Everyone has a favorite or two when it comes to food to take
along on a camping trip. On my cross-country trips, I used to like to take
crackers I made in advance. Big crackers. A whole coffee can full of them. They
kept extremely well, were nourishing, and tasted great. I got the idea for them
from a shop I discovered somewhere in Wyoming, I think. The shop sold something
it called hardtack, made with several grains, and tasted wonderful. I never
quite figured out their recipe, but I certainly enjoyed the version I came up
with. I made the dough from flour, salt, water, and a little oil. To shape the
crackers, I rolled the dough out and cut the crackers with the coffee can I
used to store them. Of course, I docked them with a fork to prevent them from puffing
up too much in the middle, and to make it easier to break them along the
perforated lines.
It’s been years since I’ve made crackers, but I thought it
would be fun to talk about them on my blog. Of course, I think it’s important
to give the recipes I use a re-run, so I decided to make a batch. After all,
they are good with cheese and other toppings, so they wouldn’t go to waste. Out
of curiosity, and because I’ve been having fun with my new computer, I decided to
look up hardtack on the internet. I was amazed to find several recipes and a
number of very enthusiastic people talking about making hardtack, or ships
biscuit, as it is also called. Basically, the recipes called for flour, salt
and water. Most did not even use oil. One directed the cook to knead the dough
and let it rest for quite a while. Naturally I thought, hey why not try making
hardtack with sourdough? I know, hardtack isn’t made with leavening, but the
flavor ought to be good. It seemed worth a try.
I had some very stiff sourdough starter on hand, so I took
roughly equal parts starter and whole wheat flour, mixed it into a ball and put
it on a floured pastry cloth to knead, adding more flour liberally to create a
heavy, grainy texture. I divided the dough into biscuit size lumps and rolled out
each lump into a round sheet about 3/8 inch thick. I did the usual docking
thing with a fork, dusted the bottoms of the dough circles with a little
cornmeal and set up to cook them outside on a camping stove. The outside
cooking had two purposes. Doing so would keep the house cooler—it’s been a
dreadful heat wave. Also, I wanted to use camping gear to make sure the recipe and
technique would be good for camping.
So far, so good. I turned the stove on, got out a frying pan
with a loose lid, and started cooking the first piece of hardtack. Oh, oh. It
burned a bit on the bottom. Oh, well. Who has never had that happen over a
campfire? Just take a picture of the tops? No problem, right? Scrape off the
burned portion, and eat it anyway? Right. Make a note to cook these critters on
a very low heat so they become very well done, but not burned.
Try again. Oh, oh. That one burned too. Not as bad, but
suddenly this cooking event was not looking picture ready and blog friendly.
Down to the last two I had anticipated making. At least they didn’t burn. Now
for the crucial question. How do they taste? Actually, not bad. Definitely
something of a mix between cracker and biscuit, and not like the hardtack I
bought on that long-ago trip. That hardtack was definitely all cracker.
Nevertheless, There’s enough of an intriguing sourdough flavor to keep me
working at this until I’m satisfied. After all, any mystery writer knows good writing is rewriting, sometimes lots of it.
I got to be a guinea pig, and they weren't bad if you put enough sharp cheddar on them and some salami and perhaps a little spicy brown mustard and a bit of arugula and served them alongside a steak or lobster with a good wine. If I keep this up, he won't make me dinner tonight.
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