Random (but not really)

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Tasty Tuesday: Italian Bread

I’ve been making bread fairly regularly since the beginning of the year. This week I decided to try the recipe from Peter Reinhart’s The Bread Baker’s Apprentice: Mastering the Art of Extraordinary Bread.

His ingredients and technique are different from the recipe I’d been using out of the The King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion, and although I didn’t follow it 100% (I make my biga right before I go to bed, I wasn’t about to wait 2 to 4 hours, then refrigerate, then pull it out and let it warm up for an hour before continuing; never mind the lack of room in my refrigerator.)

"Italian" Bread

"Italian" Bread

"Italian" bread

Written by Michelle at 6:00 am    

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Thursday, January 14, 2010

What I’ve Been Reading: Baking Books

Between the holidays and the unusually cold weather, I’ve been baking up a storm.

Now, I love baking cookies, but after all the Christmas cookies I made, I wanted to make something different. Since I don’t like cake, I decided to try breads (pies are okay, but I find pie crust more frustrating than fun).

Now I have lots and lots of cookbooks, however, over half of them are for desserts and cookies and sweets. I discovered I really only had a couple good resources when it came to bread.

First was the King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion. This is this first book I grabbed of the shelf when looking for a specific bread recipe (such as the Challah I decided to make over the holidays). This is a very good all purpose book. The recipes always turn out well (unless I make unexpected substitutions without planning ahead), and they always taste good. I use King Arthur flour in my baking, but any quality flour will work fine I’m sure. Of course the advantage of using KAF, is that you don’t have to worry about regional variations in the gluten levels of the flour.

From the Baker’s Companion I made Challah and Italian bread, both of which turned out very well.

An advantage of those recipes is they called for all purpose flour. Yes, you can make substitutions, but if the recipe calls for one type of flour, you’re always better off sticking with that kind of flour. This is of course an advantage if you don’t bake frequently, and are unlikely to use the bread flour before it goes bad.

Now if you like lots of pictures, this is not the book for you. There are a handful of pictures, but for the most part this is your standard cookbook with very few pictures. Not that there’s anything wrong with this, it just means this book isn’t as pretty as some of the others out there.

As far as the recipes, they’re simple, and I very much like the way the recipes are laid out: all the ingredients are listed at the top, and if an ingredient is used multiple times, it is listed multiple times. Since I have a habit of leaping before I look, I find this very useful.

The next book I grabbed was a Passion for Baking by Marcy Goldman. My aunt & uncle gave me this book for Christmas several years ago, and my pizza dough is based upon the recipe in this book.

The first chapter is dedicated to discussing different baking techniques, ingredients and tools. Most good baking books start this way, but it’s actually important to know how the author does things–especially if you don’t measure your ingredients by weight.

There are plenty of pictures here, showing everything from end results to intermediary steps. And they’re not just gorgeous pictures, but pictures of foods it looks like a normal human could bake. (I love Baking with Julia, but the photography only serves to make the book more intimidating, and I almost never use that book out of fear.)

The recipes are clear, and there are plenty of side notes, explaining different tricks or asides.

As I said, I very much like her pizza dough recipe and techniques, and have used that recipe for quite awhile. I also decided to branch out and tried her “BLT Bread” loaf. That turned out extremely well, and Grandmom particularly liked that bread. We made grilled cheese sandwiches from this bread, and they were fabulous. I also tried her cinnamon bread recipe, however, I attempted to substitute white wheat for all purpose (which I have done with several recipes from KAF) and although the bread tastes fine, it didn’t rise much, so that was somewhat disappointing. But again, that was the fault of the baker rather than the recipe.

And finally, I ordered The Bread Baker’s Apprentice by Peter Reinhart, which I am slowly working my way through. He goes into great detail regarding technique, and I am learning a lot, but it is a bit overwhelming. Nothing like a good book to make you feel like you know nothing.

So that’s what I’ve been reading. And unlike most of the other books I read, these are leading to so fabulous and delicious results.

Written by Michelle at 6:00 am    

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Categories: Books & Reading,Food  

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Tasty Tuesday: Cinnamon Bread

Grandmom has been complaining that I haven’t been making enough things she can eat, so I made cinnamon bread on Sunday.

Cinnamon Swirl Bread
Dough:
1 cup warm water
4 tbsp butter
3 tbsp sugar
1/4 cup potato flour
1/4 cup dry milk
2 1/2 tsp yeast
1 1/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp cinnamon
3 cups all purpose flour
Filling:
1/4 cup sugar
1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
2 tsp flour
1 egg
1 tbsp water
Topping:
2 tbsp butter
2 tbsp sugar
1/2 tsp cinnamon
2 tbsp flour

Mix together the water, butter, sugar, potato flour, dry milk, and yeast. Add the salt and cinnamon. Slowly add all-purpose flour until smoothly incorporated. Knead with mixer for 5 to 10 minutes. Allow to rise for 1 to 1 1/2 hours in a slightly oiled bowl, covered with plastic wrap.

