Date Nut Bread Recipe, and learning to fly solo

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Three loaves of date bread on a parchment paper, with the one on the right being sliced.

When I went to culinary school a few years ago, I wanted to make a change as much as I wanted to cook great food. I left the job I’d been working in Chicago for years, left the neighborhood where I’d been living all those years too, and headed west to San Francisco.

Growing up in our big, Lebanese family, I hadn’t experienced much solo time—time to hike the inroads that tell us who we are and that can only be walked alone. Even when I went away to college, I had brothers and sisters there, fun times I wouldn’t trade. But perhaps not eking out enough solo time, over time, played its role in keeping me at arm’s length from the things I did, and wanted to do, best. Maybe not enough solo time also played its role in leading up to the painfully brief marriage I entered, and exited, not long before the seeds of change (we’re talking watermelon-sized seeds, not mustard) started sprouting deep within.

Medjool dates on a white dish.

I came across many Sherpas who helped me find my way. There was my Sherpa sister, who I’d lived with a long time and who kept the voice of you’re-going-to-be-ok thrumming in my ears. One way she did that was to gift me with a candy-making class at the French Pastry School in Chicago, a precursor to my culinary school leap. That week in the kitchen taught me about tempering chocolate, respecting the ingredients, and listening closely to what the process is telling you. In learning to make candy, I found the perfect metaphor for what was happening in my life, learning to temper, respect, and listen…to myself.

There was also my Sherpa bishop, the super-beloved Timothy Lyne at Holy Name Cathedral who passed away a few months ago well into his 90s. Peg, our friend Beth, and I had bought a fundraiser auction item to have dinner with Bishop Lyne years ago. When we had the dinner, he talked about how grateful he was for the life he’d been able to lead as a priest, and how happy he’d been doing his work. He asked us personal, heartfelt questions about our way in the world. His every word made me want to walk his way.

Which I did, right into his office, when I decided an annulment was in order (my experience with that was a good one, one that cleared the mind and the air). I was nervous walking in, a little shamed, feeling like a spiritual failure. Maybe that’s why I brought along a loaf of my sister’s date bread to soften the blow, for myself if nothing else. A sweet treat with dates like my sticky date cake and date maamoul (as well as my walnut maamoul) always seem to melt people’s hearts. Bishop Lyne was interested in the sweet bread, but not so much as he was interested in listening to what had happened, and getting to the heart of where I’d been and where I was headed. Walking out I felt less the failure, and more the freedom one experiences when her life begins to find its way, when she has nothing to hide and nothing to hold her back. Before I stepped out into that snapping cold Chicago afternoon, Bishop Lyne took me by the shoulders and placed his worn, useful, shepherd hands on my head, and he blessed me, a kind of baptism for my future.

Mini loaves of date bread.

Not long after that, from the first day I walked through the doors of Tante Marie’s Cooking School, hiking the lovely, challenging hills of San Francisco to get there, I started having fun with what I do. My uniform of black-checked pants and chef’s coat with my happy green Dansko clogs gave me the sweet pleasure that only a uniform worn for work one loves can give: I’m becoming a chef! I thought, every time I donned my whites. Of course, I had that same thought, but without the smile, without the exclamation point, every time I sliced into my fingers, burned the caramel, or had to clean out the compost bins. But even then, I took the knocks and found there was nothing, nothing at all, that could detract from the joy of working hard at something one loves to do.

Culinary school is in large measure about learning to cook without recipes, without going back to a guide to figure out the next step. Our Sherpa, once we got the hang of it and could really let go, would be our own selves.

We learned to fly solo by tuning in to our senses—taste and sound and smell and touch—to show us what to do next, how to correct course when necessary, and how to end with a good result, no matter what happened on the way there.

Three mini loaves of date nut bread.
5 from 1 vote

Date Nut Bread

My sister made this bread regularly and gifted many loaves to Bishop Lyne in Chicago. He tended to think we were the same person, or at least that my number was Peg’s, because whenever he received the bread, he called me, not her, to say thanks!
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 1 hour
Total: 1 hour 15 minutes
Servings: 10 slices

Ingredients 

  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 cup hot water
  • 1 cup dates, pitted and chopped
  • 1 egg, lightly beaten
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour, unbleached
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • ½ cup toasted chopped walnuts

Instructions 

  • Grease and flour one 9×5-inch loaf pan (or three mini-loaf pans). Preheat the oven to 350⁰F.
  • In a small bowl, dissolve the baking soda in the hot water. Add the dates and soften for 5 minutes.
  • Add the beaten egg to the dates and combine thoroughly. Set aside.
  • In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar and salt.
  • Add the date mixture, olive oil, and walnuts and stir just until no streaks of flour remain.
  • Pour the batter into the prepared loaf pan, and bake for 1 hour for the loaf pan (about 30 minutes for the mini loaf pans), or until the bread is golden brown and a wooden pick inserted in the center comes out clean.

