
i love browsing food blogs. looking at yummy food pictures and reading over the recipes. but even when i find a recipe i'm dying to try i can't help but think about the changes and/or additions i could make to the recipe.
found a new blog and tagged about half the recipes i shuffled through, but this one caught my eye- 1) b/c it's bread, 2) b/c it had sour cream (still some leftover from my fish taco birthday lunch), and 3) b/c i really needed to stress bake
i've also never cooked with american sweet potatoes. if you've seen or tried korean sweet potatoes, they don't look the same, and they certainly do not taste the same. i'm definitely still a sucker for korean sweet potatoes, but i'm guessing b/c these are so orange much more nutrient rich.
the recipe comes from averie cooks, and i've made several changes to not only make it healthier but also to fit the taste buds of m&d who are not the most spice happy people out there.
Sweet Potato and Pecan Bread
loved the pecans in it, b/c i roasted the sweet potatoes the decrease in sugar was definitely worth it (you wouldn't get quite the caramelized goodness if the potatoes had been microwaved and more sugar may have been needed). oats changed the texture of the bread, but since i haven't tried the original yet, i'm quite happy with my nommy bread :)
happy baking
found a new blog and tagged about half the recipes i shuffled through, but this one caught my eye- 1) b/c it's bread, 2) b/c it had sour cream (still some leftover from my fish taco birthday lunch), and 3) b/c i really needed to stress bake
i've also never cooked with american sweet potatoes. if you've seen or tried korean sweet potatoes, they don't look the same, and they certainly do not taste the same. i'm definitely still a sucker for korean sweet potatoes, but i'm guessing b/c these are so orange much more nutrient rich.
the recipe comes from averie cooks, and i've made several changes to not only make it healthier but also to fit the taste buds of m&d who are not the most spice happy people out there.
Sweet Potato and Pecan Bread
Yield: 1-9x5 loaf
about
1 1/2 cups mashed sweet potatoes (2 medium or 1 very large), roasted
2
large eggs
1/2
cup plain non-fat yogurt
1/4
cup sour cream
1
teaspoon vanilla extract
1 3/4 cups all-purpose
flour
1/4
cups granulated sugar
1/2
cup light brown sugar, packed
2
tsp baking soda
1
T + 1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2
tsp ground ginger
1/2
tsp ground nutmeg
1/4
tsp ground allspice
1/4
tsp ground cloves
pinch salt, optional and
to taste
¼
c chopped pecans
Directions:
Preheat
oven to 400F. Spray and flour one 9-by-5-inch loaf pan; set aside.
Roast
sweet potatoes in the oven at 400F for about 35 minutes or until when poked
with a fork gives easily. Mash sweet potatoes with a fork. Allow them to cool
momentarily so you don't scramble the eggs.
Decrease
oven to 350F
To
the sweet potatoes, add the eggs, yogurt, sour cream, vanilla and whisk until
combined; set aside.
In a large mixing bowl,
combine the dry ingredients - flour, sugars, baking soda, cinnamon, ginger,
nutmeg, allspice, cloves, optional salt, and whisk to combine. Pour the wet
sweet potato mixture over the dry ingredients, and stir to incorporate.
Turn
batter out into prepared pan. Bake for 60 to 70 minutes for a 9x5 pan, or until
top is domed, golden, loaf is springy to the touch, and cake tester inserted in
the center comes out clean.
Allow
bread to cool in pan for 10 minutes before turning it out and gobbling it all
up.
loved the pecans in it, b/c i roasted the sweet potatoes the decrease in sugar was definitely worth it (you wouldn't get quite the caramelized goodness if the potatoes had been microwaved and more sugar may have been needed). oats changed the texture of the bread, but since i haven't tried the original yet, i'm quite happy with my nommy bread :)
happy baking