Posts Tagged ‘Bread’

Baguettes

Baguettes

I had my fair share of baguettes in Paris on my honeymoon. I even went through a baguette and cheese withdrawal when I got back home. How could you not after having it every day for breakfast and for a snack?

I haven’t tried my hand at baguettes yet, but I wanted to use Maggie Glezer’s book, Artisan Baking. I bought this book on a whim with the rave reviews it got from other blogs, but it’s mostly sat on my shelf. Maybe it’s still too advanced for me?

Baguettes take a long time and it’s pretty much a whole day affair if you decide not to wake up at the crack of dawn. The end result is worth it, a crust that shatters once your teeth hit it and a nice chewy interior.

This is probably a bread to reserve for the weekend when you can dedicate your time to it.

Recipe here

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Royal Irish Soda Bread

Royal Irish Soda Bread

Every year I say I’ll make something for St. Patrick’s Day and I never do. Last year the most I did was put a few drops of green food colouring in beer. I’m happy to say that I finally made soda bread, something that has been on my to bake list for awhile. And the bread was almost as simple as adding food colouring to beer. Honest.

This version of soda bread is souped up and deviates from tradition with the added butter, whiskey soaked raisins, and sugar. If you like the taste of scones or biscuits, then you need to try this bread. And don’t skip making the Irish whiskey butter, it really adds something to the bread.

Royal Irish Soda Bread

I think I may also have gotten drunk off of the whiskey fumes — it was pretty strong! I usually shy away from raisins being in baked goods, but I didn’t mind them in the bread. I would probably omit them next time just for simplicity.

Recipe here

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More Best Recipes: Review

I only recently became a Cook’s Illustrated fan. It just looked too intimidating for me. After buying one of their magazines I’ve been a fan of them. They let you know exactly what they’re trying to achieve and if something is too fussy, they’ll find a workaround for it. So while recipes might not taste as mind blowing as possible, the trade off is less effort and time. Great for when you don’t want to be chained to the stove all day long. And the taste is still really good.

More Best Recipes is a follow up to The New Best Recipe. The original has many more recipes and this is meant to compliment it. There are also two sections that are new: make ahead cooking and cooking for two.

I really like the recipes in this book and many are already being in regular rotation. The only recipe that I wouldn’t make again is the stir-fried portabello mushrooms. I have a pretty low sodium tolerance and with all the salt heavy products in it, we just couldn’t finish the dish and had to throw it out. This book also converted me into liking no knead bread. The added beer and easier handling techniques really improved the original recipe. The olive and parmesan no knead bread? Fantastic.

Olive and parmesan no knead bread

I also tried out the ciabatta bread. It’s formulated so that it doesn’t end up being so flat so you can split it in half for a sandwich.

Ciabatta

The flavour was good and the dough was easy to handle where most ciabatta dough is a sticky mess. The only problem with this bread is that it disappears so fast!

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Soft Cheese Bread

Soft Cheese Bread

I make bread frequently enough that I now have a small collection of books solely focused on bread alone. There’s something about the smell of bread baking in the oven and having a slice while still warm slathered with butter.

This isn’t the healthiest bread I’ve made, but it’s also one of the tastiest breads I’ve made (bread and cheese — can you even go wrong there?). This recipe is from Peter Reinhart’s new book Artisan Breads Every Day. It was nice to be able to mix the dough and have it sit in the fridge for a few days before baking. This makes it easy to fit into your schedule. There’s a lot of cheese involved so it’s a good way to use up any leftover cheeses. I did a mix of cheddar and cambozola and I think next time I’ll make one entirely of cambozola. My huge stand mixer had severe issues handling this dough. In the recipe it says to knead at medium-low which is a 4 on the KitchenAid. I can usually knead doughs at the speed required, but my mixer was struggling so much that I was afraid it’d break. Even at speed 2 it struggled.

After rolling up the dough and placing it in the loaf pans, I recommend having a baking sheet below to catch any cheese drippings. One of my loaves oozed cheese out onto my baking stone which was a terrible mess to clean.

