March 14, 2007
Buttermilk Apple Bread
Ingredients:
1 cup whole wheat flour
2 cups flour
1 1/2 cups buttermilk
3/4 cup cubed apple*
3 tablespoons light brown sugar
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon allspice
1 egg
Directions:
Preheat oven to 350. Grease and flour one standard loaf pan. In a large bowl, whisk together the flours, brown sugar, salt, allspice, cinnamon, ginger and baking soda. Then mix in the egg, buttermilk, and oil. Stir until a thick batter forms. Fold in the apple. Pour into the prepared pan and bake about 30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out almost clean.
*I used Cripps Pink apples, if you are using a tart apple like a Granny Smith, you might want to add a little more sugar.


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17 Comments:
I made this recipe today, and while the texture and moistness of the bread were good, it wasn't quite as apple-y, sweet, or spicy as I had hoped for. I used 1 Granny Smith apple, put in one more tablespoon of brown sugar, to negate the possible tartness. Everything else was as per the recipe though. I think next time I will use a full teaspoon of the cinnamon, allspice, and ground ginger. Still, it's very good with some butter/margarine, and a sprinkle of cinnamon sugar. I also think it would be good with apple butter and cinnamon sugar.
Ellie: It is a fairly dense crumb.
i recently used real buttermilk for the first time instead of the alternate method like rachel. boy, the real stuff is good! great looking bread rachel.
Susan: Cripps Pink are a variety of pink apple. In fact, I think it is just the more old fashioned name for the "pink lady" or a very close relation.
Oh my! What a wonderful looking apple bread - yum!
I have tried the substitute, and while it is okay for baking, I find that you really need the real thing for something like the blueberry-buttermilk sherbet where a lot of the flavor comes from the buttermilk or in uncooked foods like the blue cheese dressing.
Woah, that looks like it'd make great french toast. What's the texture of the bread like?
FYI: You can freeze buttermilk for up to 3 months. But it's only good for cooking and baking...
Actually, 1 Granny Smith apple cubed came out to about 1 cup of apple. The bread came out nice and full of apples like the loaf in your picture. Maybe I'll try a different apple variety next time. Thanks for your help and suggestions! :)
That looks fabulous!
And ditto on using BM past its date. I do that, too. Until a certain point ... it's easy to tell when it goes "bad".
And I mostly buy it for one thing: cornbread! (And pancakes, of course.)
Buttermilk is generally good way past its posted expiration date. I have successfully used it in baking up to a month after its date.
What a great chunky looking bread.
Have you ever tried the substitute for buttermilk with 1 cup milk and 1 Tbs lemon juice or 1 cup milk and 1 tbs white vinegar? I was constantly tossing buttermilk out and then I found this sub... it works just like the real thing.
Another "Go For It" on expired buttermilk. I think you have pancakes in your future ...
My mom only uses buttermilk after it gets past its expiration date to make her coffee cake. I suppose it doesn't make a difference, but she thinks it does and why ruin it for her? Point being that it ain't bad past the date.
I smiled when you said you still had leftover buttermilk. I never can finish it when I buy it either! I agree that it's great for baking; and I love it in salad dressings.
What are these Cripps apples? I've never heard of them. Are they like Pink Ladies, which are tart? I can't wait to try this bread; it looks so chewy and delicious.
Nicole, my guess is that you didn't use enough apple! My bread had apple in very bite! It also was supposed to be a mild bread, not spicy at all, to let the buttermilk/apple flavors shine through. If you want a spice bread, adding extra spices makes perfect sense!
so funny, i've been thinking of making apple cake too! some apples i bought last week aren't that great for eating, so i'm sure they'd be wonderful for baking instead. yum!
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