I like to eat a variety of tasty and healthy food, but it is difficult to feed a growing family well amidst work, kids' activities, and varying tastes. As you all know, cooking involves planning, shopping, execution, and cleanup! It just plain requires a significant time commitment, even when you apply expert advice like Mel's. But I fight the daily and weekly fight because I think it's worth it--for our health, for our environment, for our pocketbook, and for the development of important hands-on life skills. And because I believe in the power of sitting down together to eat with the people you love.
With that little manifesto over, here's a recipe from Mel that seems more suited to the fall than the winter. (You can see from the picture that I didn't try it until December myself!) But I think it's good enough to enjoy anytime!
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Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Bread, High Altitude (4500 feet)
Adapted from the sea level recipe at Mel's Kitchen Cafe
Yields 3 8.5 x 4.5 inch loaves
365 g (approximately 2 c + scant 3/4 c) flour
146 g (approximately 1 c + 1 T) white whole wheat flour
464 g (approximately 2 1/4 c + 1 heaping T) sugar
2 teas baking soda
2 teas cinnamon
1 teas nutmeg
1 teas salt
2 c dark chocolate chips (use your preference of chocolate here)
1 15 oz. can pumpkin puree
1 15 oz. can pumpkin puree
1 c canola, vegetable, avocado, or melted coconut oil
4 large eggs
2/3 c water or buttermilk
Preheat oven to 350F. Grease 3 loaf pans. (Mel says you could use 2 9 x 5 inch pans instead.)
Mix flours, sugar, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, and chocolate chips in a large bowl.
Whisk together the pumpkin, oil, eggs, and water/buttermilk in a medium bowl until well combined. Then stir the wet ingredients into the dry, until barely combined, no more.
Pour the batter into the loaf pans and bake for 50-70 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean. Let the pans sit outside the oven for 10-15 minutes, then run a knife gently around the edge before placing the bread on a cooling rack to cool completely.
I didn't try this but Mel says the bread freezes well. Wrap a loaf in plastic wrap then tin foil before freezing.