Archive for May, 2008

Bringing Back Homemade

It has been oven fifteen years since I came up with the idea that a home bakery produces the best and tastiest baked goods. Years ago there were many women who could bake an excellent apple pie, or heavenly pound cake. Today most women are too busy to bake anything, and the few that do have a smidgen of time are to busy to bake anything.

The idea that there are no real bakers around to bake and even fewer real down home bakeries got me thinking; a paradigm shift needs to occur now, right now. We need bakers, really great bakers, not folks who are going to prepare those God awful pastries sold at and Au Bon Pain. I mean good old fashioned pastry, the sort that goes stale tomorrow and must be used in bread pudding because they are no longer good for anything else.

What would it take to get people baking again? Food prices are skyrocketing. Gas prices are just sinful. Bosses aren’t hiring and people are stressed and frustrated. Yep, it’s time to bake. Baking relieves stress, baking gives a persona a sense of accomplishment and baking feeds the body and the soul. Several weeks ago I went right to work designing a course that would teach the home baker how to start a little baking business.

The course I created is titled, How to operate a successful home-based bakery. I currently have seven participants and we are having a blast. I have no doubt that a few have cold feet, but all see the potential in baking from home and selling their goods to the public. People are hungry for good down-home baked goods. I venture to say many of us don’t even remember what a cake from scratch taste like anymore.

It’s no secret small home-based businesses have been surviving and even thriving since the beginning of time. How many remember Tupperware? Anyone remember Watkins products that were sold door to door? Today there have been many changes that have occurred around how information is used and disseminated and the advancement in telecommunication technologies has both helped and hindered micro-businesses. The new technologies now make it possible for producers and consumers to connect in a more timely and efficient manner. This is a key element for the micro-business owner operating out of his/her home. Business owners can now contact customers at the click of a mouse and promote their products and services via the Web and email adverting.

The forms of advertising now available are both inexpensive and expensive depending on if you want the bells, whistles and search engine optimization and keyword analysis. Home-based business owners now have access to market research to enhance business success. Micro-owners can investigate how competing businesses are positioning their products and capturing customers in multiple markets. The economic field is expanding and that means home-based business owners must narrow their niche market and target customers outside their traditional market areas. No matter what the product, you still must offer impeccable service, a quality product and the right price; this fact is true whether you are Benny’s Home-Baked Breads or Au Bon Pain.

The manner by which we eat baked goods is going to change. My prediction is we are heading toward the way of the European. The portions of food will get smaller and smaller, but with that the quality will go higher and higher. This will not be known for several years, but life in America is changing and it is changing at neck snapping speeds. If you are fortunately enough to live in a rural area, where the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services will inspect your kitchen and allow you to operate a home-based bakery, go for it. Bakers take heed however, you will need to research the market and make sure there is a need for your services; test the waters so you don’t drown.

If the prospects look promising research what it would take to run a micro-bakery in your home. You may want to operate it on the weekends, selling at your local farmer’s market or at a local farmer’s vegetable and fruit stand. Consider contacting some of the local restaurants or coffee shops and see if they would be interested in carrying your products. Talk to the Department of Agriculture or Food Safety about any kitchen inspections, licenses, and the liability insurance you will need; better safe than sorry. You may also want to supply your products to another bakery, i.e. miniature pastry shells that can be filled with lemon curd, pecan pie filling, or minced apples and cinnamon. Don’t jump in with both feet, give this some thought and let’s read about your home-based bakery in the next issue of Southern Living.

Clinton Louisiana Tea Cookies
(Makes about 6 dozen small cookies)
This is a simple little recipe I named after my grandmother’s home town.

