You
can now with Breadlink make your
Own :
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The
Bio-Dynamically grown grains are sprouted and
filtered in fresh water and unlike the flour the
bread is baked from the fresh ingredients.
No
Preservatives or coloring, No Dairy, No Flour,
No Sugar, No Salt, No Eggs or other animal products
used. Flours with a * do not contain Gluten, all
Yeast Free and always 1000 % ORGANIC !
Make
Quaker Bread with :
The
amount once sprouted enables you to
make several tasty loafs |
Wheat
& Kamut |
Oat
|
Spelt |
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QUAKER
RECIPE
This
oatmeal bread recipe with wheat creates a moist
and delicious loaf of whole grain bread. You will
need a 9 x 5 inch loaf pan and patience. It will
take 2 - 3 hours from start to finish.
Ingredients
(Makes 1 good Loaf)
1 teaspoon salt (optional)
150 gr Sprouted Wheat
300 gr Sprouted Oats
150
gr Sprouted Kamut
1 1/2 teaspoons active dry yeast (optional)
1 tablespoon brown sugar
2 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon of Honey
If you make it from the grains :
-
Soak
the different grains for 12 hours;
-
Sprout
the different grains for 3 days.
-
Put
in a bowl the different ingredients once sprouted
; Mix well.
-
Ground
all blended ingredients in your Robot Chef,
or a Juicer.
-
Make
each bread about 400 gr, rectangular about 7
cm high in tin prviously greased with olive
oil.
-
Put
in the oven a water recipient and rise temperature
to 115°C
-
When
its hot put your bread and bake 2 h15
-
Live
it to cool before removing it from the tins.
-
Your
Quaker bread will be dark caramelized in the
outside but very moist in the inside. It keeps
very well.
-
When
the bread is done, brush the top with melted
butter to keep crust moist.
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THE
QUAKERS
The
sect of "Friends," were called Quakers in derision
when they were founded in the middle of the seventeenth century.
At first they were called " Professors (or Children) of
the Light," because of their fundamental principle that
the light of Christ within was God's gift of salvation—that
" Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world."
It
is said that GEORGE FOX, the founder of the sect, when brought
before magistrates at Derby, England, in 1650, told them to
"quake before the Lord," when one of them (Gelvase
Bennet) caught up the word "quake," and was the first
who called the sect " Quakers.” They were generally
known by that name afterwards.
They
spread rapidly in England, and were severely persecuted by the
Church and State. At one time there were 4,000 of them in loathsome
prisons in England. Many died in prison or from the effects
of imprisonment. Grievous fines were imposed, a large portion
of which went to informers. They were insulted by the lower
classes; their women and children were dragged by the hair along
the streets; their meeting-houses were robbed of their windows;
and, by order of King Charles and the Arch-New Netherland.
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THE
QUAKERS

CONTINUED
>>>
In
1657 a ship arrived at New Amsterdam, having on board
several of " the accursed sect called Quakers."
They had been banished from Boston, and were on their
way from Barbadoes to Rhode Island, " where all kinds
of scum dwell," wrote Dominie Megapolenses, "
for it is nothing else than a sink of New England."
Among the Friends were Dorothy Waugh and Mary Witherhead.
They
went from street to street in New Amsterdam, preaching
their new doctrine to the gathered people. Stuyvesant
ordered the women to be seized and cast into prison, where,
for eight days, they were imprisoned in dirty, vermin-infested
cells, with their hands tied behind them, when they were
sent on board the ship in which they came, to be transported
to Rhode Island.
Robert
Hodgson, who determined to remain in New Netherland, took
up his abode at Hempstead, where a few Quakers were quietly
settled.
There
he held a meeting, and Stuyvesant ordered him to his prison
at New Amsterdam. Tied to the tail of a cart wherein sat
two young women, offenders like himself, he was driven
by a band of soldiers during the night through the woods
to the city, where he was imprisoned in " a filthy
jail," under sentence of such confinement for two
years, to pay a heavy fine, and to have his days spent
in hard labor, chained to a wheel-barrow with a negro,
who lashed him with a heavy tarred rope.
He
was subjected to other cruel treatment at the hands of
the governor, until the Dutch people, as well as the English,
cried " Shame!" There were no other persecutions
of the Friends in New Netherland after Hodgson's release.
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