps the best argument for spending a career in teaching that I know. She came to my advanced baking course from one of the older port-town families, the kind of family that has been in Porterville for so many generations that their household traditions have calcified into something between custom and commandment, and she observed Level 2 and had observed Level 2 all her life, and she made the most beautiful egg-white unleavened wafers I had ever seen. She made them matter-of-factly, without any sense that she was doing something daring or unusual, because in her household they were neither. They were simply what one made at Level 2 during the feast season, and they were made well, and they were genuinely excellent.

I asked her about the theology. She looked at me with the mild patience of someone who has explained something obvious to a slightly slower interlocutor and said that beaten egg whites were available at Level 2 because the standard was defined by what was removed rather than by what remained, and what remained at Level 2 included mechanical technique, and beaten egg whites were mechanical technique. This was, I noted, exactly the argument I had made in Chapter 1 of this book, which I had apparently been making with more conviction in print than I had been living out in my kitchen.

I went home and made the wafers. They were excellent. I have made them every feast season since, and I have included them in the Stone Hearth Bakery’s Level 2 festival offerings, and they have been among the most popular preparations we produce during the feast week. My mother, if she is watching, has had the grace not to comment.

I tell this story not to undermine the theology of the chapter — the theology is sound and I stand behind it — but to acknowledge honestly that the feeling one brings to festival baking is not always the same as the reasoning one has worked out about it, and that sometimes it takes another person’s quiet competence to close that gap. If this chapter introduces the egg-white preparations to bakers who have the same unexamined resistance I had, I hope the recipes themselves will do for them what my student’s matter-of-fact proficiency did for me.


The Egg White as Leavening: A Technical Review

I described the basic physics of beaten egg whites in Chapter 1 and returned to them at various points in Chapters 3 and 8. I want to revisit them here with more precision, because this chapter demands a more complete technical understanding of egg-white behavior than any of the previous chapters has required, and the baker who enters these preparations with a vague sense that beaten egg whites make things light will find herself unable to manage the specific demands that each preparation makes.

The egg white is composed primarily of water — approximately eighty-eight percent by weight — and proteins, the most important of which for the baker’s purposes are ovalbumin, conalbumin, and ovomucin. In their natural state, these proteins are folded into compact globular structures that coexist peacefully with the water surrounding them. When the egg white is beaten, two things happen simultaneously and in interaction with each other: air bubbles are incorporated into the liquid, and the mechanical energy of the beating causes the protein molecules to unfold and denature — to uncurl from their compact globular state into extended chains that migrate to the surfaces of the air bubbles and form thin, continuous protein films around each bubble. These protein films are strong enough to hold the air bubble in suspension against the tendency of bubbles to coalesce and escape, and the result of this process, carried to sufficient completion, is a stable foam in which millions of microscopic air bubbles are each individually encased in a network of denatured egg-white proteins.

When this foam enters a hot oven, two further things happen. The air in each bubble expands with heat, pushing outward against the protein film. Simultaneously, the heat causes the protein films to coagulate — to set permanently into rigid structures rather than the flexible films of the raw foam. If the oven temperature and the foam stability are correctly managed, the protein films coagulate around the expanded bubbles at the moment of maximum expansion, locking in the lifted and aerated structure of the foam in a permanent form. This is the mechanism by which a meringue wafer acquires its crisp, rigid, completely dry character after baking: the foam has been expanded by heat and locked in the expanded state by coagulation.

If the oven temperature is too high, the proteins coagulate before the bubbles have fully expanded, and the preparation is dense and heavy rather than light. If the oven temperature is too low, the bubbles expand fully but the proteins coagulate slowly and incompletely, and the preparation collapses as it cools because the protein structure that should have locked in the expanded foam has not set firmly enough to do so. Managing oven temperature for egg-white preparations is therefore more consequential than for any other preparation in this book, and the baker should not treat the temperature specifications in the recipes that follow as approximations.

The stability of the foam before it enters the oven is the other primary variable, and it is governed by three factors: the freshness of the eggs, the cleanliness of the bowl and beater, and the beating technique itself.

Egg freshness affects foam stability because older egg whites have a higher pH — they become more alkaline as they age — which causes the proteins to denature more readily during beating but also produces a foam with coarser, less stable bubbles than a fresh egg white beaten to the same apparent volume. Fresh eggs produce finer, more stable foams that hold their structure longer before deflation begins, and the baker preparing egg-white preparations should use the freshest eggs available.

Bowl and beater cleanliness is not a minor precaution. Fat, in any quantity, interferes catastrophically with foam formation because fat molecules compete with the egg-white proteins for the bubble surfaces and, being more surface-active, displace the proteins and prevent the formation of the continuous protein films that stabilize the foam. Even a trace of egg yolk — which contains fat in the form of lipid-rich lecithin — in a bowl of egg whites will reduce the foam’s stability and volume significantly. The bowl and beater used for egg-white preparations must be completely free of fat: no trace of butter, no trace of oil, no trace of yolk. Washing with hot water and thoroughly drying before beginning is the minimum precaution, and running the bowl rim with a cut lemon before beginning — an old Bravian kitchen trick that I learned from one of the older catering guild members — will remove any residual fat traces that washing has not fully eliminated.

Beating technique determines the character of the foam produced, and understanding the stages of foam development allows the baker to stop the beating at precisely the point required for a given preparation rather than at an arbitrary judgment of doneness.

The foam passes through four distinct stages during beating. In the foamy stage, the whites are broken down into a loose, large-bubbled, transparent foam with little structural strength: a bowl of foamy egg whites can be poured out almost as easily as liquid. In the soft peak stage, the foam is white and opaque, with fine bubbles, and holds its shape just enough to form soft, drooping peaks when the beater is lifted: the peaks fold over rather than standing upright. This stage represents approximately two-thirds of the foam’s maximum volume and is suitable for preparations where the foam is to be folded into a heavier batter and where some deflation during folding is expected and acceptable. In the stiff peak stage, the foam holds peaks that stand upright without drooping when the beater is lifted, has a glossy surface, and has achieved close to its maximum stable volume. This is the stage at which the foam is most useful for preparations where it is the primary structural and leavening element. In the overbeaten stage, the foam loses its glossy surface and begins to look dry, grainy, and separated: the protein network has become so rigid that it can no longer hold the water in the bubble films, and the foam is beginning to break down rather than continuing to develop. An overbeaten foam cannot be corrected and must be discarded.

The preparations in this chapter specify the stage required for each preparation, and the baker should develop the eye and hand for distinguishing these stages through practice before the feast season requires her to make these preparations under conditions where a failed batch is genuinely inconvenient.


On Cream of Tartar and Its Use at Level 2

I addressed the question of cream of tartar at Level 2 in Chapter 3 and expressed the position I hold — that cream of tartar used as a foam stabilizer rather than as a chemical leavening agent is available at Level 2 — with appropriate acknowledgment of the minority view that prefers to avoid it entirely. I will not repeat that argument at length here, but I want to note its practical relevance before the recipes begin.

Cream of tartar stabilizes beaten egg-white foam by lowering the pH of the egg white, which slows protein denaturation and produces smaller, more stable bubbles than untreated egg white. The practical effect is a foam that reaches stiff peaks more reliably, holds those peaks for a longer period before deflation begins, and produces a finished meringue of better texture and more consistent character than an untreated foam would yield under comparable conditions. It is a genuine practical aid, and the baker who uses it should not feel that she is compromising the integrity of her Level 2 observance: as I argued in Chapter 3, the function determines the category, and cream of tartar in this application is functioning as a stabilizer, not as a leavening agent.

The baker who prefers not to use cream of tartar for reasons of personal conviction should note that all of the preparations in this chapter can be made without it. The foam will be marginally less stable and must be used somewhat more quickly after beating, which requires more efficient organization of the preparation process, but the finished products are equally good when the baker works efficiently. The recipes specify cream of tartar quantities where I use it in my own practice, and note the adjustment required for the preparation made without it.


Recipe 28 — Meringue-Based Unleavened Wafers

Level: 2 only

A note on this recipe: the meringue wafer is the most completely egg-white-dependent preparation in this chapter and the one that most directly showcases what beaten egg whites can produce in the Level 2 festival kitchen. It contains no flour — or a very small quantity of flour, in the stabilized variation I describe below — and its entire structure is provided by the protein network of the beaten egg whites set around their incorporated air by the heat of a low oven. The result, when the technique is correctly executed, is a preparation of remarkable lightness: completely dry throughout, dissolving almost instantly in the mouth, with a delicate crispness that is unlike anything produced by any other preparation in this book and that occupies a position at the sweet festival table that nothing else can fill.