Nutrition

Serving: 1slice | Calories: 260kcal | Carbohydrates: 46g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 7g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 3g | Trans Fat: 0.002g | Cholesterol: 16mg | Sodium: 233mg | Potassium: 155mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 25g | Vitamin A: 26IU | Vitamin C: 0.1mg | Calcium: 18mg | Iron: 2mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Additional Info

Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 1 hour 15 minutes
Course: Dessert, Snack
Servings: 10 slices
Calories: 260
Like this recipe? Leave a comment below!
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34 Comments

  1. I relly love your story…
    thank you for sharing, and for the bread, sounds great.
    Jenny from Mexico City

    1. Good question–no, the mixture isn’t hot enough to cook the eggs–it will mix just fine!

  2. Hi Maureen. I just went to your website after I’d emailed you. This is so great! The recipes look yummy. I can’t wait to try the potato wedges. I’m very excited for you—publishing your first cookbook! Congratulations.

  3. Maureen! its been so many years, but I remember well your place in Chicago with Peggy and love that I happened upon your blog somehow! gorgeous food and so excited for all the changes in your life! I live in Houston now, and there are so many fantastic Persian restaurants we go to – so I’m learning as I go and I got the Jerusalem cookbook, and so I am inspired by the whole regions’ cooking. I just bought an enormous package of dates and was unsure what to do with them next – date bread! from the great Peg Abood, no less! love it. All the best my fellow SMCer, Megan

    1. Megan, how great to see you here! I love your interest in Middle Eastern food, and think this bread will make you happy! Warm regards to you in Houston from both me and Peg, and please keep in touch!

  4. Hi Maureen, Joan Otto told our group at lunch about your new cookbook. But I found your blog quite by coincidence when I googled images of yeast when it is being proofed. You had the prettiest pic of yeast so I clicked and voila! I look forward to trying this and other recipes. Thanks for sharing!

  5. I hope I will join a cooking school or course like you, where I learn “to cook without recipes”. I’m also Lebanese and I’m lucky to have had the opportunity to experience life solo while pursuing my Bachelor degree in Switzerland. This period of my life taught me about myself and gave me confidence.

  6. What a beautiful story; thanks so much for sharing. Learning to fly solo is an important part of growing up, whatever age it happens at. Can’t wait to try this bread, either.

  7. Hello Maureen , I am lebanese from Beirut,love ur blog.
    Did u try baking with almond meal and substitute
    The sugar with honey. Need some help there pls
    Trying to bake healthy
    Thank u
    Mayada

    1. That is healthy and good, Mayada, and I wish I had tried it to tell you how it comes out. If you do, please let us all know!

    2. Hello Mayada! I hope you are well in Beirut. I have not tried baking this with almond meal and honey–I think you would need a mix of alternate flours rather than just almond meal, but I don’t have a specific recipe that I have tested for that approach for this bread. Try this site for how to bake gluten-free.

  8. Your introspection about flying solo is deep and useful for us all, dear Maureen. I loved this line, too:
    “Culinary school is in large measure about learning to cook without recipes, without going back to a guide to figure out the next step. Our Sherpa, once we got the hang of it and could really let go, would be our own selves.” So true. Continue writing and know that each of us flies solo all our lives, whether with others or not.
    XOOX Toni

  9. Just a beautiful reflection! God is with you into cooking up a beautiful future. I worked in SF for almost 2 years, so I remember those hills!

  10. Your stories are so interesting and inspiring. I love to read your blog! I am from Okemos and live in AZ in the winter. Your thoughts bring me back to MI in so many ways! Thank you. I also love your recipes.

  11. Just love reading And sharing in your life journey…you give the rest of us schleps the courage to follow the non traditional path… Whatever that may be…thank you for sharing, thank you for having the courage to put on the white coat… I really do wait every week for the next recipe… The candied cranberry salad was a HUGE hit!! Cheers my friend!!

  12. What a beautiful obituary Bishop Lyne inspired; a life well lived. And a touching and courageous post from you, Maureen.

  13. I love your analogy between tempering chocolate and life lessons, well said! I stopped and sat up even straighter when I saw the name of your cooking school … all my grand nieces and nephews, and a few of their parents, call me Tante Mary! Looking forward to trying this recipe as well.

  14. Love quick breads, i.e. no yeast. This one looks great and I’ll try it. Also love your emails but haven’t had time to reply before. Una M.