I've been on
a bread baking thing this week, and one of the breads I baked was this one from
Mrs. W. J. Holahan, of Chicago, Illinois, the Senior winner in the 1966 Pillsbury bake off. This is good with salads or
soups, for sandwiches, and even toasted.
I wanted to
make the Chicken Little bread while I still had fresh parsley in my outdoor
garden. I couldn’t find the potato soup
mix called for, but I used some bulk potato soup mix from the Amish
grocery. I found that the packages
weighed 2 ounces, so I weighed out this amount, and it made very nice loaves.
I remembered
this recipe being popular for a while when I was first married, and I found it
again in a Pillsbury booklet of Myrna’s.
That booklet didn’t attribute it to the winner…I found her recipe online
in a newspaper article of the time. That
was the year that the famous Tunnel of Fudge Cake won only second place! Mrs. John Petrelli of Las Vegas, won $25,000 that year for
her Golden Gate Snack Bread. But
here’s one of my favorites from 1966.
(The Method is mine, not the original) Check out our mixer bread information HERE. Remember, you can also make this recipe by hand too, the way I did for years..
(The Method is mine, not the original) Check out our mixer bread information HERE. Remember, you can also make this recipe by hand too, the way I did for years..
Chicken Little Bread
2
Packages Instant or Active Dry Yeast
1
Can Chicken Broth -- 13 1/2 oz -
heated to 120-125°
1
Package Potato Soup With Leek Mix
-- (2 oz)
¼ Cup
Sugar
2 ½ Teaspoons
Salt
1
Jar Chopped Pimientos -- 2 oz,
drained
¼ Cup
Parsley -- minced
2
Large Eggs
6 -6 1/2 cups
Cups Bread Flour (27-29 1/2 ounces)
Set aside 1
tbsp. soup mix. In large mixing bowl,
combine soup mix, sugar, salt, parsley and pimento. Pour hot broth slowly over ingredients,
stirring constantly. Cool to 125°.
Combine 2
cups flour and yeast; stir into mixture.
Add eggs, beat vigorously.
Gradually add remaining flour to form a soft dough. Change to dough hook
and knead 6 minutes on speed 2 or knead by hand 8-10 minutes.
Cover and
let rise 10 minutes. (or 45 minutes until doubled if using active dry
yeast)
Punch
down. Shape into 2 loaves. Let rise, covered, in two 9 x 5" loaf
pans, until doubled, 30 minutes-45 minutes.
Bake at 375°
for 45 minutes. Remove from pans. Brush
with butter, sprinkle with reserved soup mix, cool on wire racks.
2 loaves
2013 Cost
per loaf: $1.55
Sounds interesting. Love anything w/chicken or chicken broth. Will have to put this on my "to try" list! Sounds like a neat kind of sandwich bread or for making garlic bread! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteWe discovered that the Mrs Holahan mentioned as the author of this recipe was/is a relative. In honor of her win, we shared a loaf at a holiday get- together. Thanks for posting
ReplyDelete