Many Seed Bread

This is a special day. It's World
Bread Day again and this marks 1 year in bread baking
experiments for me and it has been a wonderful year of learning the
virtue of patience. I've blogged on 19 different breads and have
baked some more that I didn't blog about. I am truly grateful to
Zorra of 1 x
umrühren bitte for this event and for helping me discover the
joy of bread baking!
It's a brand new recipe this week from Peter Reinhart's new book
Whole Grain Breads. This is my first real time
baking with steam and even if it wasn't as steamy as I would like,
the crust made music as my teeth sunk into it. What a feeling! I
used to have all these phobias about creating steam but I thought
this is the day to do it. It really isn't as frightful as
it sounds - ok maybe it is, after all it took me a year to attempt
steam. It's worth it and now there are new bread experiments to try
with steam!

This is a healthy hearty loaf. Full of seeds, made with whole wheat, rye and bread flour this loaf has substance. Just on it's own, the fusion of flavours still lingers after the first tasting, the photo taking and now the blogging. Very yummy! I am so pleased with how this turned out and may I say a little proud of myself with this loaf marking a great year in bread baking!
More...Basic Sourdough Bread

Thought I should give sourdough another
go - a simpler version. I wanted to try introducing steam today but
failed. I was going to use the ice cube method but realised at the
last minute that my fridge no longer produced ice (or iced water)!
So silly that I didn't check it before. So thought I'd quickly try
to boil water - then that was taking too long so ... no steam for
bread today.
This was different compared to my previous attempt with
sourdough rye. I did encounter some problems with my firm starter -
it didn't rise for many many hours. I am suspecting that my culture
is actually dormant and I will probably need to wash and reactivate
it. So in view of the culture not working too well (although the
flavours came through), I added 1½ Tspn of Instant yeast to give it
the extra lift it needed. This was otherwise a much firmer and
manageable dough, better for newbies. I've also introduced 10% of
rye into the flour mixture. I will probably give this recipe
another attempt using refreshed culture.

Everything was less than ideal but it was quite a relief that at
least the flavours came through. It had balanced flavours with a
nutty hint of rye. It was quite a wholesome feeling. I went on and
made bruschetta with it. It was wonderful, flavourful and much
relished!
Sourdough Rye with Flaxseeds

I've finally gotten round to it, making
Sourdough Rye bread. I haven't really been spending a lot of time
baking in the last months and forgotten how long you need in
preparation for bread baking. This is my first time making
Sourdough Rye and I think I might have added just a teeny tiny bit
too much culture because the final result was a little too tart to
my liking. Then again, it might be the case that I left the
sourdough to ferment more hours than usual. I'm not too sure.
This recipe also created a very hydrated dough. I'm not very
experienced in handling wet dough so I added more flour to have it
hold up a little more and made it easier to shape. This time round
I also decided to use a thermometer to measure internal
temperatures to be certain the insides were done. I was so idiotic
too with this part too because the recipe reads in Fahrenheit and
my thermometer was in Celsius but somehow thought it was reading in
Fahrenheit and of course I thought "No no! The insides still not
done!!" The thermometer came out with tiny bits of wet dough on it
so I decided to bake it some more. I then proceeded to check the
conversions of what it should be and realised 10-15 minutes later
that my bread was already done and I'm just getting the tops of my
bread burnt!

Also what is quite lacking from this
experiment is steam - I've yet to be courageous enough to spray or
introduce water in an extremely hot oven. The last thing I need is
shattered bits of oven glass all over my kitchen and the stress
that comes with it! This was nonetheless an interesting experiment!
I need more practice! This recipe is taken from Jeffrey Hamelman's Bread: A Baker's Book of
Techniques and Recipes. Apart from the slightly over-tartness
of the bread, I quite enjoyed the flavour of rye and flax in this.
It has a lovely texture to it, not to chewy or dry - nice strong
crumb.
I'm not sure if it's fate or coincidence but I'm so glad I can now
participate in the new food blog event Bread Baking Day #03 originally created by Zorra (Goddess of
wonderful food blog events)! This time round it's hosted by
Ulrike
of Küchenlatein who is a wonderful cook and regular of
food blog events, so I am quite certain it will be a success!! I've
been meaning to take part but been too busy and only just minutes
before realising the theme for this month's Bread Baking Day is
Sourdough Rye!
Potato Rosemary Breadrolls

