Baking Our Daily Bread
Baking Our Daily Bread
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Barbara Pierce takes a loaf of bread
from the oven.
Baking Our Daily Bread
by Barbara Pierce
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From the Editor: The following article first appeared in To
Touch the Untouchable Dream, the latest in the Kernel Book series
of NFB paperbacks designed to educate the public about the
abilities of blind people. It begins with Dr. Jernigan's
introduction. Here it is:
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As regular Kernel Book readers know, Barbara Pierce is the
wife of a college professor and has raised three children. She
serves as Editor of the Braille Monitor (the National Federation
of the Blind's monthly magazine), works from a fully equipped
home office--complete with computer, e-mail, and Internet access-
-a work arrangement which meshes perfectly with her love of
homemaking. Here is what Barbara, who is totally blind, has to
say about baking our daily bread:
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One day my college roommate, whose usual cooking projects
were limited to what she could achieve in our popcorn popper,
returned from a trip to the supermarket with two loaves of frozen
bread dough. She announced with glee that she was going to bake
them and provide us with warm, homemade bread to go with the
cheese spread, oranges, and brownies my mother had sent in her
latest care package.
Having been party to dinner-roll making at home, I was
skeptical about how well the loaves would rise in our frigid dorm
room, but I went off to class hoping for the best. When I
returned several hours later, I was gratified to find that the
loaves had thawed but unsurprised to observe that they were still
the same thin logs they had been when they arrived, even if they
were now pliable.
Water left in a cup did not quite freeze in that dorm
during the winter, but I had been glad to master the art of
dressing while still wearing my flannel nightgown. I decided I
would have to intervene if we were to have bread for supper.
By combining our available resources, I managed to construct
a sort of incubator using my stool and desk lamp and my
roommate's sheepskin throw. It worked beautifully, and gradually
through the afternoon the bread began to rise. Those loaves were
only the first hatched in our cobbled-together incubator that
year and baked in the kitchen down the hall.
At home the following summer I began experimenting with
making bread from scratch. My mother was trained as a home
economist, and what she does not know about cooking is not worth
learning. She taught me the rules for handling yeast correctly
and for kneading dough effectively. In the end I learned not to
be afraid of bread-making. It was a gift that has held me in good
stead through the years.
The spring before I got married, the minister's wife at the
church I attended while a student gave me a recipe for making
four loaves of wonderful potato bread. I made the recipe several
times before we had children, but I found it infinitely valuable
once the children came along and began enjoying peanut butter and
jelly sandwiches and fresh bread and jam. But the best part of
that potato bread was my accidental discovery that it lent itself
beautifully to bread sculpture.
This is an art form ideally suited to blind bakers and small
children, because as long as the sculptor's hands are clean, the
dough can be handled and reshaped as often as necessary. (Mother
can even surreptitiously reconstruct a masterpiece that has
suffered from the competition of too many small hands.)
I eventually learned to divide the dough into three equal
pieces and give each child a section of counter, a greased cookie
sheet, and his or her part of the dough. This did not end the
warfare exactly--bargaining sessions for a little dough from a
neighbor's unused hoard had some tendency to turn into raids. But
for a number of years in our family, Christmas preparations
included making loaves of bread in the shapes of Santas, angels,
Christmas trees, bells, and shepherds to give to neighbors and
friends.
Octopi, Easter bunnies, Jack o'lanterns, and valentines warm
from the oven have also been eagerly consumed through the years
with melting butter and raspberry jam in our kitchen.
When a cook is unafraid of yeast, the word spreads like
magic. For years now I have made communion bread for our church.
Hot cross buns, filled with currants and spices and decorated
with crosses in lemon icing, are my contribution to the annual
breakfast at church between the Easter services. I have even
begun supplying the three-kings cake, which is really a sweet
bread filled with candied cherries and raisins, for our Epiphany
celebration.
People who don't bake are often surprised that I do so much
of it. My husband is a college professor, so through the years I
have turned out an endless array of cookies, bars, cakes, and
quick breads for his classes. Doing that kind of baking is fun,
and it's important to me to feed students who aren't getting
homemade treats. But bread-baking satisfies something deep inside
me. Kneading bread dough is a wonderful way to release
frustration or anger and turn them into something nourishing and
comforting. Even the fragrance of baking bread is a blessing to
everyone who steps through the door.
Bread is a living presence in the kitchen. It is very
forgiving of mistreatment or neglect. A loaf that has been left
to rise for too long can be kneaded and reshaped for another try.
If the room is too cold, moving the loaf to a warm place is
enough to persuade it to begin rising. Even if the cook manages
to kill the yeast, a little more can be dissolved and worked into
the dough to rescue the project. It is easy to tell when bread is
done even when one can't judge by looking at the color. A tap
with fingertips on the crust readily tells the listener when the
loaf is ready to be tipped out of the pan onto a cooling rack.
Several years ago I received a bread machine for my
birthday. Since I had gone back to work and the children had left
for college, I had fallen out of the habit of bread baking. The
machine and the books of recipes for single loaves of mouth-
watering breads I subsequently received inspired me to begin
baking bread again.
But this time it was altogether different. The machine
instructions said that I was to place the various ingredients in
the bowl in a prescribed order, close the lid, press the correct
button, and wait for the finished loaf to materialize. It seemed
implausible, but it worked. The only problem was that the loaf
was shaped like a flowerpot.
All went well, however, until the day I discovered that my
bread machine had suicidal tendencies. During the kneading cycle
the machine sometimes began walking itself toward the edge of the
counter. As long as I was in the room when this dangerous
behavior began, I could keep pushing it back to safety. It was
only a matter of time, however, until I was out of earshot and it
actually leaped off the counter with a resounding crash and
unfortunate consequences to the machine.
The first time this happened, the glass dome shattered. So
much for baking oddly shaped loaves. I quickly discovered to my
joy that I could remove the dough from the bowl at the end of the
kneading process and shape the loaf myself, allow it to rise in
the conventional way, and bake it in the oven.
My new arrangement worked well for quite a long time. Of
course the machine continued its self-destructive behavior, and
every time it fell another dent appeared or something else
rattled its way loose and eventually off. The cord was too short
for me to place the bread machine on the floor while I was using
it, and nothing that I could devise kept it from wandering.
My poor machine leaped from the counter for the last time
months after I had made the transition to doing the baking
myself. So I happily abandoned the machine that had taken up so
much space on my counter and retained all the wonderful new
recipes I had collected. My mixer has a bread hook, so I began
tossing together the ingredients and beating them with the mixer
to make loaves as easily and efficiently as the machine ever did
the job.
It pleases me to bake, slice, and serve my own bread. But I
couldn't bake all our bread the way I do if I did not work at
home most of the time. In fact I count providing all our bread as
one of the many advantages of having a job that keeps me at home.
What does any of this have to do with blindness? Nothing and
everything. Like thousands of other Americans I love to bake. My
family regularly sits down to fresh Stollen on Christmas morning,
homemade pizza with Italian bread crust, and crusty French bread
loaves on picnics. The only difference is that my family laughs
together to think how many of the people who know us only
casually believe that my husband must necessarily prepare all the
meals in our home, do the laundry, and keep the house clean. He
grumbles that it is hard to wear the crown of sainthood
undeservedly.
Gradually we in the National Federation of the Blind are
teaching the public that blind people can and do carry out our
responsibilities, living full and productive lives. Through the
years I have taken much satisfaction from feeding my family and
teaching my children, God's children, and the children of my
friends to bake their daily bread.
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