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Showing posts with label Homemade Bread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homemade Bread. Show all posts

Saturday, July 27, 2013

4 Things Happening Right Now

1. Fresh out of the oven right now! Sicilian No-Knead Sesame Bread, made with whole durum flour! So easy and definitely a family favorite!

 

 

2. Mason Jar lunches are being prepared for next week!

 

 

3. Things are growing in the garden, despite the adverse conditions inherent to the blisteringly hot Phoenix summers, followed by the somewhat more destructive Monsoon storms! The new transplants and seeds for the fall planting season are going in too, but that’s a whole post all by itself!

 

 

4. Figs Galore! Fresh fig abundance has come to our house, thanks to a friend with a very prolific fig tree! Now we are reveling in fresh figs, fig jam, bacon-caramelized onion-fig chutney and homemade fig and coconut ice cream!

 

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Swabian Potato Bread (Schwäbisches Kartoffelbrot)

 

This bread has fast become one of our favorites!

As the bread baker of the family, I always like to be inspired to try new bread recipes or methods, and there is so much inspiration on the web! Rarely do breads however come out the way they are supposed to - even for a seasoned bread baker like myself!

This one, however, was a success from the very first time I tried it! I didn’t alter the recipe very much - it works fine as it is!

There is something so utterly delicious about fresh baked bread, and this potato bread does not disappoint in aroma, texture or flavor!

 

When you read through the recipe, it may seem like a lot of work, but really it isn’t, especially once you get into the grove of it. Since I usually prepare some type of dough for my bread in the evening before baking, making the 3 different batches was different but not really more work!

And on baking day itself, things go pretty swiftly too!

This bread is so delicious right out of the oven, with that wonderful crackling of the crust when you cut that first slice!

However, unlike many other loaves, this bread still has a delicious and moist crumb, days later.

In fact, it’s still great even over a week later, as we found out this week!

We all came down with a stomach virus and were off bread for a few days, yet the bread was still great, with a chewy crust and a moist interior. There is a slight note of sourdough, but it is not pronounced.

 

It’s an all around good bread that goes with savory as well as sweet! The crust is quite tender too, which my currently somewhat toothless children really appreciate!

 

I reminds me of the bread I grew up with! But better, somehow! This one doesn’t go stale as quickly and is so flavorful!

And even though it is called “potato bread”, it really has very little potato in it. Just one small one for the whole loaf. However, it seems to do amazing things to the crumb!

 

So, here are the step-by-step instructions for this delectable bread!

I am doing this recipe in grams, as it is just so much more accurate and ensures baking success, especially with bread. So, please get out your kitchen scales!

 

Swabian Potato Bread

 

The Night before:


SOURDOUGH
135 g  Rye flour
135 g  Water
13g  Sourdough starter 100% Hydration -(freshly fed)

---> COMBINE IN A BOWL, LOSELY COVER AND LET IT SIT ON THE COUNTER TOP OVERNIGHT(12-16 hrs.)


PRE-DOUGH

100g  Unbleached Wheat Flour
90 g  Water
1/8 tsp Granulated yeast   

---> COMBINE IN A BOWL OR JAR, LET IT SIT AT ROOM TEMPERATURE FOR 2 HRS, THEN PLACE IN THE REFRIGERATOR OVER NIGHT (12-16 hrs.)

   
SOAKER
40 g  Bread Crumbs (Any will work, I have even done it with some gluten-free bread crumbs that needed using up!)
75 g Water

---> COMBINE IN A BOWL OR JAR AND LET SIT IN THE REFRIGERATOR OVER NIGHT.

On Baking Day:


MAIN DOUGH:

150 g  Potatoes (cooked, peeled and mashed with a fork)

415 g Unbleached Wheat Flour

120 g Water

3  g   Granulated Yeast

16  g Salt (I use Pink Himalayan Sea Salt)

10 g Oil, Ghee, Lard or Palm Shortening


Preparation:


Prepare the Soaker, Sourdough and Pre-dough as instructed above.

On baking day, combine the ingredients of the main dough with all the other ingredients and knead with the dough hook attachment on low for 4 minutes in a stand mixer.

The dough should be slightly sticky and not coming off the sides of the bowl. If necessary, add a little more water.

Turn the speed up to medium and knead the dough for a further 5 minutes.

Place the dough into an oiled bowl, cover and let rise for one hour.

Shape the loaf  by gently folding the sides inwards a few times, without kneading it too much. We want to preserve some of that rise! Place into a floured proofing basket.

Let the dough rise for another hour or so. It should almost be fully proofed.

Heat a pizza or baking stone in the oven at 480 F. Once it reaches temperature, let it heat up for a further 15 minutes.

While it is heating, turn the proofed loaf onto a baking peel sprinkled with corn flour or semolina, or onto a sheet of baking parchment (that’s what I use.)

Brush off the excess flour and slash the loaf 2-3 times, depending on the shape of your loaf.

 

 

Transfer the loaf onto the baking stone and just before closing the oven door, pour a cup or so of water in the bottom of the oven. Quickly close the oven door, so as little steam as possible escapes.

We’re going to bake this loaf with  sliding temperature and several injections of steam for a total of 1 hour.