This was meant to be my contribution to
Zorra's
new event Baking Bread Day a follow up to World Bread Day
- where bread bakers bake a themed bread for the first weekend on
each month. This month's theme was Baking with Herbs. I am a week
late for the deadline, but this was what I had planned for the
event if I got around to it.
Potato Rosemary Breadrolls. These are wonderfully flavourful and
aromatic! The aroma of rosemary infused with the flavours of tiny
roasted garlic bits all folded together into mashed potato softened
dough finished with a nice crust! I'm really pleased with it's
success - finally I've baked something that is good again! (I
became quite uninspired after my beloved dog died and it showed in
my various failed baking attempts. But I think I'm getting
better... ) These bread rolls are great to have on its own or with
your favourite bowl of soup! This recipe is from The Bread Baker's Apprentice : Mastering the Art of
Extraordinary Bread by Peter Reinhart.
I also wanted to improve on my bread scoring skills and the only
thing that came to mind when I thought last minute alternative
lamé was to use an eyebrow razor. I recently
bought a new pack so I grabbed a new (un-used) one and scored away.
The results were better than my previous attempts - the razor isn't
perfect but I guess it's a better start.

Also here's a quick and easy way to peel potato skins off boiled
potatoes - it is a breeze! The clip is in Japanese but it's pretty
self-explanatory.
Bialys

It's Vesak Day (Buddha's Birthday & Public Holiday)
today and so thought I'd try out a recipe from one of my new
cookbooks, Jeffrey Hamelman's Bread: A Baker's Book of
Techniques and Recipes. Let me first clarify, until my eyes
laid upon the recipe I had no idea what Bialys
(Bee-ah-lees) were, so while I thought they looked and tasted
pretty good, I have nothing to compare it to. I of course still did
some research and looked at some images for reference and I
think... I'm doing okay for a beginner.
It's supposed to be like a bagel but without the hole but with a
depression in the center for for an onion filling. Though it's not
quite as dense, it's chewier like a super thick pizza crust! The
natural flavour of the dough really comes through and it is
beautiful. I really liked it! It's pretty easy to prepare, just
simple steps between a few hours - if you have the time. Great for
breakfast, lightly toasted have it plain or with a generous amount
of cream cheese! Mmm!
Kossar's
Bialys in New York is apparently the best place (in the world)
to get yourself an original Bialy. So if you haven't already
patronised their fine establishment, please do so on my behalf!
Banana Bread in Terra-cotta Flower Pots

It was another Big Bread weekend!
Inspired by the wonderful recipes from my two brand new Bread
baking books, Peter Reinhart's Crust and Crumb: Master Formulas
for Serious Bread Bakers and Jeffrey Hamelman's Bread: A Baker's Book of
Techniques and Recipes (There was a sale at Kinokuniya).
Reinhart's new book Whole Grain Bread: New Techniques,
Extraordinary Flavor - which I am eagerly anticipating, is in the
press as we speak and should be out in stores in September.
I made 3 different types of bread: The Austrian Sourdough Wheat Rye
failed terribly. For some reason every time I bake something from
Classic Sourdoughs by Ed Wood, the breads turn out really very wet.
Has anyone else encountered similar problems? I also finally made
The New York Times No-Knead Bread and I
almost had it perfect, so I will try again next week and
will blog about it. And I have been wanting to try out baking with
terra-cotta flowerpots for a while now and I thought I'd stick to a
recipe that was safe and fool-proof, seeing how the previous 2
experiments didn't go through too well...

