From: Zachary Vance Date: Fri, 8 Nov 2024 03:31:00 +0000 (-0500) Subject: Lembas X-Git-Url: https://git.za3k.com/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=416ed63cd87fdf9e92d770727c249f51cc778881;p=blog.git Lembas --- diff --git a/images/lembas-batch1.jpg b/images/lembas-batch1.jpg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..95b3846 Binary files /dev/null and b/images/lembas-batch1.jpg differ diff --git a/images/lembas-batch2.jpg b/images/lembas-batch2.jpg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dd22af2 Binary files /dev/null and b/images/lembas-batch2.jpg differ diff --git a/images/lembas-flours.jpg b/images/lembas-flours.jpg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..01238f5 Binary files /dev/null and b/images/lembas-flours.jpg differ diff --git a/images/lembas-nonflours.jpg b/images/lembas-nonflours.jpg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3c90d69 Binary files /dev/null and b/images/lembas-nonflours.jpg differ diff --git a/images/lembas-peaflour1.jpg b/images/lembas-peaflour1.jpg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..60575a9 Binary files /dev/null and b/images/lembas-peaflour1.jpg differ diff --git a/images/lembas-peaflour2.jpg b/images/lembas-peaflour2.jpg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..501031a Binary files /dev/null and b/images/lembas-peaflour2.jpg differ diff --git a/posts/lembas.md b/posts/lembas.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..19c1fc1 --- /dev/null +++ b/posts/lembas.md @@ -0,0 +1,67 @@ +--- +author: admin +categories: +- Non-Technical +date: 2024-11-04 +tags: +- hack-a-day +- cooking +title: 'Hack-a-Day, Day 04: Project L.E.M.B.A.S. (FAILED)' +slug: hack-a-day-04-project-lembas +--- + +Today's project was to make a healthy, shelf-stable food that I could eat every day, and take care of meals for the rest of the month. In the process, I realized my initial goals didn't quite make sense, and I also (again!) ran out of time. But I made a little progress. + +First, I spent a couple hours researching foods like what I wanted to make. I started with "survival" foods -- hard tack, military rations, disaster food, pemmican and wasna. Commons themes I saw were: + +- The foods lasted a long time +- They were cheap to make (then, not now) +- They were dense (physically compact) and could stand being thrown around +- They were high-calorie. +- They didn't need cooking, and often you could get by with no heat or utensils if needed. +- They were something people would eat (and often, the bare minimum standard) +- They contained some reasonable macronutrient balance, although usually not an ideal one +- They were often meat-heavy + +Then I branched out a little to other calorie-dense foods: + +- Trail mix +- Fudge +- Energy bars, meal squares, and granola bars +- Biscotti + +I started realizing my goals didn't quite align with what I was seeing. I didn't really need my food to last years -- one month outside a fridge would be fine. I cared a lot more about taste. And eating calorie dense food was not really a great idea, as someone mostly sitting in a chair rather than than hauling gear cross-country all day. + +I did a circuit of local stores -- a grocery store, a restaurant supply store, an indian grocer's. I also picked up enough frozen food at Trader Joe's to last me most of the month, rather defeating the point. Oops! + +I came home with a *lot* of flours and flour-adjacent things. Very carb-heavy. I had several flours: corn, chickpea, and wheat. I ground up a few more. + +![caption: grinding dried peas into flour](lembas-peaflour1.jpg) +![caption: one jar of peas makes one jar of flour](lembas-peaflour2.jpg) +![caption: completed flours. quinoa, chickpea, corn, green pea, oats, lentil, pigeon pea](lembas-flours.jpg) +![caption: chocolate chips, coconut, cheese, sausage, flax, sunflower seeds, sugar, shortening, and boullion](lembas-nonflours.jpg) + +At this point, I had a wide variety of cheap ingredients. I went to the [USDA food database](https://fdc.nal.usda.gov/) and wrote some notes about macronutrient balance, and did the math on how much things cost. + +Then, I started experimenting. I had previously made hard tack, which I found kept forever and I liked pretty well. So I started by experimenting with hard tack, using non-wheat flour recipes. I was worried (rightly so) that non-wheat flours would not hold together as well. + +![caption: experimenting with non-wheat flour ratios](lembas-batch1.jpg) + +I tried ratios of quinoa and wheat flour, and also tried adding a few ingredients. I found that 1 part in 3 of wheat flour was plenty to hold things together--it just wouldn't be puffy any more. That seemed fine. I also discovered that it was really important to aim for a consistent thickness, because some of the pieces ended up soft and some hard or burnt. Luckily, non-wheat flours are a lot springier, so this was easier in the second batch. + +![caption: experimenting with ingredients -- 23 tests total](lembas-batch2.jpg) + +In the second batch, I kept the same 1:2 ratio, but tried a wide variety of flours, as well as the rest of the additives. + +My findings, and my ending point for the night: + +- A 1:2 ratio of wheat flour to another flour seems to consistently hold together well. The amount of water needed varies just a little. The squares cook with 20 minutes per side. +- Quinoa, green pea, oat, and chickpea flours are neutral to good. Corn and wheat flours are excellent. Lentil flour smells too strongly. I forgot to test pigeon pea or make rice flour. +- Coconut (un-powdered) is also excellent. I like the smell and a little fat. Shortening was not as good, and I didn't test other fats. +- Adding extra salt didn't change the flavor. +- Adding fat (via coconut or shortening) makes the wafers a little messier. +- Sugar is great. Whether a dusting on top, a little added, or chocolate chips, it's a definite winner. Sugar mixed in *should* improve shelf life. + +I was originally trying to invent a single food I could eat every day, which if you know me was a very stupid mistake. Instead, I'm going to have the final version be something more like my experiments--a wide variety to pick from. + +If I continue another day (and I likely will), I'm going to further optimize taste. The most compelling result of all is that I didn't eat the leftovers--I went for frozen food instead.