I want to be clear about what a meringue wafer is in the context of the Level 2 festival kitchen: it is a sweet preparation, appropriate for the sweet festival table, and it is not a bread substitute or a flatbread variant. It is its own thing — a preparation that uses the mechanical leavening available at Level 2 to produce a result that has no equivalent at any other level — and it should be served and understood as such.

Makes approximately 30 small wafers

Ingredients:

  • 4 egg whites, at room temperature — room-temperature egg whites beat to greater volume than cold ones, because the proteins are more mobile at room temperature and unfold more readily under the mechanical action of the beater; remove the eggs from the cold room at least thirty minutes before beginning
  • ¼ teaspoon cream of tartar — optional at Level 2; see note above and adjustment below for the preparation made without it
  • ¾ cup honey — the primary sweetener; I use honey rather than refined sugar in this preparation as a matter of Bravian culinary tradition and also because honey’s hygroscopic character, which would be a disadvantage in a cracker that must remain dry over many days, is less problematic in a wafer that is consumed within two to three days of making and whose slight tendency to soften at the surface in humid conditions is acceptable; the character of the honey contributes meaningfully to the flavor of the finished wafer, and I use a mild floral honey rather than the robust dark honey of the hill country, which would overpower the delicate egg-white flavor
  • Flavoring additions, from the regional variations below

A note on honey in meringue: Honey-based meringue behaves differently from a conventional meringue made with refined sugar, and the baker should understand these differences before beginning. Honey contains more water than refined sugar, which means the foam is more liquid initially and reaches stable peaks more slowly. Honey also contains natural acids that interact with the egg-white proteins in ways that modified the stability of the foam. The result of these differences is that honey meringue requires more careful management during beating and produces a finished wafer that is slightly denser and slightly less crisp than a comparable sugar meringue, but with a depth of flavor that no sugar meringue can match. For the purposes of the Level 2 festival kitchen, I consider the flavor advantage worth the additional attention the technique requires.

Method:

Prepare the bowl and beater as described above: clean, completely dry, entirely free of fat. Combine the egg whites and cream of tartar in the bowl. Beat, beginning slowly to develop the initial foam structure and then increasing speed gradually as the foam builds, until the whites reach the soft peak stage — opaque, white, with drooping peaks. At this point, begin adding the honey in a thin, continuous stream while beating continuously. This addition must be slow and controlled: adding the honey too quickly will deflate the foam significantly because the weight of the honey overwhelms the foam structure before the proteins have time to incorporate it. Add the honey over the course of two to three minutes of continuous beating, with the beater running throughout.

After all the honey has been incorporated, continue beating at medium-high speed until the foam reaches stiff peaks: the peaks stand upright without drooping, the surface of the foam is glossy, and the foam holds its shape when a small quantity is dropped from the beater onto the surface of the bowl. Honey meringue will take somewhat longer to reach stiff peaks than a sugar meringue, and the baker should be patient: the foam is developing correctly as long as it is visibly increasing in stiffness and maintaining its glossy appearance. If it begins to look dry or grainy, it is overbeaten and must be discarded.

Add the chosen flavoring at the stiff peak stage and fold in gently with two or three strokes of a broad spatula, distributing the flavoring through the foam while deflating it as little as possible.

Preheat the oven to very low — the lowest temperature your oven will maintain reliably, which in a well-calibrated oven should be between one hundred and one hundred twenty degrees on the Bravian temperature scale, or what I would describe as barely warm: you should be able to hold your hand inside the oven without discomfort. This temperature is not a baking temperature in the conventional sense. It is a drying temperature. The meringue wafers are not baked so much as they are dried: the heat is sufficient to set the protein structure around the air bubbles and drive out the moisture in the foam, but not high enough to brown or caramelize the surface.

Line a baking sheet with parchment or a clean dry cloth. Using two spoons or a pastry bag if you have one, portion the foam onto the prepared surface in rounds of approximately an inch and a half in diameter and about three-quarters of an inch in height, leaving a generous space between each. The wafers will spread slightly during drying but will not expand dramatically in the way of a chemically leavened preparation. Alternatively, spread the entire foam in a thin, even sheet on the prepared surface and score it lightly into sections before drying, breaking along the score lines after the drying is complete.

Place in the very low oven and dry for one and a half to two hours, until the wafers are completely dry throughout — one lifted from the baking surface should be completely rigid and light enough to feel almost weightless, and the bottom surface should peel cleanly away from the parchment without sticking. A wafer that sticks to the parchment is not yet dry and needs additional drying time. Do not attempt to speed the process by raising the oven temperature: higher temperature will set the surface of the wafer before the interior has dried, producing a wafer with a crisp shell and a soft, sticky center that will not keep and is unpleasant to eat.

Turn off the oven when the wafers are dry and allow them to cool in the oven with the door slightly ajar. The gradual cooling in the residual warmth of the oven is preferable to rapid cooling at room temperature, because sudden temperature change can cause the thin, dry protein structure of the wafer to crack.

Store in a dry environment in a loosely covered container. These wafers are at their best within two days of making: they remain good for up to three days in a dry environment but are susceptible to moisture absorption in humid conditions, which softens them gradually from the outside in. If the festival season coincides with a particularly damp spring, a brief return to the low oven for thirty minutes will restore the crispness that humidity has removed.

Regional flavoring variations:

Hill country — dried wild thyme and honey: Add a teaspoon of very finely crumbled dried thyme to the foam at the stiff peak stage. The combination of thyme and honey is a genuinely ancient Bravian flavor pairing, and its appearance in a meringue wafer produces a preparation that is simultaneously sweet, floral, and faintly savory — a combination that is startling the first time one encounters it and becomes deeply compelling thereafter. These wafers are served in the hill country tradition alongside aged hard cheese, which provides the salt and fat that complete the flavor combination.

Western coastal — orange and cardamom: Add the finely grated zest of one orange and half a teaspoon of ground cardamom to the foam at the stiff peak stage. This is the flavoring I use in my own bakery and the one I consider the most broadly appealing of the four regional variations, because the citrus lifts the sweetness of the honey and the cardamom provides a warmth and complexity that makes these wafers genuinely interesting over the full seven days of the feast without becoming tiresome.

Interior Amphoe — cinnamon and dried fruit: Add half a teaspoon of ground cinnamon and two tablespoons of very finely minced dried apricot or raisin to the foam at the stiff peak stage. The dried fruit must be minced almost to a paste, as described in the wafer cookie recipe of Chapter 7, because visible pieces of dried fruit in a meringue foam create soft, sticky spots that prevent even drying. The cinnamon and fruit produce a wafer of distinctly warm and autumnal character despite being made in the spring, which I find a pleasing paradox.

Delta settlement — sesame and honey: Press a small quantity of sesame seeds — toasted until golden and cooled completely before use — lightly onto the surface of each portioned mound before placing in the oven. The sesame seeds will adhere to the surface of the drying foam and toast further against the gentle heat of the oven, developing a nutty character that contrasts with the sweetness of the honey meringue in a way that is simple and very effective.

Preparation without cream of tartar: Beat the egg whites without cream of tartar to the soft peak stage, then add the honey in a slow stream as described. The foam without cream of tartar will reach stiff peaks with slightly less volume and will deflate somewhat more quickly after beating is complete. Work efficiently: fold in the flavoring and portion onto the baking surface without delay after the stiff peak stage is reached. Dry in the same manner and for the same duration. The finished wafers will be marginally less crisp and slightly more tender than the cream-of-tartar version, which some tasters prefer.


Recipe 29 — Whipped-Egg Unleavened Sponge Layers

Level: 2 only

A note on this recipe: of all the preparations in this chapter, this is the one I was most reluctant to include in the book, not because it is not good — it is very good, and among the most sophisticated preparations I have developed for the Level 2 festival kitchen — but because it is the preparation that most directly challenges the expectation that Level 2 baking produces flat things. A sponge layer is not flat. It rises in the oven to a height that would look perfectly at home in an ordinary baking-year kitchen and that strikes some observers as incompatible with the unleavened season. I have addressed this concern in the chapter introduction and in Chapter 1, and I will not rehearse the argument again at length here. What I will say is that a thin, flat sponge layer is different from a thick, airy one in both technique and intent, and the preparations I describe below are specifically designed to produce thin layers rather than dramatic height — unleavened sponge in the sense of a preparation whose structure is built from egg foam rather than from chemical leavening, and whose flat or near-flat character is appropriate to the spirit of the season even as its technique belongs unmistakably to the Level 2 repertoire.