So here's presenting Banana Bread in Terra-cotta Flower Pots!!
Aren't they the cutest things! Terra-cotta pots practical and great
for baking breads because of how wonderfully and evenly it
distributes heat to the dough. They have to be unglazed terra-cotta
pots or you might be seriously poisoned by lead compounds from the
glaze. You will need to "season" the pots first before baking (of
course). I bought mine for $1 each from Ikea. Wash them thoroughly
(remove the very sticky price tag too), dry it well and rub some
vegetable oil on both the inside and outside the pot. Preheat your
oven to the max. Leave pots to absorb the oil and repeat until it
stops absorbing, because of its porous nature it will be extremely
absorbent so be patient. Bake pots on an aluminum foil lined baking
sheet in the oven for half and hour. Leave to cool completely
before using it. Do not wash after use, wipe clean with a paper
towel to remove any access oil and it is ready for use.
This Banana Bread recipe is from Peter Reinhart's Crust and Crumb: Master Formulas
for Serious Bread Bakers. It's a quick bread - more like a
larger version of a muffin. This was a big hit when I brought it to
work the following day and I promise if you do the same you will be
very popular with your colleagues. This was very moist and richly
flavourful. I had added 1 too much a banana and this made it
crumble easily because it was just way too much goodness!
Brioche

I'm
in the need for comfort food. Rich foods (equals fatty foods). I'm
not usually known to finish a whole tub of Ben & Jerry's
(Chubby Hubby's my Fav!) all on my own, stuff my face with
cheesecake (it was offered to me) even when I was full, and have
chocolate molten lava cake a few hours later or gorge on a variety
of Thai tourist snacks (they were lying on the table calling my
name!) some people brought back on from recent trips to Chiang Mai
and Melbourne. I usually have more self control and concern about
failing to fit into my shrinking pants.
I'm depressed. My wonderful and most incredible pet companion died
last week. We've had him with us for 15 years, 4 months and 22
days. That's half my life - we grew up together. He was very
healthy (he loved jumping and fooling around) up until the start of
this year he started to age and became old. I knew it was time for
him we were very lucky to have him as part of the family, he gave
us so much love and joy. I called him my Sunshine Day because he
made my day all bright and beautiful. It's been different without
his presence at home. Empty. Which of course explains the rush to
fill the void with rich rich foods.

So
I bake Brioche. It's part of the grieving process. Brioche is the
richest bread ever. I chose to make the Middle Class Brioche
instead of the Rich Man's Brioche because even I am depressed now,
I'll be more depressed if I have to buy new clothes to fit my
expanding waistline.
The warm buttery aroma combined with the beautifully flakey, fluffy
and oh so moist texture of the freshly baked Brioche was worth the
very long baking process. It almost filled the empty
void.
Challah

I wanted to bake something special for
Good Friday & Easter. And of course, being the good example of
a bad Catholic girl, I thought, "Jesus must've eaten Challah?!" I've got the recipe from The Bread Baker's Apprentice : Mastering the Art of
Extraordinary Bread by Peter Reinhart. It'll surely be great!
So the night before Good Friday I looked through the recipe, made
sure I had everything I needed, measured ingredients and began
mixing and autolysing. While autolysing I thought I'd read up more
about Challah. Then I wanted to kick myself.
So Stupid! They ate unleavened bread during Passover! Not celebration breads! So I quickly
googled for Matzo recipes hoping to save myself from the fires
of hell for my totally blasphemous act. I was stuck with guilt and
half-kneaded Challah dough on Holy
Thursday.
I continued kneading in my beloved KitchenAid KPM50, while I
started to prepare my own version of Matzo. Left the Challah dough
in the fridge to refrigerate for 2 days - which was a good plan
because the flavours were AMAZING!
I know technically it's a Jewish celebration bread -
hardly Catholic or Roman in any way. And I'm Chinese in Singapore.
So I know there is no real connection here... I just needed an
excuse to bake pretty braided breads! It turned out so great! And I
baked it on Easter too!
I hope I'm not going to hell for this.
Sourdough Flatbread

