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Banana Poppy Seed Muffins

February 3, 2018 Colleen Stem
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Banana bread never goes out of style. It is a clsasic, everyday, everybody type of food. Have a slice for dessert, maybe drizzled with some chocolate, definitely.  How about for a grab and go breakfast, sure sure.. A chunk slathered in peanut butter for snack time or anytime, well  isn't that's why you make it?  And who doesn't always have a banana bowl in the kitchen? A banana bowl that is always full of bananas because the banana just always makes it's way home. They seem to pile up, even when I don't mean for them to. And I know I am not the only one. I see it all the time. A fruit bowl in the kitchen with a least a couple of really really ripe bananas, waiting for that moment when you know there is no freaking way anyone in their right mind would eat those banana because gross. That's when you have it, the perfect banana for some banana bread, or in this case, banana muffins.  

Here I went muffin style because I had already made a loaf of banana bread earlier in the week and because I wanted to send half of the muffins to the boys at the front desk at the gym. (They give me coffee, I give them muffins) And also, muffins cook a lot faster then bread so if you are a little low on time, muffins are the way to go. But if you would rather bread, you can make it bread. Bananas are there for you and are not fussy. 

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The stuff. Ripe bananas, poppy seeds, brown sugar, oil, and apple cider vinegar. Also have flour, cinnamon, baking soda, baking powder, and a little salt in the bowl. 

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Mash the bananas in a bowl, like really mash them up until it turns to a sugar banana slop. Then add in the oil and the vinegar and mix together.

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Dump in the dry and the poppy seeds and mix it all up until combined but then stop. Don't over mix the batter or else you will get tuff muffins. 

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Scoop into well greased muffin pans and pop them into the preheated oven to bake. 

Done! And in only took like 20 minutes appose to an hour if I made banana bread. 

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And here is when you grab a coffee, a muffin, and have yourself a moment.

Stay good.

-C


Banana Poppy seed Muffins

makes 12-14 muffins

  • 2 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder 
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon cinnamon 
  • 1/4 cup poppy seeds
  • 2/3 cups packed  brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup neutral flavored oil
  • 4 really ripe bananas (they need to be really ripe of the mixture will be to dry)
  • 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar 

Preheat oven to 350

In a large bowl, mash the bananas with the sugar until the mixture turns wet and sloppy, but there are still a few little chunks of banana.  Mix in the oil and vinegar. In a separate bowl mix the  flour, cinnamon , baking powder and soda, salt, and poppy seeds together. Dump the dry into the wet and mix until all is combined but then stop. Don't over mix batter. 

Scoop mixture into well greased muffin tins and place into oven once it has preheated. Bake the muffins for about 20- 22 minutes or until nicely browned and a tester stuck into the middle of one comes out clean.

Remove from oven and let sit in tin for a few minutes until it cools down. Remove the muffins from the tin and let completely cool on a wire rack. 

Eat whenever and how many you want, store the rest in an air tight container for a couple of days or wrap a few and  freeze. 

In Sweets, snack, seeds, fruit, desserts, Dairy Free, breakfast, bread, sweet breads and muffins Tags Banana Poppy Seed Muffins, vegan, muffins, poppy seeds, bananas, fruit, breakfast, snack time, nut free, dairy free, plant based, everyday baking, vegan baking, bread, dessert
3 Comments

Fresh Cranberry Chocolate Chip Scones

December 2, 2017 Colleen Stem
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I am on full fledged baking mode. I bought the Costco sized bag of flour, stocked up on spices and chocolate chips, and am counting down the days to when all the littles come over for the cookie decorating party. But I am also trying to pace myself because I don't need to have cookies, cake, and candies all over the house quite yet. The season is young and the time for stuffing your face with all the candies and cookies awaits. Until then, (next week sounds about right) sensible baking like bread and scones (yes, scones are sensible)

The other morning I woke up and was very determined that I must make scones. I don't really know why scones, maybe it was the news of Prince Harrys engagement  (the dream of being princess is now dead)  but it was a fierce determination..  And they had to be cranberry because well, I have a tone of cranberries in the fridge. And I know I could have made them just cranberriy, but why not add a little chocolate. Still sensible in my book.  So scones I did make. And after he shared one with Barb, the mr has been eating them for breakfast which is just another reason why they are sensible...they are breakfast food. 

The stuff. Flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt (all in the bowl). Sugar, coconut oil, cinnamon, soy milk and vinegar. And of course fresh cranberries and chocolate chips.