The technique for this preparation is the whole-egg foam described in the chapter introduction: whole eggs beaten vigorously with honey over gentle heat until the mixture is pale, thick, and dramatically increased in volume. This technique is the most powerful whole-egg leavening method available at Level 2 and produces a batter of great lightness into which a small quantity of flour is folded to provide structure. The result, baked in a thin layer, is a preparation with a tender, slightly open crumb and a delicate character that is entirely distinct from anything produced by the fat-based or egg-white preparations of this chapter and entirely appropriate for the sweet Level 2 festival table.

Makes two thin sponge layers of approximately ten by fourteen inches, or four smaller layers

Ingredients:

  • 4 eggs, at room temperature
  • ½ cup honey, warmed until very runny — the honey must be warm and fluid when it is added to the eggs, because the initial beating of cold honey with eggs produces a mixture that is difficult to aerate effectively; the warmth of the honey also contributes to the warming of the egg mixture during beating, which is the purpose of the gentle heat described below
  • ½ cup soft wheat flour — a very small quantity relative to the volume of egg foam that will be produced; this is intentional and should not be increased, because the flour in this preparation is providing structure to an existing foam rather than forming the primary matrix of a conventional batter, and too much flour will weigh the foam down and produce a dense, heavy result
  • ¼ teaspoon fine salt
  • 2 tablespoons melted butter or olive oil, added at the very end of the preparation and folded in with great care — the fat contributes tenderness and flavor and prevents the finished sponge from being dry or papery, which is the characteristic fault of an egg-foam preparation that contains no fat; it must be added last and folded with minimum strokes, because the weight of the fat deflates the foam rapidly and any excess handling at this stage undoes the work of the beating

Method:

Prepare a baking pan or sheet — ten by fourteen inches is the standard size for this preparation in my bakery, producing a thin, even layer that can be cut or rolled after baking — by greasing it thoroughly and lining it with parchment pressed flat against the greased surface, then greasing the parchment as well. The double preparation is necessary because an egg-foam sponge adheres more aggressively to baking surfaces than almost any other preparation in this book, and inadequate preparation of the pan is the most common cause of catastrophic loss of a sponge layer at the moment it should be triumphantly turned out.

Set a large heatproof bowl over a saucepan of barely simmering water — the bowl should sit above the water without touching it, because direct contact with simmering water would cook the eggs rather than warming them. Combine the eggs and warmed honey in the bowl and begin beating immediately with a wire whisk or a hand beater. The gentle warmth from the steam below the bowl softens the egg proteins and makes them more susceptible to unfolding under the mechanical action of the beating, which is why the warm-bowl technique produces a larger and more stable foam than cold beating alone. Continue beating over the warm water for six to eight minutes, until the mixture has at least tripled in volume, is pale yellow in color, and falls from the beater in a thick ribbon that holds its shape on the surface of the mixture for three to four seconds before disappearing. This ribbon test is the most reliable indicator of a fully developed whole-egg foam and should be used rather than time alone to determine when to remove the bowl from the heat.

Remove the bowl from over the water and continue beating without heat for two to three minutes more, until the bottom of the bowl has cooled to room temperature and the foam has stabilized. The continued beating after removal from the heat sets the foam structure and prevents it from deflating rapidly as it cools.

Sift the soft wheat flour and salt together over the surface of the foam. Fold in with a broad spatula using large, slow, deliberate strokes that cut through the center of the foam, sweep along the bottom of the bowl, and fold the mixture back over itself from below — the classic fold that preserves air by moving the heavier flour through the foam without compressing the bubbles against the sides of the bowl. Count the strokes: twenty to twenty-five is usually sufficient to incorporate the flour completely. If dry flour is still visible after twenty-five strokes, add three to five more, but do not exceed thirty strokes total under any circumstances. An underfolded preparation with streaks of dry flour is better than an overfolded one with deflated foam.

Drizzle the melted butter or olive oil over the surface of the folded batter and fold in with five to eight strokes — just enough to distribute the fat through the batter without significant deflation. Work quickly, because the fat deflates the foam on contact and the longer it sits on the surface before being incorporated, the more deflation it produces. Pour the finished batter into the prepared pan immediately, spreading gently with the spatula to the edges of the pan without pressing down.

Bake in a moderate oven — not the very low temperature of the meringue wafers, but a true moderate baking temperature that will set the egg protein network before the foam has fully deflated — for twelve to fifteen minutes, until the surface is golden and springs back when touched lightly in the center. The sponge is done when a finger pressed gently on the surface leaves no indentation and the edges have pulled slightly away from the sides of the pan.

Allow to cool in the pan for five minutes, then run a knife around the edges and invert onto a clean cloth. Peel away the parchment immediately while it is still warm, because parchment that is allowed to cool fully against a sponge layer will adhere more firmly and tear the surface when it is eventually removed. The inverted sponge layer should be flat, even, and slightly springy when pressed — not rigid like a cracker, not soft and yielding like a custard, but with the specific slight resilience of a correctly made egg-foam preparation.

On uses for the sponge layer: The thin sponge layer, cut into portions or left whole, can be used in the following ways at the Level 2 festival table, all of which I have served at the Stone Hearth Bakery during the feast season:

As a base for soft preparations: A piece of sponge layer placed on a plate and topped with a soft fresh cheese preparation — lightly sweetened, perhaps, with a small quantity of honey and the zest of a citrus fruit — is an elegant and satisfying sweet festival preparation that requires no further embellishment. The sponge provides a slightly firm, absorbent base for the moist topping, and the combination of the egg-rich sponge and the fresh dairy is straightforwardly good.

Rolled around a filling: The warm sponge layer, while it is still pliable in the first minutes after baking, can be rolled around a filling in the manner of the savory wraps of Chapter 6 — but in this case a sweet filling, such as a honey and fruit preparation or a thick preserve. This rolling must be done immediately while the sponge is warm and flexible, because a fully cooled sponge layer will crack rather than roll. Set a cloth on the bench, invert the warm sponge onto it, apply the filling in a thin, even layer, and use the cloth to assist the rolling, lifting it to encourage the sponge to roll over itself. The rolled preparation should be wrapped in the cloth and allowed to cool in its rolled shape, which it will maintain after the egg proteins have set fully.

Cut into portions as a sweet accompaniment: The sponge layer cut into small squares or rectangles and served alongside the meringue wafers and honey cake on a sweet festival table presents the full range of what the Level 2 egg-based sweet kitchen can produce, and this presentation — three preparations of completely different character made from the same primary ingredient — is one I find genuinely satisfying as a demonstration of what the Level 2 festival kitchen is capable of.


Recipe 30 — Almond-Flour and Egg Preparations

Level: 2 and 3

A note on this recipe: the almond-flour and egg preparation is the oldest of the three preparations in this chapter in terms of its culinary lineage — preparations of ground nuts bound with egg have been made in the Bravian festival kitchen and in other cooking traditions for centuries before any of the other preparations in this chapter were developed — and it is the preparation that most directly bridges the gap between this chapter and the grain-free Level 3 preparations of Chapter 14. It contains no wheat flour or other grain: its structure comes entirely from the combination of finely ground almonds and egg, which together produce a preparation of dense, moist, intensely nutty character that is completely different in texture and flavor from anything made with grain flour and that occupies a distinct and unrepeatable position in the festival kitchen.

The preparation is appropriate at Level 2 in the form described below, which uses lightly beaten whole eggs and, in one variation, egg whites beaten to soft peaks for a somewhat lighter result. It is also appropriate at Level 3 with the modification noted at the close of the recipe: the eggs are added without beating, which produces a denser and more compact preparation that is nonetheless very good and that requires no mechanical technique that exceeds the Level 3 standard. This is one of very few preparations in Part Three that can be adapted to Level 3 observance, and I have noted this specifically because the baker who observes at Level 3 and is looking for a sweet preparation of some sophistication will find in the Level 3 version of this recipe one of the most accomplished preparations available at that level of observance outside of Chapter 14.

Makes one preparation approximately nine by nine inches, serving 12 to 16

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups finely ground blanched almonds — the grinding must be fine enough that the texture of the finished preparation is smooth and cohesive rather than grainy and crumbling; almonds ground in a mortar produce a slightly coarser result than almonds ground in a mill, and the miller’s product, where available through the port-town markets or the Amphoe grange, is preferable for this preparation. The almonds must be blanched — skins removed — because the bitter compounds concentrated in the almond skin produce an off-flavor in a preparation of this simplicity where there is no competing flavor to moderate them
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • ½ cup honey, warmed until runny
  • 4 eggs — at Level 2, these are lightly beaten before incorporation; at Level 3, they are added without beating
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil or melted butter
  • Flavoring, from the variations below

Method:

Combine the ground almonds and salt in a large mixing bowl and stir to distribute. In a separate bowl, whisk the honey and lightly beaten eggs together until the mixture is uniform. Add the olive oil or melted butter and whisk briefly to incorporate.

