Settin' 'round bread
1/4 c. water at 105º F
1/3 c. turbinado sugar (most any sugar will do, though)
2 pkgs. active dry yeast
1/4 c. butter
1/4 c. shortening
1 1/2 c. water
1/2 c. milk
1 large egg
1 c. non-fat dry milk
1 1/2 tsp. salt
1 1/2 Tbsp. honey
1/8 tsp. ground cinnamon
1/4 c. rolled oats
1/4 c. corn meal
1/4 c. bran
1/4 c. cracked wheat
1/4 c. buckwheat
1/4 c. soy flour
1 c. rye flour
2 1/2 c. whole wheat flour
3 c. white flour
butter


Melt the shortening and the butter. Let them cool a bit,  so as not to kill the yeast when they are added to the  dough.  If you want to scald the milk, do so, and also let it cool (it is common practice to scald milk before  baking with it, though I never do.) Dissolve the yeast  and sugar in the 1/4 cup of lukewarm water. Mix the cinnamon, oats, corn meal, bran, cracked wheat,  buckwheat, soy flour, and rye flour. Add the rest of the  water, the milk, butter, shortening, egg, and honey, and mix well.  Stir in the dissolved yeast mixture.  Mix in  the salt, and the whole wheat flour. Stir in the white  flour, about  1/2 cup  at a time, until the mixture is  stiff enough to knead.  You'll probably have about half  of it left. Remove the dough from the mixing bowl, onto  a floured surface. Knead the dough, adding more white  flour as necessary to keep the dough workable. Knead the dough until it is smooth and elastic, about ten minutes. It's okay if you end up using less than or
more than the three cups of white flour; just use whatever it takes. Put the dough back into a bowl that's been very lightly greased.  Let it rise, covered, in a still, warm place (around 85º F is best, though room temperature will work) for 45 minutes, or until it has doubled in bulk. Punch the dough down, divide in half, shape into loaves, and place each half into a loaf pan which has been very lightly greased. Let rise again, for another 45 minutes, in a still, warm place, until the loaves have about doubled in bulk. Preheat the oven to 350 F as the bread finishes rising. Bake the bread for 3540 minutes, until it sounds hollow when tapped. Remove from the loaf pans, and rub the top of the loaves with some butter to give them a nice, soft, chewy crust.
Red meat is not bad for you.  Now blue-green meat, that’s bad for you! 
~Tommy Smothers
When you need soft butter quick..  If your butter is frozen, grate it, it's the same as soft butter.
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