Recently, a visitor to this blog contacted me via Facebook. We are now friends on Facebook, and, what a friend she is. Her name is Cindy Johnson, and she is a retired Home Economist from Georgia. Cindy was kind enough to share a great recipe with me and allow me to share it with you. She says that this recipe is her most requested recipe and I can’t wait to try it for myself.
From Cindy:
Hi Christi –
I am more than happy to share this recipe – I never understood people who kept “secret” recipes….. unless it was a restaurant or a business. I have very few original recipes – most are from friends, family, favorite magazines and cookbooks. This is one of my most requested recipes.This recipe came from a dear friend, Carol. We used to share favorite recipes regularly – we would call each other all breathless about something we had tried that was a “keeper”. We are both Auburn graduates and both former flight attendants so we have much in common.
Anyway – my family would probably send me home if I arrived at Thanksgiving without 5 or 6 loaves of this bread. As I mentioned earlier – some eat it with coffee/tea for breakfast – we always slice up a plate to put on the dessert table, and it is available for snacks with a glass of cold milk. Its not that poppy seed is normally associated with Thanksgiving except that this is an excellent make-ahead bread. It is actually almost better after its been frozen and thawed ( also good warm from the oven).
I’ve already started baking these and freezing 2 loaves at a time. That is another plus if you have a large family or are baking these for Christmas – the fact that each recipe results in 2 gifts 🙂
I also like it because you just dump everything into your mixer (no creaming, no separating, eggs, or other things that take lots of time). I can pull out my mixer, and get 2 loaves in the oven while I’m cleaning the kitchen after dinner.
Hope you enjoy it!
Poppy Seed Bread
Preheat oven to 325 degrees
Prepare 2 loaf pans – (I spray with Pam and cover bottom with wax paper or parchment paper) The sticky glaze can make them difficult to get out of the pan otherwise.3 cups flour
2 1/2 cups sugar
1 1/2 tsp. baking powder
1 1/2 tsp salt
3 eggs
1 1/2 cups milk
1 1/2 cups oil (I use canola)
3 Tbsp. poppy seed
1 1/2 tsp. vanilla
1 1/2 tsp. almond flavoring
1 1/2 tsp. butter flavoringGlaze:
3/4 cup sugar
1/2 tsp each of all flavorings (vanilla, butter, almond)
1/4 cup orange juice
Combine and set aside until bread comes out of oven.Combine all bread ingredients in bowl. Mix on medium speed for 2 minutes. Pour into 2 prepared loaf pans. Bake at 325 1 hour to 1 hour and 20 minutes (until tester comes out clean and top is golden brown). My recipe says 1 1/2 hour but mine don’t take that long – I start checking at 1 hour.
Immediately pour,or brush glaze over hot bread.Cool at least 10 minutes in pan – then remove from pan. Freezes well.
Makes 2 large loaves.
Thanks so much Cindy! I’ll be trying that for my family this Thanksgiving.
Today’s Lagniappe: Sausage Cheese Muffins
I love that Cindy’s recipe is good for breakfast. I saw this recipe for breakfast muffins that sounds good. Kind of like sausage cheese balls with a little extra added to make them into muffins.
* 1 (1-lb.) package ground pork sausage
* 3 cups all-purpose baking mix
* 1 1/2 cups (6 oz.) shredded Cheddar cheese
* 1 (10 3/4-oz.) can condensed cheese soup
* 3/4 cup water
Preparation
1. Cook sausage in a large skillet, stirring until it crumbles and is no longer pink. Drain and cool.
2. Combine sausage, baking mix, and shredded cheese in a large bowl; make a well in center of mixture.
3. Stir together soup and 3/4 cup water; add to sausage mixture, stirring just until dry ingredients are moistened. Spoon into lightly greased muffin pans, filling to top of cups.
4. Bake at 375° for 20 to 25 minutes or until lightly browned.
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