Pour the egg-honey-fat mixture over the ground almonds and stir with a broad spatula until the batter is completely uniform. The mixture will be considerably wetter than a flour-based batter of comparable apparent thickness: almond flour absorbs liquid more slowly than wheat flour and the batter should be allowed to rest for five minutes after initial mixing, at which point the almonds will have absorbed some of the liquid and the batter will be somewhat thicker and more cohesive than it appeared immediately after mixing.

Grease a nine-by-nine inch baking pan generously with butter or oil and line with parchment. Pour the batter into the prepared pan: it will fill the pan to approximately three-quarters of an inch depth, which is correct. The finished preparation will be a dense, flat slab rather than a risen cake, and the pan should not be filled deeply in anticipation of significant rise, because there will be none beyond the modest expansion that heated egg proteins produce.

Bake in a moderate oven for twenty-two to twenty-eight minutes, until the surface is a deep golden brown and a skewer inserted in the center comes out with moist but not wet crumbs adhering to it. Almond-flour preparations take somewhat longer to set at the center than grain-flour preparations of comparable thickness, because the almond proteins coagulate at different rates from wheat gluten, and the baker should use the skewer test rather than time alone to determine doneness. The surface will be fully set and slightly firm before the center is done, and this difference between surface and center doneness is normal: trust the skewer.

Allow to cool completely in the pan before cutting. The fully cooled preparation will be firm throughout and will cut cleanly into portions without crumbling. Serve in thin slices or small squares — this preparation is rich enough that a modest portion is genuinely satisfying, and it is one of the few preparations in this book that rewards restraint in serving size as strongly as it rewards generosity in preparation.

Regional flavoring variations:

Hill country — honey and dried wild thyme: Add a teaspoon of very finely crumbled dried thyme to the almond-honey-egg mixture before pouring into the pan. The thyme-almond combination is unusual and compelling, and in the hill country tradition this preparation is served alongside a strong aged cheese that makes the combination into something that sits at the boundary between sweet and savory in a way that is distinctly Bravian in character.

Western coastal — orange zest and cardamom: Add the finely grated zest of one large orange and half a teaspoon of ground cardamom to the almond-honey-egg mixture. Orange and almond is among the great natural flavor partnerships in the Bravian culinary tradition, and this preparation in its orange-cardamom version is the one I consider the finest expression of the almond-and-egg preparation in this chapter: the orange brightens the richness of the almond, the cardamom provides warmth and complexity, and the honey binds everything together with a floral sweetness that is entirely appropriate to the festival season.

Interior Amphoe — cinnamon, ginger, and dried fruit: Add half a teaspoon of ground cinnamon, a quarter teaspoon of ground ginger, and three tablespoons of very finely minced dried apricot to the almond mixture. Scatter additional slivered almonds over the surface of the batter before baking. The dried fruit adds a concentrated sweetness and moisture to the preparation that prevents the richness of the almond from becoming heavy, and the slivered almond surface provides a textural contrast between the crisp toasted almonds on top and the dense, moist preparation beneath.

Delta settlement — sesame and honey: Press two tablespoons of sesame seeds, toasted until golden, into the surface of the batter before baking. The sesame and almond combination is one of the newer flavor pairings in the Bravian festival repertoire, brought through the influence of the eastern communities, and it produces a preparation with a depth of nutty character — the different nut-and-seed flavors complementing rather than competing with each other — that is entirely convincing as a festival table preparation.

The lighter Level 2 variation using beaten egg whites: For a somewhat lighter preparation at Level 2, separate three of the four eggs and set the whites aside. Beat the three yolks and one whole egg with the honey until well combined. Prepare the almond base as described above using this yolk mixture. Beat the three egg whites to soft peaks — not stiff peaks, because a preparation as dense as ground almonds cannot support a stiff-peak foam without collapsing it almost entirely during folding — and fold the soft-peak whites into the almond batter in three additions, folding gently with twenty strokes per addition. The resulting batter will be noticeably lighter and more voluminous than the whole-egg version, and the finished preparation will be somewhat less dense and more open in texture. This lighter version is appropriate for the baker who finds the whole-egg preparation too rich for daily festival eating and wants a version with a somewhat less emphatic almond character.

Level 3 adaptation: Add the eggs to the almond mixture without any prior beating — crack them directly into the almond-honey-fat mixture and stir to combine. The batter will be slightly less well-emulsified than the beaten-egg version and may have a slightly rougher texture before baking, but the finished preparation is very similar in character to the Level 2 version and entirely appropriate for Level 3 observance. Bake as described above, with the same temperature, the same timing, and the same doneness test. This is one of the most naturally Level 3-compatible sweet preparations in Part Three of this book and is strongly recommended for the strictly observant household that wants a sweet preparation of genuine sophistication without the mechanical leavening concerns that most of the other preparations in this chapter present.


The Egg-White Kitchen in Perspective

The three preparations in this chapter represent the upper boundary of what the Level 2 kitchen is licensed to do by its own internal logic: mechanical technique applied with full deliberateness to produce lift through the incorporation and stabilization of air in egg-white proteins. They are the preparations that most clearly demonstrate that the Level 2 standard, properly understood, is not a slightly impoverished version of Level 1 but a distinct baking tradition with its own characteristic methods and its own characteristic range of results — results that are not available at Level 1 because they depend on the removal of chemical leavening to make their contribution legible, and not available at Level 3 because they depend on mechanical technique that the stricter standard does not permit.

This distinctiveness is, in my view, the most important thing to understand about Part Three as a whole, and this chapter in particular brings it into focus more clearly than any other. The meringue wafer is not a failed chemically leavened cracker. The sponge layer is not a risen yeasted cake inadequately executed. The almond-flour preparation is not a substitution for something that could be better made by other means. They are what they are: preparations whose existence and character depend on the specific combination of constraints and permissions that define the Level 2 festival kitchen, and that could not exist in quite the same form under any other set of baking conditions.

My student from the port-town family, who made her egg-white wafers with such quiet competence and such complete absence of drama, understood this instinctively. The preparations of the Level 2 festival kitchen were for her simply the preparations of the Level 2 festival kitchen — not a set of restrictions to work around but a tradition to inhabit, and she inhabited it with the ease of someone who has never felt the need to apologize for where she lives.

I have learned to inhabit it the same way. The wafers are on the festival table every year now, next to the honey cake and alongside the almond preparation that has become, in the years since I first made it, one of the preparations I look forward to most during the feast season. They are good things. They belong there. And they are there because the Level 2 kitchen, with its particular combination of constraints and freedoms, is the kind of kitchen that produces them, and no other kind does.

That is enough reason to be glad of the standard.


Part Four: Level 3 Recipes — No Biological, Chemical, or Mechanical Leavening begins on the following page.

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The Bravian Unleavened Kitchen: Chapter 9 — Fat-Based and Layered Doughs

There is a moment in every serious baker’s education when she understands, for the first time, what fat actually is in a dough. Not what it does in the gross functional sense — she knows it makes things tender, she has known that since she was old enough to rub butter into flour — but what it is physically, structurally, in the context of the gluten network that forms when flour meets water, and why its behavior changes so dramatically depending on how it is incorporated, at what temperature, in what quantity, and in what relationship to the liquid and the flour around it.

For most bakers, this understanding comes gradually and somewhat accidentally, assembled from the cumulative observation of many batches of many preparations over many years. For the Level 2 baker working within the specific constraints of this kitchen, it comes more quickly and more urgently, because the Level 2 fat-based preparations demand that the baker understand fat with a precision that the ordinary baking year, with its chemical leavening to compensate for errors and its biological leavening to condition and soften the crumb, does not require. In the Level 2 fat-based kitchen, fat is not one tool among many. It is the primary tool, and its management is the difference between excellent preparation and poor one.

This chapter is built around four categories of fat-based and layered preparation that represent the full range of what fat can accomplish as the primary structural and textural element in a Level 2 unleavened dough. Each category makes different demands on the baker’s understanding of fat and produces a qualitatively different result, and taken together they constitute what I consider the most technically sophisticated section of the Level 2 recipe chapters. Not the most difficult — some of the egg-based preparations of Chapter 8 are more technically demanding in their moment-to-moment execution — but the most technically complete in the sense of requiring the broadest and most integrated understanding of the baker’s primary materials.

We will work through each category in order of increasing complexity: the shortbread-style crackers, which are the simplest expression of cold fat worked into flour; the laminated preparations, which are the most sophisticated expression of the same fundamental technique taken to its layered conclusion; the olive-oil flatbreads, which operate by a completely different mechanism from the cold-fat preparations and require a different understanding entirely; and the twice-baked preparations, which add the dimension of sequential heat management to what would otherwise be a straightforward enriched dough. Each section begins with the principles and ends with the recipes, because in the Level 2 fat-based kitchen, understanding the principles is not separate from executing the recipes but is the precondition for executing them well.