I put one loaf in the freezer and one to eat. The one that wasn’t frozen was very fluffy and soft, the frozen one being more dense. I’m not sure if that had to do with me freezing it or how I rolled up the dough.

Despite some set backs, this bread is definitely repeat worthy. I scarfed almost a whole loaf of bread in no time.

Recipe can be found here.

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Almost No Knead Bread

Almost No Knead Bread

When I bought my dutch oven, I really wanted it for no knead bread. In the end I used it for many things except for making no knead bread. I made the bread once. Confession: I wasn’t sold on the no knead bread craze. It ended up being way too chewy for me and staled so quickly I gave some to my dog and made the rest into breadcrumbs. My dog wasn’t too fond of it either — after he had a piece he drank his entire bowl of water.

So when I saw the Cook’s Illustrated almost no knead bread version I made it. And then made it again. And will make it again really soon, maybe tomorrow. This is all within a week by the way. I’ve consumed more carbs than normal and it’s all this bread’s fault.

Almost No Knead Bread

What makes this bread so spectacular? 3 things: vinegar, beer, and a teeny tiny bit of kneading (10-15 times). The bread is good for 2 days, but is still excellent toasted after that. Really, the bread doesn’t last much longer than 2 days. I also appreciate this recipe’s ease of getting the dough into the dutch oven. Previously, you had a very wet dough and had to flour the crap out of tea towels to prevent the dough from sticking. Then, you flipped it into the hot dutch oven. It was a terrible mess. This version you let it rise in a skillet with parchment and then you lift the parchment with the dough on it and place it into the dutch oven. Less mess.

I’ve tried this with Canadian unbleached and bleached flour. I found that unbleached provides a much chewier bread than with bleached and I preferred the latter. Try both and see what works for you. Cook’s Illustrated also offers a few variations on it such as olive, rosemary, and parmesan, a rye bread and a whole wheat version. I can see myself doing a roasted garlic no knead bread — yum.

How does it compare to other breads I’ve made? I’m not about to abandon my bread making process, not kneading isn’t a top priority for me as I have a stand mixer, but it’s nice to have a simple recipe that you can get creative with and throw together in a minute. If you didn’t like the original no knead bread, you really should try this one.

You can find the recipe here.

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White Bread

Soft Sandwich Loaf

With all the bread baking I do, I have never made a loaf of white bread. There are many more interesting breads to make than something so…plain.

My tastes have changed since I was a kid and would refuse to eat whole wheat bread. Rye, pumpernickel and whole wheat are one of my top bread choices nowadays. If I buy white bread it’s usually destined for breadcrumbs.

This is the Basic Soft Sandwich Loaf from The Bread Bible. If you do enjoy white bread, you’ll like this bread. It’s very buttery and when toasted it has a crumbly crisp nature to it. This would be a fabulous sandwich bread for tea sandwiches of the sort. I usually look for a heartier bread so I don’t think this recipe will make it on my routinely bread baking schedule.

Unfortunately I can’t find the recipe online. But if you’re a bread fan, you should get this book anyway. The only downside to this book is that there aren’t many whole grain breads.

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Eric Kayser & Laurent Dubois

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When we got to our hotel in Paris it was around 11am. Check in was at 2pm so after a night of not being able to sleep on the plane, we explored the neighbourhood a bit. Which really involved checking off 2 things on my foodie list: Eric Kayser and Laurent Dubois.

First stop was Eric Kayser. This place was minutes away from our hotel and there always seems to be a line. There is a large assortment of breads and pastries available. I would have to live in Paris for awhile to try out all the different varieties. Prices were conveniently listed on a sheet of paper near the entrance so I could see what they had to offer instead of gawking at the glass case for 10 minutes. I took David Lebovitz’s advice and tried the pain aux cereales. I lined up (one thing I learned about Paris if it’s anything good Parisians will line up for it) and observed how other people were ordering. I didn’t hear a single person order in English which made me feel intimidated to speak it so I made an effort to speak French.