After you put the loaf on the stone and injected your first steam, leave it to bake for 15 minutes. Reduce the temperature to 445 F and let it bake for a further 15 minutes. Reduce to 400 F, toss another cup of water on the bottom of your oven and let it bake another 15 minutes. Reduce to 350 F and let it bake for another 15-20 minutes.

 

 

Should the top of your bread get too dark, cover it loosely with a sheet of aluminum foil.

Let the bread cool completely before cutting into it!

 

 

Letting it cool before tearing into it, is pretty much the hardest part around here. The family is swarming the kitchen and checking the oven usually half an hour before it comes out because the smell of fresh crusty bread is all over the house - and it is irresistible!

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

Homemade Bread - Swabian Potato Bread

This is what came out of the oven a mere 30 minutes ago!

I will write about the recipe and method of this particular bread at a later date, since it requires a post all on it’s own! But until then, I wanted to share a picture with you!

Have a happy weekend everyone!

 

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Homemade Bread - 100% Sprouted Spelt Sandwich Loaf

 

This loaf was another experiment with sprouted spelt. The loaf is made with 100% sprouted spelt, but in 3 different forms. I used freshly sprouted organic spelt berries (whole), organic whole sprouted spelt flour and organic sifted, sprouted spelt flour.

This is also the first time I used liquid Levian (which is a form of quite runny sourdough) as a flavor, rather than a method of leavening the bread. No overnight rising for this bread either, the added granulated yeast did all the rising. It was done in a total of 4 hours!

Incidentally, this bread dough came together surprisingly easy and hardly needed any kneading. I gave it a couple of rounds of folding, but that’s about it.

I have to say that the flavor of this bread is amazing! Most fresh bread is pretty good, but the aroma that was filling the house when this was baking was very different and very enticing!

The flavor of the bread is a little on the sweet side, the crumb is moist and a little dense (in a good way.) Next time I want to get a much lighter crust, as this one got a little too dark and I might increase the proofing time to even longer than the two hours it got today. The burst crust on top would indicate, that it wasn’t quite done with the final proofing. 

And I think I might use a loaf pan next time around, rather than this small, but long free-form loaf, so it will be more of a sandwich slice shape!

Other than that however, I think this could be a very good, fully sprouted sandwich bread and a regular go-to for us!

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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Homemade Bread

Today’s loaf is gluten-free. I wanted to experiment with a gluten free loaf that is rich in fiber but not gummy, or sawdust, for that matter! And I wanted a crispy crust!

 

 

It turned out pretty well, even though I do want to tweak the recipe further just a little bit!

I baked it in the Romertopf as a free-form loaf. The flavor was very good, and I even got a nice little oven spring out of it! Especially for a gluten free loaf, which is a bit of a beast when it comes to bread baking! Nice crust too, and the bread isn’t too dense either. Much like a 100% whole wheat loaf, really!

But I would like to work on the texture a little more. I think the dough could have stood being even wetter than it was to maybe get even more of a rise out of it, which would make it just a tad lighter!

Experiments will continue!

 

For now I’m enjoying a toasted slice with some homemade ghee slathered on it!

 

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

Homemade Bread - Spelt Sourdough

 

Today’s bread was a bit of an experiment for me!

I used half freshly ground organic spelt (in the vitamix) and half sprouted (then dried, then ground to flour) spelt.

I used my usual no knead ratio, which usually produces a relatively easy to handle, even though very soft, dough.

Not in this case however. I suspect that the sprouted flour reacts somewhat differently to moisture!

It produced an amazingly sour flavor (in a good way) but the dough stayed VERY soft and sticky, even after the addition of some more flour.This made it very hard to handle the dough, hence the somewhat odd shape and crust. It didn’t even hold it’s basic shape while I was lifting it from the proofing basket to the Clouche on a parchment paper!

The flavor and texture of the bread is, however, very good. As I said, amazing sourdough flavor, nice open holes in the crumb and a lovely crunchy crust!

I will experiment further and will post a recipe once I have devised a more manageable dough!

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Sunday, May 5, 2013

Homemade Bread

This week’s bread was quite the surprise.

Just lately my sourdough has really been taking off and has become quite volatile within 20-30 minutes of feeding it! It might have something to do with using structured water to feed it!

So, yesterday I thought I would try it on a much heavier dough. Normally it takes around 18 hours for the sourdough to rise (first rising), double in volume and develop that yummy sour dough flavor throughout the whole dough. Since I was making a double batch, I would have imagined it taking even a bit longer.

Well, only 7 hours into it, the dough had more than doubled, the familiar sour smell was well developed and I really didn’t want to leave it for another 11 hrs. in case it would wear itself out and not rise again.

I went ahead and shaped the loaves, put them down for their second rising and low and behold - they turned out beautifully!

 

 

This was a medium hydration, no-knead dough and it ended up with a beautifully soft crumb and a rustic crust.

The whole family loved it!

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Thursday, May 2, 2013

Homemade Bread

I make a lot of our bread myself and I thought it might be time to occasionally share pictures of those breads.

Today’s  is a sourdough bread, German Style (meaning a low hydration dough, longer kneading to produce a dense crumb with just a hint of fennel seed to round out the flavor)  fresh out of the oven! Baked in the Romertopf .

 

 

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