On Fat Temperature and Its Consequences

Before any of the recipes in this chapter can be made well, the baker must understand the most fundamental variable in all fat-based preparation: temperature. Fat temperature at the time of incorporation determines more about the character of the finished product than any other single factor in the formula, and the three primary temperature states — cold solid, warm soft, and hot liquid — produce results so different from one another that they are practically different ingredients despite being the same substance.

Cold solid fat, incorporated into flour by cutting or rubbing before the addition of any liquid, does not distribute evenly through the flour. It remains in discrete pieces of varying sizes — some as large as peas, some as small as sand grains, some at every size between — and these pieces coat the flour particles around them with a thin film of fat while leaving other flour particles uncoated. The result of this uneven distribution is, after baking, a product that is simultaneously short and layered: short in the coated regions where fat has inhibited gluten development and the coated flour particles will separate from each other easily in the mouth, and layered in the regions where distinct pieces of fat have melted during baking, leaving behind thin air pockets between planes of flour-and-water structure. Cold fat incorporated into flour is the foundation of every flaky pastry in the history of baking, and understanding why it produces flakiness — the discrete fat pieces melt and leave behind thin separations, which steam then pushes apart to create distinct layers — is the key to managing the technique deliberately rather than accidentally.

Warm soft fat, at roughly room temperature and spreadable but not runny, distributes more evenly when worked into flour than cold fat does, coating the flour particles more uniformly and leaving fewer discrete pieces. The result after baking is a product that is short — tender and crumbling in the mouth — without the layering that cold fat produces. The shortbread crackers and certain of the twice-baked preparations in this chapter use fat in this state, because uniform shortness rather than layered flakiness is the textural goal.

Hot liquid fat, incorporated into flour either before or simultaneously with the liquid component of the dough, distributes most evenly of all, coating flour particles uniformly and inhibiting gluten development throughout the dough rather than in patches. It also, as I have described at length in earlier chapters, partially gelatinizes the starch in the flour on contact, producing a dough of distinctive character: pliable, slightly glossy, extensible without being elastic, and remarkably forgiving on the bench. Hot liquid fat is the fat of the olive-oil flatbread tradition and of several of the twice-baked preparations in this chapter, and the baker who has worked with cold fat all her life will find the behavior of hot-fat doughs initially surprising and eventually, I think, somewhat addictive in their workability.

These three fat temperature states are not interchangeable within a given recipe. Using cold fat where warm is specified produces flakiness where smoothness is intended; using warm fat where cold is specified loses the layering that defines the preparation. The recipes that follow specify fat temperature with precision, and the baker should treat these specifications as requirements rather than guidelines.


Recipe 24 — Simple Unleavened Shortbread-Style Crackers

Level: 2 and 3

A note on this recipe: the shortbread-style cracker is, in its fundamental structure, the simplest possible expression of what fat does in flour: fat is worked into flour until the flour particles are uniformly coated, a small quantity of liquid is added to bind the mixture into a rollable dough, and the dough is rolled thin and baked until the fat melts and the starches set around it, producing a product whose defining characteristic is its uniform, even tenderness from edge to center. There are no layers. There is no flakiness. There is only the clean, even shortness that comes from flour whose gluten development has been completely and uniformly inhibited by the fat surrounding every particle.

The cracker I am describing is not sweet in the way that the Scottish shortbread from which the name derives is sweet. It is a savory or neutrally flavored preparation that serves the same purpose at the Level 2 festival table that the soda cracker of Recipe 4 serves at the Level 1 table: a stable, crisp base for soft cheese, preserved preparations, and herb-oil accompaniments, and a textural contrast to the softer flatbreads that form the backbone of daily festival eating. It is also, of the preparations in this chapter, the one that most directly continues the historical Bravian tradition of fat-based unleavened cracker production that I described in the historical section of Chapter 3, and several of the regional variations below are drawn directly from historical household recipe books of the pre-chemical-leavening era.

Makes approximately 50 crackers

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups soft wheat flour — soft wheat rather than hard, because the goal here is uniform inhibition of gluten development throughout, and soft wheat’s lower protein content produces less gluten to begin with, which means the fat has less work to do to produce the desired shortness; using hard wheat flour in a shortbread-style cracker produces a product that is less tender and more resistant to the clean snap that defines a well-made cracker of this type
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • ½ cup butter, at cool room temperature — not cold, not warm, but cool room temperature: soft enough to be pressed with a fingertip and leave a clear indentation, firm enough to retain its shape when handled without immediately smearing across the surface. This temperature is critical and worth checking before beginning; butter that is too cold will not distribute evenly enough to produce the uniform shortness required, and butter that is too warm will produce a greasy, spreading dough that bakes to an oily and poorly textured result
  • 3 to 4 tablespoons cold water — the minimum quantity necessary to bring the dough together; this dough should be as lean in liquid as possible, because excess water develops gluten and undermines the shortness the fat is trying to produce

Method:

Combine the soft wheat flour and salt in a mixing bowl. Add the cool room-temperature butter in one piece and work it into the flour using your fingertips in a firm, pressing motion rather than the light rubbing used for cold fat incorporation: press and smear the butter through the flour, working across the bowl, until the mixture is completely uniform and no visible pieces of butter remain. The mixture should look and feel like very fine, slightly damp sand — not crumbly, not sticky, but cohesive when pressed between the fingers. This even distribution of fat is the defining technical requirement of this preparation and distinguishes it from the flaky preparations later in the chapter, where the goal is deliberately uneven fat distribution.

Test the mixture by pressing a small handful firmly together: if it coheres into a mass that holds its shape when the pressure is released, the fat distribution is sufficient and no additional working is needed. If it crumbles apart immediately, press and smear further.

Add three tablespoons of cold water and stir with a broad knife or a flat spatula until the dough just comes together. It will be considerably stiffer than any of the flatbread doughs in previous chapters and will feel almost too dry to work with. If it does not cohere, add the fourth tablespoon of water carefully. Do not add more than four tablespoons: a dough that requires more liquid than this to cohere has either been insufficiently worked in the fat-incorporation stage — the fat has not fully coated the flour particles and the flour is therefore absorbing liquid rapidly — or has been measured with too much flour. Identify the source of the problem rather than adding more water, which will begin to develop gluten and change the character of the finished cracker.

Form the dough into a flat disc, wrap in cloth, and rest at cool room temperature for twenty minutes. The rest period is brief relative to other preparations in this book because this dough requires minimal gluten relaxation — there is very little gluten to relax — but it does need time for the moisture to distribute evenly through the flour-fat matrix and for the butter to firm slightly after the warmth of the working.

Preheat the oven to moderately hot, with a baking stone or heavy sheet inside.

Divide the rested dough into three portions. Working with one portion at a time and keeping the remainder wrapped, roll on a very lightly floured bench to the thinnest achievable even sheet. The shortbread cracker dough rolls differently from the flatbread doughs of earlier chapters: it is short and cohesive rather than elastic, which means it does not spring back when rolled but also does not have the extensibility of a gluten-developed dough. It will roll to an even sheet of good thinness — not quite the near-translucency of the best Level 3 matzah preparations, but thin enough that the color of the bench surface is visible through the dough when held at an angle to the light — and it will reach this thinness with less effort and less resistance than a gluten-developed dough of comparable hydration.

Cut into rectangles or rounds of the desired size. Transfer to the preheated baking surface — the shortbread cracker dough is less fragile than the thin wafer of Recipe 13 and can be lifted by hand with some care, though a broad spatula is still useful for the thinner pieces.

Prick each cracker once or twice with a fork — fewer perforations than the hard tack of Recipe 5, because this dough does not generate the vigorous steam of a higher-hydration preparation and does not need extensive docking to control blistering. Scatter the surface treatment of your choice from the options below, or leave plain.

Bake for ten to fourteen minutes, watching from the nine-minute mark, until the crackers are a pale, even golden color across their entire surface. Shortbread-style crackers brown more slowly and more uniformly than the spotty browning of the high-heat Level 3 flatbreads, because the fat surrounding each flour particle mediates the rate of browning: rather than the rapid, direct contact browning of a lean dough on a very hot surface, the fat promotes a slower, more even development of color. The correctly finished cracker is pale golden throughout with slightly deeper color at the edges, and is completely rigid and dry when lifted from the baking surface. It will crisp further as it cools.

