Post by Chris in NM on Nov 28, 2009 8:14:52 GMT -6
Royal Lunch Cracker ingredients:
Enriched Wheat Flour (contains niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate (vitamin B1), Riboflavin (vitaming B2)
Vegetable Shortening (partially hydrogenated canola oil)
Sugar
Malted milk (adds a trivial amount of cholestrol) I have no idea whether this is a liquid or a powder.
Leavening (calcium phosphate, baking soda)
Salt
Egg yolks (adds a trivial amount of cholesterol)
There you have it. Good luck. Here's the recipe for Common Crackers:
Common Crackers
4 cups all-purpose flour
2 TBSP sugar
1 tsp salt
1/4 cup butter
1 cup milk, plus extra milk to brush on crackers. (If you use cream, you'll need to add more liquid until the mixture is sticky)
First guess.
I'll be trying this out as soon as I buy some malted milk powder
and adjusting as I go along to get the correct consistency for cutting out biscuits:
4 cups bread flour
1 TBSP Sugar
pinch Salt
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp baking powder
1/4 cup Crisco shortening
1 egg yolk
1 tsp malt powder*
Enough milk to make dough. Okay, so the RLMC box doesn't list milk or water. But some liquid is needed as egg yolks aren't enough.
Sift together flour, sugar, salt, baking soda and baking powder. Cut in shortening until mixture has the consistency of corn meal. Beat in egg yolk. Stir in enough malted milk to make a stiff dough. Roll 1/4 inch think on a lightly floured board. Cut into 3 inch rounds. Prick surface with a fork. Brush surface with milk. Place on an ungreased backing sheet and bake in a 425 degree oven for 15-18 min. or until light golden brown. Store in an airtight container.
*A little research on the internet has discovered two forms of malted milk powder. Non-diastatic malt is for flavoring. Like for malted milk balls and malted milk shakes. The other, diastatic malt, has enzymes that turn starch to sugar. They give bread a finer texture and longer shelf life and some sweetness. Bakers use diastatic malt for bread to help with leavening. It also gives bread a crustier crust. Guess which one I think is in this recipe? That's right, the diastatic stuff I.E. with the enzymes. But I'm not sure. So I'll have to try it both ways. BTW you can get diastatic malt all sorts of places. Even eBay. But try your health food store first. Who needs a pound of the stuff. 1 tsp per loaf. So about 1 tsp for this recipe *if* this is the stuff. Another reason I think it's the diastatic stuff? The non-diastatic makes the crust shiny. If you've seen a milk cracker, it's quite dull. Very matte finish.
You can make your own diastatic malt: sprout a cup of wheat berries by covering them with water in a jar for 12 or so hours, dump out the water & rinse with clean water, and place the jar in a darkish, warmish, place. Rinse the berries every day with clean water and return to their place.
In 2-3 days they will begin to sprout. When the sprout is as long as the berries themselves, dump them out on paper towels, dry them off, and set on a cookie sheet in the sun for a day or so to dry out. Then put the cookiesheet in a 100F oven for an hour or three. Do not let the temp get above 130F or the enzymes will be destroyed.
Then grind the dried malted berries into flour, and use it in your favorite recipe at a rate of approx. 1tsp. per loaf. www.laiuppa.com/mary/recipes/milkcrackers.html
Enriched Wheat Flour (contains niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate (vitamin B1), Riboflavin (vitaming B2)
Vegetable Shortening (partially hydrogenated canola oil)
Sugar
Malted milk (adds a trivial amount of cholestrol) I have no idea whether this is a liquid or a powder.
Leavening (calcium phosphate, baking soda)
Salt
Egg yolks (adds a trivial amount of cholesterol)
There you have it. Good luck. Here's the recipe for Common Crackers:
Common Crackers
4 cups all-purpose flour
2 TBSP sugar
1 tsp salt
1/4 cup butter
1 cup milk, plus extra milk to brush on crackers. (If you use cream, you'll need to add more liquid until the mixture is sticky)
First guess.
I'll be trying this out as soon as I buy some malted milk powder
and adjusting as I go along to get the correct consistency for cutting out biscuits:
4 cups bread flour
1 TBSP Sugar
pinch Salt
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp baking powder
1/4 cup Crisco shortening
1 egg yolk
1 tsp malt powder*
Enough milk to make dough. Okay, so the RLMC box doesn't list milk or water. But some liquid is needed as egg yolks aren't enough.
Sift together flour, sugar, salt, baking soda and baking powder. Cut in shortening until mixture has the consistency of corn meal. Beat in egg yolk. Stir in enough malted milk to make a stiff dough. Roll 1/4 inch think on a lightly floured board. Cut into 3 inch rounds. Prick surface with a fork. Brush surface with milk. Place on an ungreased backing sheet and bake in a 425 degree oven for 15-18 min. or until light golden brown. Store in an airtight container.
*A little research on the internet has discovered two forms of malted milk powder. Non-diastatic malt is for flavoring. Like for malted milk balls and malted milk shakes. The other, diastatic malt, has enzymes that turn starch to sugar. They give bread a finer texture and longer shelf life and some sweetness. Bakers use diastatic malt for bread to help with leavening. It also gives bread a crustier crust. Guess which one I think is in this recipe? That's right, the diastatic stuff I.E. with the enzymes. But I'm not sure. So I'll have to try it both ways. BTW you can get diastatic malt all sorts of places. Even eBay. But try your health food store first. Who needs a pound of the stuff. 1 tsp per loaf. So about 1 tsp for this recipe *if* this is the stuff. Another reason I think it's the diastatic stuff? The non-diastatic makes the crust shiny. If you've seen a milk cracker, it's quite dull. Very matte finish.
You can make your own diastatic malt: sprout a cup of wheat berries by covering them with water in a jar for 12 or so hours, dump out the water & rinse with clean water, and place the jar in a darkish, warmish, place. Rinse the berries every day with clean water and return to their place.
In 2-3 days they will begin to sprout. When the sprout is as long as the berries themselves, dump them out on paper towels, dry them off, and set on a cookie sheet in the sun for a day or so to dry out. Then put the cookiesheet in a 100F oven for an hour or three. Do not let the temp get above 130F or the enzymes will be destroyed.
Then grind the dried malted berries into flour, and use it in your favorite recipe at a rate of approx. 1tsp. per loaf. www.laiuppa.com/mary/recipes/milkcrackers.html