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-   -   Sprouted Corn Oregon Tempeh (https://www.quiltingboard.com/recipes-f8/sprouted-corn-oregon-tempeh-t311262.html)

tropit 06-06-2020 10:34 AM

Sprouted Corn Oregon Tempeh
 
I found this recipe in my wonderful, cookbook: <I>Miso-Tempeh-Natto and Other Tasty Ferments, A Step-By-Step Guide to Fermenting Grains and Beans</I> by Kirsten K. Shockey and Christopher Shockey

This recipe does not use any soy beans. It is made up of dried corn, dry pinto beans, dry scarlet runner beans, vinegar and starter. I don't have all of the stuff to make it right now, but summer is upon us and these are all easy to grow ingredients. I'm gonna plant them this week. In the mean time, I'll pick up the pinto beans and corn at the co-op and see if I can find a substitute for the runner beans. I'll keep you posted on how it works out.

Also, my homemade tempeh incubator has some flaws. I made it out of a ice chest, fitted with a small aquarium pump and bubbler and an aquarium heater to keep things a constant temperature. The heater doesn't work (brand new too...augh!) and the pump disappeared over the winter. (My DH isn't saying a thing, but I think he's guilty somehow.) Therefore, I think that I'm going to buy a bread proofing box to make tempeh and other things, like bread and natto, for instance. They're kind of expensive and they take up a lot of electricity, but they are precise and dependable.

~ C

QuiltingNinaSue 06-06-2020 02:35 PM

A quick inexpensive bread rising box is a plastic drawer from WalMart or similar place, a heating pad. put the heating pad underneath the drawer frame and drawer on low temp setting. Slide the drawer into its frame and rise your bread. My husband made one for my SIL who took it to a class and the teacher copied the idea and used one too. All else fails the componets can be used seperately. I used mine until I learned my oven light works well in rising yeast or the bread.

tropit 06-07-2020 02:52 PM


Originally Posted by QuiltingNinaSue (Post 8391111)
A quick inexpensive bread rising box is a plastic drawer from WalMart or similar place, a heating pad. put the heating pad underneath the drawer frame and drawer on low temp setting. Slide the drawer into its frame and rise your bread. My husband made one for my SIL who took it to a class and the teacher copied the idea and used one too. All else fails the componets can be used seperately. I used mine until I learned my oven light works well in rising yeast or the bread.

Thanks! Great idea! I've been using the oven with just the pilot light for warmth for my natto and yeast breads. The tempeh needs more humidity though, hence the water bath incubator made with an ice chest. I'm going to keep working on it. I hate to pay so much money for a bread proofer.

~ C


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