Transfer to a rack and cool completely. The finished crackers should snap cleanly when broken and have a texture that dissolves evenly in the mouth without any resistant or chewy quality. A chewiness in the finished cracker indicates either too much water in the dough — excess gluten development — or insufficient fat incorporation, and either error should be noted for correction in the next batch.

Store in a dry, loosely covered container. These keep well for four to five days and maintain their crispness reliably in a dry environment.

Regional surface treatments:

Hill country — coarse salt and dried thyme: Scatter a pinch of coarse salt and a small quantity of crumbled dried thyme over the surface of each cracker before baking, pressing very gently with the palm to encourage adhesion. The thyme will toast against the hot surface during baking and develop a caramelized, intensely fragrant quality that is characteristic of hill country unleavened preparations generally.

Port town — sesame and fine black pepper: Scatter sesame seeds and a pinch of finely ground black pepper over the surface before baking. The sesame toasts to a deep golden color against the pale surface of the cracker and contributes a nutty richness that pairs well with the soft fresh cheeses and preserved fish preparations of the coastal festival table.

Interior Amphoe — caraway and onion: Work a teaspoon of caraway seed and a tablespoon of very finely dried and ground onion flake into the flour mixture before the fat is incorporated, distributing them evenly through the flour before the fat is added. These interior flavors penetrate the cracker more completely than surface treatments do, because they are incorporated before the fat and are therefore present throughout the crumb rather than only on the surface.

Delta settlement — coriander and sesame: Scatter lightly crushed coriander seed and a small quantity of sesame over the surface before baking. This combination reflects the developing flavoring tradition of the eastern communities described in Chapter 5 and produces a cracker with a warm, slightly citrus-edged character that is becoming increasingly familiar at festival tables throughout the Delta region.

Level 3 note: This preparation is appropriate at Level 3 without modification, because the fat incorporation technique — pressing and smearing at room temperature — does not constitute mechanical leavening. The fat is being distributed for the purpose of gluten inhibition and shortness, not for the purpose of air incorporation, and the technique used does not introduce meaningful quantities of air into the mixture. This is one of the clearest cases in the Level 2 recipe chapters where Level 3 applicability is unambiguous, and the cracker produced at Level 3 using this recipe is identical in character to the Level 2 version.


Recipe 25 — Unleavened Laminated Dough: The Basic Preparation

Level: 2

A note on this recipe: laminated dough is the most technically sophisticated preparation in this chapter and the one that most clearly demonstrates what the Level 2 kitchen can achieve through fat and technique alone, without any biological or chemical leavening of any kind. The lamination technique — the folding of cold fat into a developed dough in a series of repeated folds that create thin, alternating layers of fat and dough — produces a preparation that separates in the oven into distinct, tender layers not because any gas has been produced to push them apart, but because the thin films of fat between the dough layers prevent adhesion, and the steam generated by the water content of both the fat and the dough vaporizes rapidly against the intense oven heat and forces those non-adhering layers apart. The result, in the hands of a baker who has managed the fat temperature and the folding correctly, is a preparation with a layered, flaky, almost architectural quality that is genuinely remarkable for a product that contains no leavening of any kind.

I described in Chapter 3 the theological question around lamination at the boundary of Level 2 and Level 3, and I noted the majority position — that lamination is available at Level 2 because its mechanism is steam rather than trapped air — without prejudice to the minority view. This recipe is written for the Level 2 baker who operates under the majority position. The baker who holds the minority position on lamination should proceed to Recipe 26, the olive-oil flatbread, which achieves its character by a completely different mechanism and presents no lamination-related concerns at any level.

The laminated preparation I describe below is not the full-laminated puff pastry of the professional kitchen, which requires many more folds and a much more precisely managed fat-to-dough ratio than is practical in a home kitchen, particularly during the festival season when the baker has many other preparations to attend to. It is a simplified lamination — three to four folds rather than the six or more of a professional preparation — that produces a product with genuine layers and genuine flakiness without the extended time commitment or the technical precision that a full lamination requires. It is the lamination of the Bravian home kitchen rather than the professional pastry kitchen, and it is very good.

Produces dough sufficient for 12 to 16 individual preparations, depending on size


For the base dough:

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups hard wheat flour — hard wheat is essential for laminated preparations because the gluten network must be sufficiently developed to hold the thin layers of dough together during folding and rolling without tearing; soft wheat flour lacks the structural capacity for this and will tear during the folding process
  • ½ cup soft wheat flour — a proportion of soft wheat is included to moderate the toughness that a pure hard wheat laminated dough can develop, because gluten that is too strong will resist the rolling between folds and require extended rest periods to relax before each fold
  • ¾ teaspoon fine salt
  • 2 tablespoons cold butter, cut into small pieces — this small quantity of fat in the base dough is not lamination fat; it is incorporated into the flour before the water is added by the rubbing method and serves to produce a base dough of moderate tenderness that will provide a pleasant texture in the thicker, less-layered portions of the finished preparation
  • ½ cup cold water, approximately — begin with slightly less and add carefully

Method for the base dough:

Combine the hard wheat flour, soft wheat flour, and salt in a mixing bowl. Work in the two tablespoons of cold butter by the rubbing method until the mixture resembles coarse sand with no visible butter pieces. Add the cold water and bring the dough together into a firm, smooth ball, adding water carefully until the dough is properly hydrated — firm, not sticky, not dry. Knead on a lightly floured bench for five to six minutes until the gluten is well developed and the dough is smooth and somewhat elastic. This is more kneading than most of the doughs in this book require, because the gluten must be developed to a reasonable degree before lamination begins: underdeveloped gluten tears during folding, while well-developed gluten stretches.

Form into a flat rectangle — not a ball — approximately six inches by four inches, wrap in cloth, and rest in a cool place or the cold room for thirty minutes. The resting relaxes the gluten that the kneading developed and makes the first roll easier; it also ensures that the base dough and the lamination fat are at similar temperatures when they meet, which is essential for successful lamination.


For the lamination fat:

Ingredients:

  • ¾ cup cold butter — this is the lamination fat, and its temperature management is the most critical technical variable in the entire preparation. The butter must be cold enough to remain solid and discrete from the dough during rolling — if it melts into the dough, the layers collapse and the preparation becomes simply a fat-enriched dough without layering — but pliable enough to roll and fold without shattering into sharp, crumbling pieces that tear through the thin dough layers. The ideal temperature is what I would describe as plastic: the butter should bend rather than snap when flexed, and should hold an indentation when pressed with a finger without immediately spreading or smearing. In the cool-room conditions of a Bravian spring kitchen, this temperature is usually achieved by allowing the butter to sit at room temperature for fifteen to twenty minutes after coming from the cold room. In a warmer kitchen, the butter may need to be kept colder and worked more quickly.

Method for the lamination fat:

Place the cold butter between two pieces of clean cloth and beat it with a rolling pin into a flat rectangle approximately five inches by four inches and of even thickness throughout. This beating accomplishes two things: it shapes the butter into the flat slab required for the first incorporation, and it develops the plasticity of the butter — the beating aligns the fat crystals in a way that makes the butter more pliable and more cooperative during rolling without warming it to the point of softening. The shaped butter slab should be cold and plastic when you are ready to incorporate it into the base dough. If it has warmed and softened during the shaping process, return it to the cold room for ten minutes before proceeding.


Lamination method:

Remove the rested base dough from its cloth and roll on a lightly floured bench into a rectangle that is twice the size of the butter slab — approximately ten inches by eight inches. Place the butter slab in the center of the dough rectangle, oriented with its longer dimension parallel to the longer dimension of the dough. Fold the dough over the butter from both sides, as if folding a letter: bring one short end of the dough over the butter to the center, then bring the other short end over it, completely enclosing the butter within the dough. Press the edges firmly to seal the butter inside.

Now roll the enclosed package gently in the direction of the fold — pushing the rolling pin away from you along the length of the package, with moderate pressure — until the package is approximately three times its current length and approximately a quarter of an inch thick. Roll deliberately and without excessive force: too much pressure at this stage can push the butter through the thin dough layers, which is the primary failure mode of lamination and produces a greasy, uneven product. If butter begins to show through the surface of the dough at any point during rolling, stop immediately and place the package in the cold room for fifteen minutes before continuing; the butter has warmed too much and needs to firm before it can be worked further.

Fold the rolled rectangle into thirds — again, as a letter: the bottom third up, the top third down over it. This is the first fold, and it has produced three layers of dough with two layers of fat between them. Wrap the folded package and rest in the cold room for twenty minutes.

Remove from the cold room, orient the package so that the fold opening faces to the right, and roll again in the same direction to three times the length. Fold in thirds again. Rest in the cold room for twenty minutes. This is the second fold and has produced nine layers of dough with eight layers of fat.