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The sugar and cinnamon go into the bowl with the rest of the dry...whisk it all together. Oh, and preheat the oven.

Mix a tablespoon of vinegar into the milk so it starts to sour.

Coconut oil gets cut in to the mixture.. You want a course crumb, kind of like pea sized chunks of oil mix around in there.

And now rough chop the cranberries which is a little difficutl because they all want to roll away, but you can do it. 

I rough chopped the chocolate chips as well because why not.

Mix the cranberries and chocolate into the mixture until evenly incorporated.

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Then dump the milk in.

Gently mix until the dough just comes together. Dump our onto a well floured surface. 

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Pat the dough into a circle and flatten out until it's about an inch and a half thick. Cut the circle into 8-10 equal pieces. 

Place the scones on a baking sheet and brush with a little milk. Pop them into the preheated oven 

Pop them out when they are all nice and golden brown. 

Place them on a cooling rack.

And watch them disappear or like a sensible person, eat one everyday for breakfast. 

Have a great weekend.

-C


Fresh Cranberry Chocolate Chip Scones 

makes 8-10 scones

  • 2  1/4 cups flour 
  • 1/3 cup  sugar
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon 
  • 1  teaspoon baking powder 
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup coconut oil
  • 1 hefty cup fresh cranberries
  • 1/2 cup chocolate chips
  • 3/4 cup plant milk plus about a tablespoon more for brushing on top
  • 1 tablespoons apple cider vinegar 

Preheat oven to 375. 

In a large bowl whisk together the flour, salt, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, and sugar. Add the vinegar to the milk and set aside. With a pastry cutter or 2 knives, cut the coconut oil into the dry mixture until it becomes a course crumb. 

Rough chop the cranberries and the chocolate chips (optional on the chocolate chips) and toss both into the bowl. Give it a quick mix to coat it all then dump in the milk. Mix until the dough comes together (DON"T OVER MIX) then dump the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Gather the dough into a ball and flatten out into a disk that is about and inch and a half thick. Cut into 8-10 equal sized wedged and place not a baking sheet. Brush the tops with a little milk and pop into the preheated oven.

Bake for 25 minutes or until the tops are all nice and golden brown. Remove from oven and place on a wire rack to cool.

Then eat them .

In bread, breakfast, brunch, Dairy Free, desserts, Sweets, Vegan Tags Fresh Cranberry, Scones, Chocolate Chip, Fresh Cranberry Chocolate Chip Scones, vegan, plantbased, King Arthur flour, oceanspray, ocean spray, holiday, breakfast, desserts, quick and easy
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Cinnamon Star Bread

November 11, 2017 Colleen Stem
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I have been so excited all week to make this star bread. About a week ago, while perusing  King Arthur Flour recipes, I saw this  amazing star shaped cinnamon bun situation and just knew that I had to make it. I checked the recipe, made a a bunch of tweaks (made it vegan and a little simpler) and set a date with the oven. I figured that Friday was the day because well, this bread is basically a really pretty cinnamon bun and cinnamon buns are great for the weekend and plus the temperature in the world dropped to like super freaking freazing cold and what better way to stay warm then to crank the oven. 

And make it I did. And honestly. this was one of the most satisfying bread bakes that I have had in a while. It is just so dang pretty and smells so good and was honestly way easier to make then it looks (seriously, really simple). I don't know if I am ever going to be ale to make cinnamon buns the regular way again. I mean look at this.  And best to let you know that it feeds a crowd, which is fantastic if you are going to be having any big family/friend gatherings in the next month or two. (or if you are just awesome and want to eat the whole thing to your face). Think about it, if you make this for the people (or yourself)  how cool and awesome and fancy you are going to seem. It's really a win win win all around here so I don't see a reason to not make it. Trust me, and thank me later. 

The stuff of stars. Flour. salt. yeast and soy milk. A little oil, sugar, mashed sweet potato, earth balance  and cinnamon. 

To start, a  couple of tablespoons sugar and the yeast go into the warm soy milk to kick start that yeast and get mixed together.

Salt, oil, and mashed sweet potato go into the big bowl with the flour.

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Then the yeast mixture gets pouted in too. Get ready to mix. And mix.

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And after mixing, some kneading.  A well floured surface with a extra flour on the side is needed here. You are going to want to knead the dough for about 5 minutes, adding a little flour whenever the dough gets to sticky. 

Once the dough is nice and smooth looking, cover it in oil and stick it into a bowl and cover it  and let  rise for about an hour. 

