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Re: New member / question about injera

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> Speaking of which, there is something that has me stumped. I went

to an

> Ethiopian restaurant while pregnant with our twins a couple of

years ago

> and tasted injera for the first time. I couldn't get enough of the

> stuff! So I've experimented with it on my own, but I can't get it

right

> somehow. As in, it seems to ferment well (I do not and will not

use

> yeast), but when I try to cook it, it either sticks to the pan

> (regardless of what oil or butter I use, or stainless steel or

cast

> iron) or it never cooks all the way through, so I've got burnt

outsides

> and nothing but glue on the inside. And it's not light and spongy

like

> it should be. I'm grinding my own teff. I just don't know what

else to

> try. Anyone got the magic cure?

>

> I'm so excited to have found this list! Makes me feel like I'm not

the

> only one staying up late to make beet kvass and check on the

simmering

> stock.

>

> Blessings,

>

>

> www.newgrovetech.com/foodblog/

>

I use kefir and teff flour (sometimes I have to thin it a bit with

water to get the right crepe-like consistancy - too thick doesn't

cook all the way through), keep the pan well greased (or heaven

forbid and I'm ducking the flames use a non-stick griddle) and cover

it with a pan lid while it cooks. I use a glass lid ('cause that is

what I have) and I can watch the bubbles come up and the whole thing

turn a different shade. I think that the pan lid is the secret.

Connie H

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On 11/26/05, Nylund <mamabear@...> wrote:

> Speaking of which, there is something that has me stumped. I went to an

> Ethiopian restaurant while pregnant with our twins a couple of years ago

> and tasted injera for the first time. I couldn't get enough of the

> stuff! So I've experimented with it on my own, but I can't get it right

> somehow.

My understanding is that injera in the states is a mixture of

wheat/teff. So I'm sure that is what you had at the restaurant. It is

also my understanding that the teff stateside is not like the stuff

back in Ethiopia.

--

Life isn't static. People change. Circumstances

change. What may have been true six months

or a year ago may no longer be true now.

Maybe a loved one got sick and died at a

tender age...Maybe they ran into an old high

school buddy who still looks great...At any rate

what they couldn't hear before rings true to them

now. So don't despair. Stick to the task. You will

eventually find yourself surrounded by people who

do care about good food and see it as a

legitimate avenue to great health.

Winning the War on Good Food

http://www.warongoodfood.com

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