Repeat the roll-and-fold sequence one more time — a third fold — producing twenty-seven layers of dough with twenty-six layers of fat. Rest in the cold room for twenty minutes after the third fold before the dough is ready for its final roll and shaping.

After the third rest, remove from the cold room and roll to the thickness appropriate for the intended preparation. For preparations intended to be eaten as an accompaniment to soups and stews — cut into rectangles or rounds and baked plain — roll to approximately an eighth of an inch, which will produce a preparation with visible, distinct layers and a satisfying flaky snap when broken. For preparations intended to be filled or topped, roll to a quarter of an inch to provide more structural integrity.

Cut the rolled dough into the desired shapes. Place on a preheated heavy baking sheet or stone. Do not use parchment for laminated preparations, because parchment creates a slightly humid environment at the base of the dough that prevents the bottom layers from crisping properly; the direct contact of dough on hot metal or stone is important for the development of bottom-layer crispness.

Bake in a very hot oven — as hot as the oven will achieve — for twelve to sixteen minutes, until the preparations are deeply golden across their entire surface and the layers are visibly separated at the edges. The layers should be distinct and well-separated when a preparation is broken in half: this is the clearest indicator of successful lamination. If the layers are fused rather than distinct, the butter warmed too much during rolling and merged with the dough rather than remaining separate from it.

Uses for the laminated preparation: The plain baked laminated preparation is excellent as an accompaniment to the soups, stews, and spreads of Part Five, where its flaky, buttery character provides a richness and a textural contrast that the plainer Level 3 flatbreads cannot match. It is also a good base for the open-faced preparations described at the close of Chapter 6, where the laminated crispness carries soft toppings more elegantly than a plain flatbread does. For filled preparations — a laminated pastry shell around a festival-appropriate filling — follow the hand pie method of Chapter 6, using the laminated dough in place of the standard pastry shell dough and reducing the oven temperature very slightly to allow the interior to heat through before the laminated exterior has fully set.

On working in warm weather: The festival season falls in spring, and the kitchen temperature in most Bravian regions at this time of year is compatible with laminated preparations. The baker who attempts laminated preparations in the warmer months, or who works in a kitchen that is unusually warm for the season, will find that the resting periods between folds must be extended and the cold room must be used more aggressively to keep the butter plastic rather than soft. In temperatures above what I would describe as a warm spring day, laminated preparations become very difficult to manage without a purpose-built cold space, and the baker may be better served by one of the other preparations in this chapter.


Recipe 26 — Olive-Oil Unleavened Flatbreads of the Southern Coastal Tradition

Level: 2 and 3

A note on this recipe: the olive-oil flatbread of the southern coastal regions and the port towns is, of all the preparations in this chapter, the one that operates most differently from the cold-fat preparations of Recipes 24 and 25. Where those preparations depend on the discrete presence of solid fat pieces in or between layers of gluten network for their characteristic textural qualities, this preparation depends on the even distribution of liquid fat through a fully hydrated dough — a distribution so complete and so uniform that the olive oil and the water and the flour are essentially a single continuous phase rather than distinct components, and the character of the finished preparation comes not from the layering or shortening of gluten but from the lubrication of gluten strands by the oil that surrounds them throughout the dough.

This is an old preparation. It predates the cold-fat laminated traditions of the hill country and the interior Amphoe communities and probably predates the butter-based shortbread cracker tradition as well, because olive oil is the oldest recorded fat in the Bravian culinary tradition and its use in unleavened bread is documented in the earliest Bravian household records that have survived. The recipe I present here is developed from those historical preparations, modernized only in the specificity of its measurements and technique; the fundamental formula — olive oil, flour, water, salt — has not changed in any meaningful way from what was being made in the port-town kitchens of Bravia’s earliest years.

This preparation is appropriate at both Level 2 and Level 3 without modification, because liquid fat incorporated by simple mixing — as opposed to the creaming or whipping of fat with air — does not constitute mechanical leavening at either level. It is the most straightforwardly Level 3-compatible of the preparations in this chapter, and it is the preparation I would recommend to the baker who is working at the boundary between Level 2 and Level 3 and wants a fat-enriched preparation that presents no concerns at the strictest standard.

Makes 10 flatbreads

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups hard wheat flour
  • ½ cup soft wheat flour
  • ¾ teaspoon fine salt
  • 5 tablespoons good olive oil — the quality of the olive oil matters more in this preparation than in any other recipe in this book, because it is a primary flavor rather than a background contributor; a fruity, well-flavored oil from a good pressing will produce a flatbread of considerable depth and character, while a thin, flavorless oil will produce a preparation that is texturally correct but flavorless. Use the best olive oil available to you, and if you can obtain a cold-pressed oil from the port-town markets rather than the heat-processed oil of wider commercial distribution, do so.
  • ½ cup water, heated until steaming — hot water rather than cold, for the reasons of starch gelatinization and dough extensibility described at length in earlier chapters; the combination of hot water and olive oil in this preparation produces a dough of remarkable pliability that is among the easiest to roll in this entire book

Method:

Combine the flours and salt in a mixing bowl. Combine the olive oil and hot water in a separate small bowl and stir briefly — they will not fully combine, because oil and water do not emulsify without an emulsifying agent, but brief stirring will distribute the oil in droplets through the water sufficiently for even incorporation into the flour.

Pour the hot oil-and-water mixture into the flour and salt in a steady stream, stirring as you pour. The dough will come together quickly and with notable ease — more quickly and with less effort than water-only or butter-enriched doughs of comparable formulation, because the olive oil coats the flour proteins immediately and comprehensively, which both inhibits gluten development and lubricates the forming dough to produce a smooth, workable consistency within seconds of the liquid meeting the flour.

Turn onto a lightly floured bench while still warm and knead gently for two to three minutes. The dough will be smooth, slightly glossy from the oil, and noticeably supple: it will move and stretch under the hands in a way that is more reminiscent of clay than of conventional bread dough, yielding under pressure without resistance and returning slowly to its original state rather than snapping back. This distinctive handling character is one of the pleasures of working with an oil-enriched dough and one of the reasons that experienced bakers in the olive-oil tradition tend to find the transition to other dough types slightly frustrating after working with this preparation.

Cover and rest for twenty-five minutes. The olive-oil dough benefits from a somewhat longer rest than the water-only preparations of Chapter 11, because the oil needs time to distribute fully and evenly through the dough and the gelatinized starch needs time to set into the extensible network that makes this dough so workable.

Divide into ten portions. Roll each on a lightly floured bench — very little flour is needed, because the oil makes the dough naturally non-sticky against a clean surface — to a round of approximately nine inches in diameter. The oil-enriched dough rolls to this size with almost no resistance: it is the most extensible of all the doughs in this chapter and will reach the correct thinness with a fraction of the effort required by the water-only Level 3 preparations of Chapter 11.

Bake on a preheated griddle or stone at high heat for sixty to seventy-five seconds per side. The olive oil promotes faster surface browning than the water-only matzah preparations of Chapter 11, and the baker should watch the color from the forty-five second mark: the correct final color is a warm, deep golden brown with slightly more even distribution of color than the water-only preparations because the oil conducts heat more evenly across the surface. The preparation should be rigid when fully baked but marginally less brittle than a water-only preparation, retaining a slight degree of pliability from the oil content that makes it more forgiving of the cooling process and more useful as a wrap if it is consumed while still warm.

Surface treatments for the olive-oil flatbread: The oil-enriched surface of this preparation is notably better suited to surface treatments than the water-only preparations of Chapter 11, because the oil provides a natural adhesive for seeds, herbs, and salt crystals without the need for an additional oil wash. All of the surface treatments described in the surface treatment framework of Chapter 11 are appropriate here and work particularly well, because the oil already present in the dough produces a surface that toasts and develops flavor in the oven in a way that a lean dough does not.

The most characteristic surface treatment for this preparation in the Western Reaches port-town tradition is a scatter of coarse sea salt and cracked black pepper applied immediately after the flatbread comes off the griddle while the surface is still hot and the oil is still active: the salt dissolves slightly against the hot oiled surface and the pepper releases its aromatic oils into the warm fat, producing an effect that is impossible to achieve with the same ingredients applied before baking. This is the preparation that my grandfather apparently ate every morning of the feast season with strong tea and nothing else, and while I am not in a position to vouch for his tea, I will vouch for the bread.