Make your cinnamon sugar mixture while waiting . 

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Dough doubled in size and dumped onto the well flour counter. 

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Take a dough cutter or knife and divided the dough  into four equal pieces and roll each piece into ball.

While keeping your surface well floured, roll a dough ball into circle (or as close to a circle as you can get it) about 12 inched wide 

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Place rolled dough onto parchment paper and cover the surface with  earth balance. Then sprinkle a third of the cinnamon sugar mixture all over that.

Grab another ball of dough and roll it out the same size as the first and place on top the first dough. Repeat the earth balance and sugar mixture and then cover that with another rolled out dough. Earth balance and sugar mixture one more time, then the last dough.

All stacked up.Take the rolling pin and give the whole stacked thing a gentle little roll, just to make sure all layers are stuck together.

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The fun part. Grab a small circle cutter or lid (I used small jar lid) and place directly in the middle. Take your dough cutter and score your cuts. Score into quarters then each corner into six pieces. You end up with twenty-four pieces. There needs to be a even amount of pieces in order for the design to work so you could do  22-16 pieces. I wouldn't  go less.

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To get the twist, grab a piece in each hand, give a little tug and twist the pieces towards each other 3 times. Take the ends and kind of tuck and pinch them together.  Repeat until all the pieces care twisted. 

 This is probably the most pretty cinnamon thing I have ever seen. 

Slide the star on the parchment onto a baking sheet and cover to rise and rest for about half hour or so and get the oven preheated.

After the second rise and right before you stick it into he oven, brush the top with a little plant milk.

And into the hot oven it goes. 

Aaaaa. So freaking pretty! 

After a few minutes, if you decided you want a little glaze action, go for it. I made up a super simple one, just a splash of vanilla in powder sugar with a splash of milk. 

Drizzled and ready for action. 

Now let the people eat. 


Cinnamon Star Bread

makes 12-13 servings 

For the dough 

  • 2 3/4 -3 cups all purpose flour plus more for kneading.

  • 1/4 cup mashed sweet potato *

  • 1 1/4 cup warm soy (or any plant) milk plus 1 tablespoon to brush on pre bake

  • 1/4 cup neutral oil plus 1 tablespoon to coat dough

  • 1 packet or 2 teaspoon yeast

  • 2 tablespoons sugar

  • 1 teaspoon salt

for filling

  • 7 tablespoons sugar

  • 2 tablespoon cinnamon

  • 3 tablespoons room temperature earth balance

For icing (optional)

  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla

  • 1/2 cup powdered sugar

  • 2-3 teaspoons plant milk

*I just mashed up a 1/4 cup of a roated sweet potato that I had in the fridge. If you don't have a roasted potato laying around, you can steam of roast a sweet potato and mash it up for this. 

Measure milk into a large jar or bowl. Mix in 2 tablespoons sugar and the yeast. Set aside to activate. In a large bowl mix together the lesser amount of flour and salt. Add in the sweet potato, oil, and the soy yeast mixture. Mix together with a wooden spoon or dough spoon until you can't. If the dough seems really wet, add in another 1/4 cup of flour.  Once mixed as well was you can get it, dump the dough onto well floured surface. Start kneading the dough, adding a little flour as you go if needed. Knead for about 5 minutes or until the dough is a nice soft but not to sticky uniform ball. Cover dough with a little oil and place into large clean bowl. Cover with a towel and let dough rise in a warm place for about an hour or until it doubles in size.

Mix the cinnamon and sugar together while waiting.

Once dough has risen, dump it onto a well floured surface and divide into 4 equal pieces. Roll each piece into a ball then grab the first ball and roll out into a large circle about 12 inches wide. Don't worry hear if the circle is not perfect, its going to be fine. Place first circle onto piece of parchment paper and cover the surface with 1 tablespoon of earth balance. Sprinkle with a third of the cinnamon sugar mixture. Grab another dough ball and roll out to the same size as the first and place onto of the cinnamon sugared dough. Repeat the earth balance cinnamon sugar and top with another rolled out dough. Once more with the remaining earth balance and cinnamon sugar and top with the last rolled out dough. Take rolling pin and give the whole stacked thing a little roll to make sure it's all stuck together well.