Once dough is finished rising, whisk together sugar, cinnamon, and flour. Beat together egg and water.

Roll dough into a large rectangle. Thickly brush some of the egg wash onto the dough rectangle (I only brushed on a light coating, and the swirl separated some). cover the surface of the dough with the cinnamon/sugar/flour.

cinnamon_bread_0001

Roll up the dough, and place into small, lightly greased loaf plan.

cinnamon_bread_0002

I rolled the dough up and then folded it under itself. They suggest rolling the dough longways.

cinnamon_loaf_0004

Allow dough to rise for about an hour at room temperature.

After dough has risen, preheat oven to 350.

Pulse topping ingredients in food processor (recipe called for twice as much flour, but this made way too much topping, and the consistency seemed off). Brush egg wash into top of risen loaf. Sprinkle with topping. (I did this over a piece of parchment paper to make clean up easier.)

Back 350 for 45 minutes.

Allow to cool for 5 minutes. Slide knife or other utensil around edge of loaf to release from pan. Remove bread from pan. You’ll want to do this over parchment paper or waxed paper to make clean-up easier, as a bunch of the topping will fall off.

Completely cool and then eat.

cinnamon_loaf_0001

From the King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion.

Written by Michelle at 8:00 am    

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Tasty Tuesday: Poticza

I love baked goods with nuts in them. Heck, I love all kinds of foods with nuts. In a conversation with Tania she mentioned a nut bread a friend used to make.

She sent me the recipe and the source, which I discovered was in a cookbook that I have, The King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion.

Poticza

The bread is completely delicious–I’ll definitely make it again. However, the directions left something to be desired.

The problem is they had me roll out the dough, and then roll the nut paste on top of the dough. Unfortunately, the bread dough is very soft, so when I rolled the nut paste onto the dough, the dough became extremely thin, especially in the center.

So next time I may try and roll out the nut paste and then put it on the bread dough. That may keep the dough from getting too thin when it is rolled out.

Regardless of how it looked, it was very very delicious.

Written by Michelle at 8:00 am    

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Categories: Food,Photos  

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Tasty Tuesday: Holiday Baking

Somehow the holidays always surprise me with how quickly they arrive. Luckily, the only thing I have to do before Christmas is bake.

And bake I have. Here’s what I’ve made so far:

Peanut Butter Blossoms
Lemon Shortbread Coins, from The Essential Baker by Carole Bloom
Spiced Sugar Coins, from The Essential Baker by Carole Bloom
Hazelnut-Chocolate Chip Cookies, from The All-American Dessert Book by Nancy Baggett (modified)
Lemon Snowflake Cookies, from The All-American Dessert Book by Nancy Baggett (these were a mess to make)
Pumpkin Whoopie Pies, from The All-American Dessert Book by Nancy Baggett
King Arthur’s Special Roll-Out Sugar Cookies, from The King Arthur Flour Cookie Book
Sour Cream Nutmeg Sugar Cookies, from Christmas Cookies
Cranberry-Caramel Bars, from Christmas Cookies (modified)
Lemon Cornmeal Shortbread Bars, from The Best of Fine Cooking: Cookies
Giant Cranberry Oatmeal Cookies, from The Best of Fine Cooking: Cookies (modified to be not giant)
Peanut Butter & Chocolate Shortbread Bars, from The Best of Fine Cooking: Cookies

I still need to decorate the sugar cookies and make the pumpkin and sweet potato pies, and Michael is still planning on making peanut butter fudge.

Now before you think I’ve completely lost my mind, I did give cookies to my co-workers for Christmas, and will give them to some others tomorrow.

AND I didn’t bake up the full recipes for some of the cookies. So I’ve got frozen dough I can bake at any time. Yum!

Lemon Snowflake Cookies

Lemon Snowflake Cookies

Lemon_Coins

Lemon Coins

Oatmeal_Cranberry

Oatmeal Cranberry Cookies (with coconut, pecans, and white “chocolate”)

Sugar_Cookies

Sugar Cookies


Written by Michelle at 7:28 pm    

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Categories: Food,Photos  

Saturday, December 13, 2008

To-ing and Fro-ing

Today was full of doing stuff. Not anything particularly fun, but the grocery shopping and laundry and all that other stuff that ends up on the back burner until the weekend.

However, on the bright side, since I was already on my feet the whole day, I made pizza for dinner, and there is bread pudding with vanilla ice cream and whiskey sauce for dessert.

Mmmmm!

No, I didn’t take any pictures, as I was making dinner and dessert at the same time while washing up as I went. So you’ll just have to imagine.

Or perhaps I’ll just take a picture of the end product–a couple spoonfuls of piping hot bread pudding with a scoop of vanilla ice cream and whiskey sauce poured over the entire thing.

I love baking.

Written by Michelle at 7:55 pm    

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Categories: Food  

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