Yeast
Pesto-Potato Rolls
These pretty rolls are baked side by side in cake pans. To serve, turn the rolls out of the pans, and let your guests pull them apart.
Banana Fritters with Honey and Ice Cream
Wemonrat Pok, an immigrant from Thailand, opened Siam House 11 years ago near the campus of Indiana University in the lively college town of Bloomington. It's a family business — Wemonrat is the chef, and her aunt and cousin help out with the cooking. The elegant restaurant with several small dining rooms occupies a lovely old home. Thai sculptures and creaky hardwood floors add to the charm; great food and an accommodating staff keep locals coming back.
The batter and bananas can be prepared ahead of time, leaving only the frying to do at the last minute.
By Wemonrat Pok
Rye Twists with Anise, Fennel and Orange
One bread that Swedish settlers brought to the heartland was limpa; these twists are a nice twist on that classic.
Parma Braids
Don't be put off by what might look like a complicated technique. It takes more time to describe how to make Parma braids than it does to actually assemble them. Slightly salty and very buttery, these savory croissants are hard to resist.
Active time: 2 hr Start to finish: 18 hr
Almost Grandmother's Challah
To make this bread easier to prepare, shape the dough into two loaves after the second rising instead of forming braided loaves, as is traditional. Place each loaf in a buttered 9x5x3-inch loaf pan and continue as per recipe.
By Arthur Wenner
Pretzel Rolls
These really do taste like pretzels, but they're shaped like regular dinner rolls. Quick-rising yeast makes them a cinch to prepare, and boiling them before baking is the secret to their superb texture.
Potato, Onion and Caraway Cloverleaf Rolls
Potatoes lend moistness, and caraway seeds and onions--two ingredients favored by German, Scandinavian and Eastern European immigrants--add flavor to these traditionally shaped rolls.
Whole-Wheat Bread Hayes
By Timothy J. Hayes
Cheese Bread Zuder
By Delores Zuder
Ballymaloe Brown Bread
This no-knead, one-rise bread was introduced by Doris Grant in her book Your Daily Bread. This recipe is an improved version devised by Myrtle Allen, founder of the now legendary Ballymaloe House hotel and cooking school in County Cork, Ireland.
By Eric Treuille and Ursula Ferrigno