For the design part. Grab a small circle shaped thing about 2 inches wide (I used a jar lid) and place directly in the center of the dough. Take a dough cutter or sharpe knife and lightly score into quarters then each quarter into 6 pieces You could also cut less pieces, but the main thing you need is to have an even number of pieces for the design to work. Once your lines are good, cut the lines by pushing down into the dough and not slicing back and forth.  Grab a piece in each hand and gently  twist the pieces towards each other 3 times then pinch the ends together. Repeat until all the pieces are twisted together. Slide the star onto a large baking sheet, cover, and let rest and rise for another 1/2 hour. 

Preheat oven to 400

When the star is risen again and right before it's going into the oven, brush the top with a little plant milk. Pop it into the oven and bake for about 20- 25 minutes, or until the top is a nice deep gold brown.

Remove from oven and let cool a little bit. If you want a little icing, mix together the vanilla, powdered sugar, and plant milk. Wait until the star is less the hot and drizzle all over.

And now it's time to get at it. Eat what you want and store the rest in an air tight container. 

In breakfast, bread, brunch, Dairy Free, desserts, Vegan Tags Cinnamon Star Bread, Cinnamon buns, vegan, Vegan cinnamon buns, King Arthur flour, breakfast, dessert, plant based, bake along, yeasted bread, feeds a crowd, food design
6 Comments

Acorn Squash Quick Bread

October 14, 2017 Colleen Stem
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I forgot how amazing fall baking smells. The spiciness floating throughout the house, lingering on my clothes, in my hair, up the stairs and into the bedroom. It goes everywhere. Unfortunately it didn't last very long this time around because the mr made popcorn and then the whole house ended up smelling like a freaking movie theater, but for a little while it was so nice. I want to bake everyday just to stink the house up all nice. I might just do that. 

Everyone eats the pumpkin bread or the pumpkin this or pumpkin that. But why does't everyone harness the greatness of all the other winter squashes in baking? This I do not know. Don't get me wrong, I love pumpkin but I also think that it's very interchangeable in most baking applications. Like this quick  bread. I am sure that some people would notice that it is not pumpkin, but these same people would also enjoy the subtle difference in flavor. Acorn squash is a sweet and delicious squash and makes a fine fine bread my friends. And the acorn squash is cheaper then sugar pumpkins which is aways a plus. And the winter squash keeps longer the pumpkins so the are available longer. Acorn squash bread all winter long. (Yup, I am thinking winter already)

This bread lasted less then a day. The mr got a couple slices but some littles came over and ate almost the entire loaf. The didn't ask what kind of squash I used, they just ate it vigorously and left heir little crumbs all over. So Bean with her mouth full of bread declared it A-MAZING. From the mouth of a 5 year old.

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The stuff. The flour, baking soda and powder, salt, and cinnamon are in one bowl. The squash puree, oil, brown sugar, maple syrup, and apple cider vinegar in another .Also need a little plant milk a bit more cinnamon and sugar for topping.

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Simple simple. Whisk together the dry then whisk together the wet.

Pour wet into dry and mix until incorporated.

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And there you have it.  Acorn squash bread batter. 

Batter goes into a well greased bread pan and sprinkles all over with cinnamon sugar. Then into the oven (preheated of course) it goes.

All baked up and cooling. Like what I did there?  More circulation to the bottom  so it cools faster.. I am so smart.

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The mr came home right when I was contemplating whether it was cool enough to cut.  It wasn't but I cut it anyway. 

Have a great fall weekend!

-C  


Acorn Squash Quick Bread 

makes 1 loaf

  • 1 1/2 cups acorn squash puree*
  • 1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup whole wheat flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon plus 1 teaspoon
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar plus 1 tablespoon
  • 1/2 cup maple syrup
  • 1/2 cup oil 
  • 1/3 cup plant based milk
  • 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar 

*To make acorn squash puree, stick an acorn squash into a oven at 400 for about 40 minutes or until until fork tender. Remove from oven, cut in half, and let cool until you can handle it. Scoop out seeds (save for roasting) then scoop out flesh (eat skin as snack) and puree in blender. Add a splash of water if needed to get a smooth puree.

preheat oven to 350

In a large bowl mix together the squash, oil, sugar, maple, milk, and apple cider vinegar. Mix until well combined. In a smaller bowl, whisk together the baking soda and powder, the tablespoon cinnamon, salt, and flour. Pour wet into the dry and mix until combined.  Pour into a well greased loaf pan. Combine the tablespoon brown sugar and teaspoon cinnamon and sprinkle on top. Pop into oven and bake for 60-65 minutes or until a tester poked into middle comes out clean.

Once cooked, remove from oven and let cool for a few minutes. Remove form loaf pan and let completely cool. 