“Je voudrais un pain aux cereales, sil vous plait.”

The lady retrieved it and handed it to me. Success! I was understood and didn’t get laughed at. When I got to the register I was asked what I had ordered.

“Cereales aux pain, err….pain aux cereales.” This fumble elicited a giggle from the staff. Maybe my ordering wasn’t a total success.

Eric Kayser's pain aux cereales

We found a place to sit and I started ripping pieces off. The crust was nice and crunchy and a good chewy crumb. It was very good bread. I had my eye on the cookbook they were selling, but I’m not skilled enough to translate French when all I can do is pick out one or two words out of a sentence.

During busier hours at Eric Kayser they have someone outside to sell baguettes.

Eric Kayser

Next stop was Laurent Dubois which was a short walk away. They had all sorts of really neat cheeses that I’d love to try but there’s only so much cheese you can consume in a short period.

Laurent Dubois

Laurent Dubois

Laurent Dubois

I picked up a small round of goat cheese (chevre).

Laurent Dubois

You can bring cheese back to Canada from France. You just have to make sure it’s vacuum sealed (“sous-vide”). If you don’t buy a lot of cheese, you get charges 1 euro for the bag. Not a bad deal considering I get to bring back a little piece of Paris.

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Challah

Challah

I’ve been wanting to make challah for the longest time. The last time I had it, I was in a synagogue with my then boyfriend celebrating his brother’s bar mitzvah.

This is the first bread I’ve made in a long time since the disaster that hit my unit. It felt nice to have the smell of fresh bread coming out of the oven. This challah was from The Bread Bible and it is a dairy challah which is a brioche. I made a huge batch of this bread and the challah was huge. Here’s my hand for comparison:

Challah

I forgot to cover the bread with foil so it came out with a deep deep brown colour and thankfully it didn’t burn. I’ll have to re-visit brioche again and make a smaller loaf — this one was just too big for 2 people.

Recipe here

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The basics and how-to's

Rose Levy Beranbaum has just posted links on the basics of bread making. As with any Beranbaum literature, it’s really more than just the basics but a comprehensive article that looks at proper measuring, the different types of pre-ferments, recipes, storing the bread, and sourdough. Sourdough will be the bread that finally does me in on my no store-bought bread challenge (haven’t bought any since mid-November). I’ll be picking some up this weekend. Movie Man doesn’t see it as a failure as I tried to make my own starter for over a month and it just never got big enough. Maybe I’ll attempt it again after the wedding when the weather is still warm and I have one less thing to stress about.

Also, now on youtube are baking segments of Rose. Being a cake amateur, the ganache clip was mighty helpful giving me tips on how to frost the cake. Great information considering I’ve volunteered to make my neighbour’s baby shower cake. I’ve at least got time to practice so I’ll make the practice buttercream that’s in the Cake Bible so I don’t embarrass myself in front of everyone.

P.S. All my recent food pictures are on Movie Man’s recently deceased computer. So until he gets the computer back up and running, I’ll be posting some oldie but goodie pictures. I’ll also be posting a brown rice shortbread recipe if I can stop myself from eating it all (again) and take a picture. It’s addictive and probably my favourite shortbread (and I don’t like shortbread).

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Beer bread

Beer bread

Working my way through The Bread Bible looking to try a new recipe I came across beer bread. It looked interesting and it was a “quick” bread (no sponge overnight). I used Rickard’s Red for the beer. The dough is very soft and it was easy to shape into a boule (which I haven’t mastered so they all look misshapen). It browned really quickly, about 15 minutes in so I had to cover it with aluminum foil so it wouldn’t burn.

There’s no beer flavour and the bread is nice, but Movie Man and I agreed we probably wouldn’t make it again. Mainly because we only stock good beer, and because the recipe uses almost a whole bottle, it becomes a pricier bread.

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