I made Naan Flatbread and I made it with sourdough! It was
very exciting! Although not really true or accurate, because I
don't think there's sourdough in Naans. The sourness usually comes
from the yoghurt - which I realised at the last minute I forgot to
buy so I used sourdough starter instead. I've been scouring through
the internet the past week for Naan recipes because it was my Dad's
Birthday over the weekend and he loves flat breads, so I thought
I'd make him Naan. And I stumbled upon the blog entry of
Il Forno - and there I
learnt how Naan was made with the help of Julia Child. I know,
it's not really authentic or Indian made but still I think it's a
good start.
The final taste was beautifully sourdoughy. Haha - not quite Naan
in flavour but it was very yummy. It was crispy, very nicely chewy
on the inside and I loved the texture inside that was created by
the sourdough. Most rewarding even if I actually failed to make
Naan. Next time I will remember the yoghurt.

I'm back with 3 Seeded Bread Rolls

I just came
out of a crazy 3 week project that was made up of 14-16 hour days.
I am not as young as I used to be - what a shocker. So explains the
lack of blogging and the effort to press the button on my camera
that takes the photo the past weeks. So it's like this, work work
work 6 days of 14 hours - rest Sunday. And all I can think of -
besides sleeping is baking bread! It's like I needed to do
something else and I needed
to bake
bread. Specifically healthy 3 Seeded bread rolls. All of my
favourite seeds: Flax, Sunflower
and Poppy. This is so healthy and good for you because of the rich
amounts of Omega 3 oils from the Flax, the vitamins and minerals
from the Wheat germ, and it's so flavourful! This week's version is
a slight variation because I ran out of whole wheat flour - and of
course you make a white bread version.
I just found out from Wikipedia
why Poppy
seeds can't be found here in Singapore. Although it's
really
very
harmless, the
drug opium
is produced
by "milking" latex from the unripe fruits ("seed pods") rather than
from the seeds, all parts of the plant can contain or carry the
opium alkaloids, especially morphine
and
codeine.
This means that eating foods (e.g., muffins) that contain poppy
seeds can result in a false positive for opiates in a drug test.
And so the sale of poppy seeds from Papaver
somniferum is banned in
here due to the morphine content. And if you've had poppy seeds you
know you don't feel like you can fall asleep forever and
ever.
I've also since discovered the wonderful joy of adding Milk powder
instead of Milk to breads - they are much better conditioners! This
recipe was one that I found on Allrecipes.com but have
since made some variations to it.
I wonder if I
will get arrested for eating poppy seeds bread rolls...?
Panettone

Christmas
Carbs... *Evil!*
What is it about them that give so so much comfort? Something
seemingly so innocent and inviting. Their pretty colours and pretty
packaging are all a setup - that works!
And all you want to do is stuff your face with them. Maybe it's the
season of depression too that encourages such self inflicted force
feeding tendencies. Whatever!
I
just want more! Will do the diet thing after Chinese New Year!
Christmas breads are a lovely and wicked part of holiday weight
gain. Yes, still in bread making mode and so Panettone
a
richly aromatic and sweet wild yeast bread of the Italians made
it's way into my kitchen. When I first saw this recipe in
The Bread Baker's Apprentice : Mastering the Art of
Extraordinary Bread by Peter
Reinhart, it was one of the first to be marked to be baked.
I kneaded this by hand and it took me a long time. I became one
with the dough, my hands and dough were fused as one. Kneading
requires you to not only move your arms but your hips and knees and
shoulders and feet to get enough energy into your hands and arms to
knead the dough. It was quite a sight. But it was all worth it
because I finally windowpaned! Woo!
It was well worth it because the baked bread was wonderfully soft
and moist! This recipe calls for a wild-yeast starter or sourdough
starter. I acquired mine from Sourdoughs
International but you can
make your own - this
requires some days and patience.
Soft Pretzels