Eat what you want and store the rest in an air tight container for a few days. Can be sliced and frozen too.

 

In Dairy Free, bread, desserts, fall, Vegan Tags Acorn squash, quick bread, vegan, fall, baked goods, acorn squash quick bread, not pumpkin bread, plant based, dairy free, maple syrup
2 Comments

Yeasted Banana Sandwich Bread

March 18, 2017 Colleen Stem
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What do you do when you have a bazillion ripe bananas? A sweet banana bread? Banaer ice cream? Mash them up in your oatmeal? These are what I usually do, well these things and just stock my freezer full of bananas because I am pretty sure that there should always be bananas in the freezer. .

I went grocery shopping and bought like a billion bananas because they were dirt cheap (19 cents a pound) and why not. There is plenty of room in the freezer.

And it was a bread making day. I wanted to make bread that involved a good knead, that the mr could have as a sandwich loaf, and that had bananas in it. (I love adding fruit and veggie purees to breads) I needed a multi functional loaf that can be used for toast and sandwiches. So I made it.

This bread doesn't have a crazy powerful banana flavor, just a light bananerness that adds a touch of sweetness and yum to the bread. Perfect for slices and slathering with peanut butter.

Pretty sure I scored on this one. It was well loved by many and eaten within days. Lucky for the mr I have a billion bananas.

The stuff. Some all purpose flour and some whole wheat (with germ) flour. A couple really ripe bananas, a little earth balance, salt, yeast, and water.

Peel and blended bananas into a smooth banana puree.

Add enough water to the bananas to make 2 cups of liquid.  Add in the yeast and earth balance and blend that in too.

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Wet gets dumped and mixed into the (mixed) flours and salt.

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Wet shaggy dough gets dumped onto the floured counter and kneaded for about 10 minutes into a nice uniform and smooth ball

In a bowl doing the rise

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Once risen twice it's size, dump dough onto counter, shape into a log and place into a well greased loaf pan. Cover with plastic or wax paper and set to rise again. Second rise will take a little less time then the first, just wait for the dough to dome over the sides of the pan.

Once it looks good, stick the thing into a preheated oven, close the door, and watch it bake (for about 50 minutes)

Golden brown, hollow sounding, and the instant read thermometer reads 190....Bread is all baked.Now hard part. Let that loaf sit and cool completely. (trust, it needs to cool or you will just mush it)

Now that its cooled, you slice and eat. A loaf of bread with a slight hint of banana ready for you face.

The mr has been eating it toasted with peanut butter like I predicted or dipping it into his split pea soup. (he really liked it with the soup) Just suggestions.

Bye.

-C


Yeasted Banana Sandwich Bread

makes one loaf

  • 2 1/4 to 2 1/2 cups all purpose flour
  • 1 cup whole wheat with bran flour (plus a little more for kneading)
  • 2 rip bananas
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons yeast (or 1 packet)
  • 2 teaspoons earth balance (or butter)
  • 1- 1/12 cups warm water

Peel bananas and blend them into a smooth puree. Add enough warm water to the banana mixture to equal 2 cups of liquid. Add the yeast and earth balance to the puree and mix until fully incorporated. Let sit for a few minutes to active yeast.

Whisk together the flours (start with the lesser amount) and salt in a large bowl. Dump the wet mixture into the bowl and mix together with a dough whisk or wooden spoon until you can no longer mix. If the dough is really wet, add in the other 1/4 of flour. Dump dough out onto a lightly floured surface and knead dough for about 10 minutes.

Place in a clean greased bowl and cover with plastic or wax paper and a towel and place in a warm place to rise. Depending on how warm your place is, it will take about 1 to 1 1/2 hours to double in size. Once risen, dump onto counter, shape into a log and place into a greased loaf pan. Cover again with plastic or wax paper and set to rise again for about 1/2- 45 minutes or until the dough forms a dome over the pan.

Preheat oven to 350.

When dough is done second rise, stick it into the preheated oven and bake. It should be in there for about 50 minutes, but check at 45 for a deep golden color and a internal temperature of 190. Once done, remove from oven, gently remove from pand and set on a wire rack to cool completely.

Once cooled you can go for it.

Stay fresh for about 3 days in a air tight container, but I would slice and freeze any if not gone by then.

In Winooski, Vegan, fruit, Dairy Free, bread Tags Yeasted banana bread, bread, yeasted bread, whole wheat bread, sandwich bread, vegan, banana, red cat farm
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