On the use of other oils: The olive-oil specification in this recipe is a preference rather than an absolute requirement, and the baker whose pantry or regional tradition does not center on olive oil can substitute another liquid fat with good results. Rendered lamb fat that has been melted to a liquid and cooled slightly will produce a richer, more savory flatbread with a depth of fat flavor that pairs extremely well with the meat-based preparations of Part Five. Rendered beef tallow produces a more neutral fat character. Good quality nut oils — walnut oil is available in some of the interior markets, and almond oil appears in certain port-town preparations — produce interesting and complex results but are too expensive for everyday festival production and are better reserved for preparations where the oil’s character can be fully appreciated. Whatever oil or liquid fat is used, the technique is identical and the results will reflect the character of the fat chosen.


Recipe 27 — Hard Twice-Baked Biscotti-Style Slices

Level: 2 and 3

A note on this recipe: the twice-baked preparation is one of the oldest techniques in the Bravian unleavened baking tradition, predating not only chemical leavening but, in some of the oldest documented forms of the preparation, written recipe records of any kind. The principle is simple and has been known since the earliest days of baking: a dough that is baked once and then sliced and baked again at lower temperature will dry out more completely than any single baking can achieve, producing a preparation of almost indefinite keeping quality whose texture is hard, dry, and resistant to moisture — simultaneously the most austere and the most practical result achievable from flour, fat, and heat.

The preparation I describe here is adapted from the hill country household tradition of hard twice-baked slices that were made in large quantities in the days before the feast season, stored in the pantry, and eaten throughout the seven days alongside softer fresh preparations. They are not elegant food and they do not pretend to be: they are functional, reliable, and considerably more pleasant to eat than that description makes them sound, because the twice-baking process develops the grain’s natural flavors through repeated exposure to dry heat in a way that a single baking does not, and the fat content of the dough provides a background richness that keeps the finished product from being merely austere.

This preparation is appropriate at both Level 2 and Level 3. The Level 2 version includes an egg as a binder and enricher; the Level 3 version omits the egg or adds it without beating, which produces a marginally firmer and less rich but equally good preparation appropriate for the strictest standard.

Makes approximately 30 slices

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups hard wheat flour — hard wheat is essential because the structure of the twice-baked preparation must survive not only the first baking but the slicing and the second baking, and soft wheat flour does not have the structural capacity to hold a clean slice without crumbling
  • ½ cup spelt flour — included for flavor complexity; the nutty character of spelt develops particularly well in the twice-baked process where the extended heat exposure has more time to work on the grain’s natural flavor compounds than a single baking would allow
  • ¾ teaspoon fine salt
  • 1 teaspoon honey — a small quantity, sufficient to promote surface browning during the second baking and to provide a mild background sweetness that is perceptible without making the preparation sweet in any pronounced sense
  • 5 tablespoons olive oil or melted butter — olive oil produces a preparation more appropriate for savory pairings; butter produces a slightly richer and more neutral preparation appropriate for either savory or sweet accompaniment
  • 1 egg, lightly beaten — Level 2; omit entirely for a strict Level 3 preparation, or add unbeaten for a Level 3 preparation with the egg’s structural contribution preserved
  • 4 to 6 tablespoons warm water, as needed

Additions for regional flavor variations: Choose one of the following, or leave plain:

  • Hill country: 1 teaspoon whole caraway seed and 1 teaspoon dried thyme, incorporated into the dry flour mixture before the fat is added
  • Port town: 2 tablespoons sesame seed, toasted, and ½ teaspoon coarse black pepper
  • Interior Amphoe: 1 tablespoon dried onion flake, crumbled finely, and 1 teaspoon dried rosemary
  • Sweet festival variation: 2 tablespoons honey replacing the single teaspoon in the base formula, 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon, ¼ teaspoon ground cardamom, and 3 tablespoons of very finely minced dried fruit incorporated into the flour before the fat is added

Method:

Preheat the oven to moderate. Grease a loaf pan or a rectangular baking form of approximately eight by four inches.

Combine the hard wheat flour, spelt flour, salt, and any chosen additions in a mixing bowl and stir to distribute. Combine the honey, olive oil or melted butter, and the lightly beaten egg in a small bowl and stir until uniform. Add this fat-egg mixture to the flour and work in by hand until the flour is evenly coated. Add warm water two tablespoons at a time until the dough coheres into a firm, slightly stiff mass that holds its shape when pressed. It should not be soft or slack: this dough must be stiff enough to hold the shape of the loaf form through the first baking and to slice cleanly after cooling.

Transfer the dough to the prepared loaf pan and press it firmly and evenly into the form, ensuring no air pockets and a flat, level surface. The dough will fill the pan to approximately half its depth.

First baking: Bake in the moderate oven for twenty-five to thirty minutes, until the preparation is set throughout — a skewer inserted in the center should come out clean and dry — and the surface is a pale, uniform golden color. Remove from the oven and allow to cool completely in the pan before proceeding. This is not negotiable: a hot or even warm preparation will crumble when sliced, and the complete cooling of the first-baked loaf is the technical precondition for the clean slicing that makes the twice-baked preparation possible. Allow at least one hour of cooling at room temperature, or up to overnight.

When the first-baked preparation is completely cool, remove from the pan and place on a cutting board. Using a sharp, thin-bladed knife, cut the loaf into slices of approximately three-eighths of an inch thickness — thin enough to dry completely in the second baking without requiring an excessive baking time, thick enough to maintain their structural integrity during the second baking and during subsequent handling. Cut with a firm, decisive stroke rather than a sawing motion: sawing will crumble the edges of a preparation of this dryness and produce uneven slices. If the slices crumble despite decisive cutting, the first baking was insufficient and the interior of the loaf was not fully set; the remedy is to return the unsliced loaf to the oven for an additional ten minutes before attempting to slice again.

Second baking: Reduce the oven to low. Arrange the slices in a single layer on an ungreased baking sheet, with the cut surfaces facing up. Bake for twenty to twenty-five minutes, then turn each slice over and bake for an additional twenty to twenty-five minutes. The slices are done when they are completely dry throughout — pressing the center of a slice should reveal no softness or give — and have developed a deeper golden color than the first-baked preparation, with slightly darker color at the edges and a surface that is visibly drier and more matte in finish than the sliced surface was before the second baking.

Transfer to a rack and cool completely. The finished twice-baked slices should be thoroughly and uniformly hard and dry, with a texture that requires real effort to bite through and that softens and yields pleasantly once initial contact has been made. They are excellent dry, eaten as a cracker accompaniment to the soups, stews, and spreads of Part Five, and they are equally excellent briefly moistened in warm broth or dipped in olive oil, which softens them slightly and amplifies the grain and fat flavors that the twice-baking has developed.

Store in a dry, loosely covered container or a cloth-lined provision box. Properly dried and stored, these keep for two to three weeks without significant deterioration, making them by far the best-keeping sweet or savory preparation in this book and the most useful for households that wish to prepare for the full seven days of the feast in advance.

A note on the sweet festival variation: The sweet variation, made with additional honey and warm spices, produces a preparation that occupies a genuinely different position at the festival table from the savory versions: it is a sweet, spiced cracker of considerable depth that is excellent alongside the honey cake of Recipe 11 and the fruit-filled pastry rounds of Recipe 12, and that holds up to a spread of soft fresh cheese and preserved fruit in a way that nothing else in this chapter quite matches. I make this variation in large quantities in the days before the feast season and store it throughout the seven days as a reliable sweet accompaniment that requires no baking during the feast week itself — a practical advantage that the baker who is managing a full festival kitchen will appreciate more than I can adequately convey in the space available here.


The Fat-Based Kitchen in Perspective

The four preparations in this chapter span a range of technique and character that I think represents the full scope of what fat can accomplish as the primary element of an unleavened Level 2 preparation. They move from the uniform shortness of the cold-butter cracker through the dramatic layering of the laminated preparation, from the silky extensibility of the olive-oil flatbread to the austere reliability of the twice-baked slice, and each of them achieves its character through a different relationship between fat and flour and heat.

What they share is the demand for understanding. The baker who attempts the laminated preparation without understanding why the fat must remain cold will produce a greasy, unstructured mess rather than distinct layers. The baker who attempts the olive-oil flatbread with butter at room temperature rather than liquid oil will produce a dough whose handling characteristics are entirely different from what the recipe intends. The baker who removes the twice-baked slices from the oven before the second baking has completed will produce a preparation that softens within a day and fails at its primary purpose of keeping well.

In each case, the failure is not of the recipe but of the understanding, and the remedy is the same: to know why each specification exists before the hands begin the work, and to bring that knowledge to the bench alongside the flour and the fat and the heat. This is the demand the Level 2 kitchen makes consistently, and it is a demand that the baker who meets it will find has made her not only a better Level 2 baker but a better baker in every context and every season.

My mother would have said something simpler. She would have said: know your fat. It was, in the end, the same advice.


Chapter 10: Egg-White and Beaten Preparations begins on the following page.

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