I love Soft
Pretzels or Brezel. I love
their smooth golden crust with the soft chewy centers with butter
drizzled over it. Yum!
I
would eat it everyday when I was living in Berlin some years ago.
It just something I could never get tired of eating.
I'm so glad I found on The Fresh Loaf a great
recipe for it. This recipe was submitted
by Floydm and it is
really quite simple to prepare. I hand kneaded the dough for 10
minutes and I think my upper arms are going to ache tomorrow (what
a workout) but very worth the effort. I also boiled them in water
and a teaspoon of baking soda for about a minute on each side
before baking them in the oven. I baked for 12 minutes and at 6
minutes rotated my tray 180° so they brown evenly. All in all I
took about just over 2 hours to make (I left it to proof for an
hour).
If you want the authentic real deal you will need to include
domestic lye as a wash. I don't even want to try it. And if you
must (and if you read German) you will find a great deal of
information at Der
Brez'n-Bäcker.
I am thinking of adding garlic the next time as a
topping.
Sourdough Bagels Part 3/3

The bagels
are being cooled. I've baked them and the sense of accomplishment
is rewarding. Baking breads requires a great deal of patience and
good time-management skills. If anything this is the best and most
fun part of the whole joy of the creation of food. The whole
discovery, experimenting, failure and the triumph of creating a
successful dish! I am still brimming with glee with the successful
activation of my cultures and very successfully creating bagels
from it.
These bagels were nicely dense and chewy also really nice when
toasted! Though I think I overdid it with the coarse sea salt
topping. So sprinkle with caution.
With so much sourdough cultures left... what is next?!
Sourdough Bagels Part 2/3

The starter
proofed quite well. Nice and bubbly. Added the remaining
ingredients all but 1 cup of flour (according to the recipe) and
mixed with my trusted rubber spatula. It was a pretty wet dough and
so I did a manual wet knead, working the dough as much as I could.
I added the rest of the flour and it was still quite wet. So I
added more, of about 1½ more in total. I transferred the dough to
the counter and tried to knead it - it was tacky and I couldn't do
a windowpane test (I really must work on this.). I proceeded to
dividing the dough up into 18 little balls of 100gm each left it to
rest on baking parchment lined cookie sheets for 20
minutes.