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups sugar
  • 2 cups vegetable shortening (i.e. Crisco)
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract*
  • ½ teaspoon maple flavor
  • 4 eggs
  • 5 ½ cups all-purpose flour
  • 3 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup almonds, finely chopped (substitute pecans)
  • powdered sugar for dusting (optional)

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350F
  2. Beat sugar, shortening and vanilla and maple flavor with an electric mixer at medium speed until creamy
  3. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition
  4. Continue beating until the mixture is smooth
  5. Stir flour, cream of tartar, baking soda and salt in a large bowl
  6. Add nuts
  7. Stir into shortening mixture until well blended
  8. Shape dough into walnut-size balls
  9. Place 2 inches apart on un-greased cookie sheet
  10. Bake 8-10 minutes until lightly brown around edged
  11. Cook 2 hours on wire rakes
  12. Dust cookies with powdered sugar

Stocking Up

In 1982 I was returning from Okinawa, Japan after serving in the United States Navy and on the way to Detroit decided to stop in Oakland California to visit my daughter’s Great Aunt Edith. Great Aunt Edith was a true victory gardener, a southern-belle, gracious, kind, with a heart of gold. I admired her self-preservation skills and her ability to give knowledge and wisdom so effortlessly.

I received from my daughter’s great-aunt one of the best gifts, I had probably ever received in my young life. It was a little red book titled Stocking Up, by the staff of Organic Gardening and Farming copyrighted 1977. The book introduced me to food preservation and why it is not only important but essential.

You see when I first went into Aunt Edith’s apartment, I knew this woman was a survivalist of sorts since she was just starting the seedlings for her garden. This was someone I could learn from and someone willing to teach; and although we were only there for a brief time, she left a lasting impression.

What did I gain from my encounter with great-aunt Edith?

  1. You don’t have to have a back yard to garden
  2. Fruit trees are essential, even if they are growing in a gigantic pot on the patio.
  3. Everyone should know how to garden and can (preserve) food
  4. It’s good to be frugal
  5. Understanding numbers 1, 2, 3 and 4 will help you survive lean times

I come from a long line of gardeners, my mother, grandmothers and great-grandmothers. These were southern women who could make a dollar out of a dime and a delicious pie out of vinegar or buttermilk. Today I cannot stress enough the need to grow your own, even if it is just green onions and lettuce. It is the wise homemaker (male or female) who can “put up” fruits, vegetables, jams and pickles for a rainy day.

This may sound simplistic, and folks cannot survive on canned fruits and vegetables alone, but ever dime saved by canning and baking from scratch can be spent towards meat, fish and fowl. Every little bit helps and that is no exaggeration.

When was the last time you were at a Farmer’s Market? When was the last time you stopped by a road side stand to pick up strawberries or peaches? I can honestly tell you there is nothing better than buying fresh and preserving fresh fruits and vegetables. I am aware that everyone lives busy lives but with food cost skyrocketing, floods destroying American soil and gas prices going through the roof we must “think smart” and pay attention to how we spend our nickels and dimes since money really can disappear like snow in a furnace.

This fall I will be introducing a series of classes to the folks living in the Raleigh/Durham area. I will teach canning and how to make homemade bread. There was a time when the most inexpensive food you could purchase was a loaf of bread. Today “good” bread can cost you upwards of $3 to $5 dollars or more depending on where you live. Good whole wheat bread is a wonderful source of fiber and the perfect accompaniment to any meal.

Why learn these skills? Why not? Learning to preserve, and learning to bake is like learning to ride a bicycle, once you know how, you never forget. Canning and baking are two survival skills ever human, young or old should have. Years ago, little girls learned to canned at the hip of their mother or grandmother. Now, we rely on pre-prepared foods loaded with sodium, additives and preservatives. Ages ago, bakers made their own bread, because they did not have the five cents or twenty-five cents to purchase a loaf. Today all the loaves are pre-sliced and filled with all sorts of things I’d rather not list.If you think you cannot bake, or you think you do not have time to can, please reconsider. These are skills you can teach your children or grandchildren. This is an activity that can become a late summer, early fall family affair. Learn more about the Canning and Baking classes in the Raleigh/Durham area this fall by visiting www.cookingwithdenay.com

Staring a Home-Based Bakery?
The information for home-based bakers has been transferred over to HomeBasedBaking.com.

Visit HomeBasedBaking.com

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