After letting
the dough rest, I shaped them and again left them to rest for 20
minutes. Since it was getting late and I really wasn't up to baking
bread at midnight. I thought I'd try the overnight retardation
technique of leaving the dough overnight in the fridge to extend
fermentation, giving it more flavour. I had to do a "float test" to
see if the bagels were ready to be retarded. I took a bagel and
dropped it in a bowl of tap water, it floated up within 10 seconds.
Hooray! Got them packed, layered between lightly oiled parchment
paper in plastic square containers.
Let's see how we do tomorrow!
Sourdough Bagels Part 1/3
I've been trying to activate my sourdough cultures over a week now and have been pretty unsuccessful - most likely because I didn't use a proofing box (I don't have one) and also because of changes in temperature and other external environmental factors. I wanted to try making sourdough bagels so I took the cultures out from the fridge, fed 2 cups with 1 cup of flour and water and proof for the working culture. I also fed my stock culture, using my electric mixer I added 2 cups of flour and 1½ cups of water to replenish. Using the electric mixer really helps because it introduces air into the mixture, and really wakes the whole starter up. I remembered reading a year ago when I was trying to make yogurt at home that you can incubate yogurt in your oven at very low temperature - this allows you a constant temperature within the given time for the yogurt to solidify. So I had the idea this morning to try proofing my cultures in my oven (turned off) - that meant it I had a controlled environment with constant temperature. So I left them in the oven and went to work.
When I came home, I could smell bread coming from the kitchen - from the oven! My cultures bubbled and bubbled so much it overflowed and made a puddle of sourdough culture at the bottom of my oven - luckily for me there was a tray or cleaning up would have been a real tassel. The smell of the cultures went from something alcoholic this morning to a lovely sourdough aroma. So I quickly refrigerated the cultures, though I was a bit sad that I lost about half a cup or more to the puddle. I continued to part 2 of feeding my sourdough bagel starter - which I should check on in 4 hours now I have my own version of a proofing box.
Sourdough Experiment
The instructions in activating these cultures involves a lot of patience, time along with careful observation. It's been 4 days since I began the activation and I am not sure if it's working. It seems I have gone past the active stage and am at the dormant stage - meaning I need to do it again. It seems when it's really active, there would be a bubbly foam that's 1-2 inches high from the starter. Err... nope. I was worried that my starter got contaminated so I fed it again and 12 hours later I had one that was maybe half and inch? Hope! So I shook it all up and left it again to see if it will abundantly foam. Nuh. But technically it has been activated, just dormant now. So I kept it in the fridge until this weekend when I decide which sourdough I will experiment.
Diary of my sourdough activation:
Day 1 : Fed 1 cup of bread flour with 1 cup of lukewarm water to the culture, mixed thoroughly and left for 24 hours.
Day 2a : It had some bubbles, not a lot. Fed 1 cup of bread flour with ¾ cup of lukewarm water to the culture and left for 12 hours - mixed it up thoroughly at 6 hour intervals.
Day 2b : It looks slightly curdled (like yoghurt), smelled funky with a very small layer of bubbles and a thin layer of brown liquid. Fed 1 cup of bread flour with ¾ cup of lukewarm water to the culture and left for 12 hours - mixed it up thoroughly at 6 hour intervals. Getting worried at this point if it was ruined. I divided starter into 2 large bottles, and stirred and stirred.
Day 3a : 1 cm of bubbles and a thin layer of brown liquid. I have hope! Fed 1 cup of bread flour with ¾ cup of lukewarm water to the culture and left for 12 hours - mixed it up thoroughly at 6 hour intervals.
Day 3b : It was flat with the thin layer of brown liquid. I didn't feed it, I just shook it up and came back to it 12 hours later. No change - I refrigerated them.
Pizza Nepoletana

The final part of my Big Bread Weekend of merry bread making! Let
me begin by saying that a month ago when I first tried to make
pizza dough I had no idea what was ahead of me, the whole science,
debate, discussion and rules of a true Neapoilitan pizza.
The recipe of my first pizza dough I made was from
Chubby Hubby and
101 Cookbooks - the recipe
they used are taken from Peter Reinhart's The Bread Baker's Apprentice: Mastering the Art of
Extraordinary Bread. The baked
pizza crust had a wonderful wonderful texture, perfect the way I
love it - chewy and slightly crispy at the edges! I was quite
happy.
Then my pizza making world opened up when I discovered
Jeff
Varasano's site
and The
Pizza Making Forum. Wow. To
half the world, Pizza is the perfect meal. The amount of
information and serious discussion over a mixture of flour, water
and yeast. The way these people were describing their pizza making
experiences and how things should be with their spreadsheets and
baking percentages can be initially very intellectually
intimidating. And I'm thinking, I just want to make pizza! Why so
complicated!? It doesn't take too long though before you get caught
up in the excitement and want to work at making the perfect pizza
crust (with the given constraints like having a normal oven with no
baking stone). You see? Ignorance is bliss. I was happy with my
first, now I just want to keep making it better.
And now that I know a little more, I laugh at my old self when I
actually rolled
out my first
pizza dough. Silly cow. Everyone knows you don't
do
that.
So let's be clear. This recipe is not a Vera Pizza Napoletana. It's
not entirely
authentic. It
can't be. My home electric oven goes only to 250°C at max, I have
no baking stone but I LOVE this dough! After a month of
experimenting, I've arrived at this recipe. I probably still have a
long way more to go, but I think this is a good basic and decent
dough a pizza making noobie can make at
home.
Chewy Cinnamon Scrolls

Chewy
Cinnamon Scrolls is part 2 of my 3 part Big Bread Weekend. These
little buttery cinnamon scrolls in pretty paper cups fresh from the
oven really hits the spot. Comfort food. Warm rolled up chewiness
in cinnamon and hazelnut butter, the aromatic wafts of cinnamon on
a monsoon afternoon makes it all
okay. And
yes, monsoon has started 1 or 2 weeks ago after weeks of horrible
haze from the neighbour's deforestation exercise and then suddenly
one afternoon the sky decided to pour forth it's frustration and
angst from the pollution. And Singaporeans, PRs and expats united
together and for once warmly welcomed the screaming rain and
thunder. It's always a dramatic monsoon.
This recipe is an amalgamation of the one in The Bread Baker's Apprentice : Mastering the Art of
Extraordinary Bread and
Donna Hay
Magazine (Issue 8).
This basically a bread recipe so, it requires some time to allow
the dough to ferment. Fermentation, I have learnt is the work of 2
very important elements, Yeast and Lactobacilli (bacteria that
produces lactic acid from the fermentation of carbohydrates). So in
idiot terms, the yeast creates the bubbles and the lactobacilli the
flavour. There are 2 ways to ferment your dough, you can either do
a warm rise or a cold rise. A warm rise is leaving the dough out
and wait for it to rise gradually create flavour - this can take
12-24 hours. The variation in room temperature and the amount of
yeast used can make a difference in how well the dough rises and
ferments. You can be lazy like me and do the cold rise - which in
many ways better too. In this whole process of fermentation, the
yeast only requires about 2 hours to create all the fun little
bubbles - and it works better in a warm environment. This only
allows the Lactobacilli only 2 hours to produce all the wonderful
flavours and it works well in any temperature. So by preparing the
dough the night before allows the dough a long time to develop
wonderful flavours for your bread.
You need a fair bit of time to prepare and bake bread anyway so
best to read up the recipe and plan your time
accordingly.
The Big Bread Weekend! Lesson 01: Patience is a (Bread) Baking Virtue

"Patience is
a Baking Virtue"
Peter Reinhart
How wise and true. More specifically, Bread Baking. So much time
and consideration goes into baking a loaf of bread. I had
finally
gotten my
hands on The Bread Baker's Apprentice : Mastering the Art of
Extraordinary Bread by Peter
Reinhart. I've read so many good reviews about it through countless
blogs and websites and I so wanted to have a copy so I could be a
part of this very special world of bread baking and to finally
understand all the cool bread baking lingo, such as proofing,
autolyse and window paning. Now, I'm in.
I was giggling and smiling to myself as I paged through the book
carefully, my colleagues rolled their eyes at my insanity and told
me to just start baking and feed them instead of showing them all
the pretty bread pictures.
This is going to be my Big Bread Weekend a three-part super carbo
creating crash course in bread making with the help of The Bread
Baker's Apprentice. I'm going to be covered with flour. My kitchen
is going to be covered with flour. And I will hopefully develop
some patience in that process. Hahahahaaaaaa!!
First, I made poolish.
It's a pre-ferment of Polish origins, a mixture of flour and water
mixed together and fermented to help save time and to improve
flavour and structure. I made poolish
primarily
because I wanted to work on my pizza dough and I read that
including a starter in the dough will make a big difference. This
is will elaborate in a later blog entry when I make pizza
(again)
tomorrow. And
so since I have this big pot of poolish
and I only
need so much for the pizza I thought I would try to make
Poolish
Focaccia from
The Bread Baker's Apprentice. With this recipe using a pre-ferment,
I need only 1 day to make it whereas the regular one without the
pre-ferment takes 3 days. Being the impatient and impulsive person
that I am I naturally chose the poolish
version,
makes sense right? Since I have a big pot of it sitting in my
fridge.
You will need 6 hours to make the focaccia alone, this excludes the
time for the poolish
to ferment,
if you include that you will need about 9-10 hours. I used a lot of
the waiting time to wash and clean up.
Patience is a baking virtue.




