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Thread: BREAD baking

  1. #16
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    Grey - yes, it's almost fool-proof...and I can attest to that (being a bread making fool myself)! It's this book:

    http://www.amazon.com/Artisan-Bread-...538133&sr=8-1#

    Besides the basic boule, I have made the whole wheat (that was supposed to be cooked in a pan - it didn't turn out), the herb bread variation on the boule, and the rosemary onion focaccia. Both of the last two were amazing!
    My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom

  2. #17
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    this should be re-titled the Yummy Bread Thread!

    I make sourdough from a home-made starter that's about 18 months old and lives in the fidge in an old mayo jar. I had authentic San Francisco Sourdough starter but found it a bit fragile (it died!) and not as sour as my starter. My loaves take about 36 hours to make, and I find the dough very stiff to work so only make one loaf at a time. The resulting bread isn't as good as SF sourdough but it is far better than anything I can buy around here. I use ~1/3 rye and 2/3 hard Canadian flour and bake the loaf in a cast iron pot.

    That 'Artisan Loaf' book sounds great, I am still using 'Beard on Bread'. I want to try German Rye Bread, uses 100% rye and hardly rises. Sometimes I make challah and very oily Italian bread, and make my own pizza bases (very satisfying). Sometimes I use molasses instead of sugar to proof the yeast and a bit of walnut oil to add interest to the taste. Oh, and chopping up and adding fresh chilies to white bread works great.

  3. #18
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    *still waiting for her baking peel*

    In the meantime - you know that dipping sauce you get for foccacia (or at least foccacia-like) bread in the snootier Italian restaurants?

    How the heck do you make that stuff? I've never found any pre-made that was any good, and attempts to date to make it myself have been unsuccessful.
    By charity, goodness, restraint, and self-control men and woman alike can store up a well-hidden treasure -- a treasure which cannot be given to others and which robbers cannot steal. A wise person should do good. That is the treasure that cannot be lost.
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  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by ZenSojourner View Post
    *still waiting for her baking peel*

    In the meantime - you know that dipping sauce you get for foccacia (or at least foccacia-like) bread in the snootier Italian restaurants?

    How the heck do you make that stuff? I've never found any pre-made that was any good, and attempts to date to make it myself have been unsuccessful.
    My DH just likes to use our salad dressing for that bread dipping.
    Our favorite salad dressing:
    make a cruet of dressing using the Good Seasons dry dressing mix from an envelope. But use extra virgin robust flavored olive oil, and some good balsamic vinegar. Then I also add a couple teaspoons of freeze-dried 'salad herbs' that I keep in the fridge after opening.

    ZS: a tip about the peel....don't wash it by soaking it with water! People keep saying their wood peels are warping/cracking when washed, etc.
    Oh but you are getting the non-wood peel, right?- then no problem.

    What I do is: when I shape the loaf/loaves, I then let them 'rest' by putting a sheet of parchment on the peel and sprinkling the parchment with some corn meal- I lay the loaves on that. When time to bake, I just slide the loaves, parchment and all, right on to the hot baking stone and bake. (The parchment is good for about two baking sessions.) When done, it's easy to again slide the peel under the parchment and remove bread parchment and all. The bread seems to come right off the cornmealed parchment with no problem, and my peel actually never gets doughy or needs washing- my Stone stays clean too. If each parchment piece is used twice, the parchment roll will last a l-o-n-g time.

    I used to make lots of many kinds of bread 20 years ago- sourdough, w.wheat, pastries, white loaf bread....making it the old fashioned way with a couple of risings. But I never got such yummy chewy/stretchy bread with a crisp crust as from the basic boule recipe in the Artisan Bread 5 Minutes book! It's exactly the way I love my bread to be and I never got it that way before.
    One thing though- the basic (using 6 1/3 cups flour) really only makes 3 very modest sized loaves bread- not 4 as they claim. 4 to a batch comes out too tiny, and 2 to a batch are too large and don't rise as well. 3 seems just right!
    Lisa
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  5. #20
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    Lisa - I wonder if our books are different versions? I could have sworn that my recipe says that the basic boule makes three loaves, not four. I'll have to look again when I get home tonight. If so, that would be REALLY odd, don't you think?

    I don't wash my peel. I just wipe it clean and so far, with enough corn meal, it's fine. Same for the stone - which is actually a pizza stone and it also works great. I'd love to get a long square one so that I can make different shaped loaves, but so far the round has kept me busy enough. What benefit does the parchement serve? Do you still use cornmeal with it?

    Oh, and ZenSojo - before I got my peel, I was just using a cookie sheet with no lip. Worked like a charm! I got the peel just because it's hard to make cookies when your cookie sheet always has a new loaf of bread sitting on it!
    My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom

  6. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by GLC1968 View Post
    Lisa - I wonder if our books are different versions? I could have sworn that my recipe says that the basic boule makes three loaves, not four. I'll have to look again when I get home tonight. If so, that would be REALLY odd, don't you think?
    I think I remember reading on their BLOG that the recipe should read 3 instead of 4 loaves. I bought my book used- its from 2007. Maybe they updated it in a later printing?

    What benefit does the parchment serve? Do you still use cornmeal with it?
    Yes, I use cornmeal on the parchment, all on the peel. The parchment enables me to slide the two loaves of puffy bread right off the peel and onto the hot stone (paper and all) with minimal jostling of the loaves- helps to keep them from collapsing what little amount they have risen after the 'rest'. The bread bakes on the parchment, on the stone.
    Very convenient, and I use each parchment piece twice before it gets brittle.
    Doesn't stick to the bread either.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
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  7. #22
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    Yum that olive bread looks delish! Can you truly make bread in 5 minutes (not counting rising and baking)? I may have to purchase this book. I can just smell the fresh baked breads coming out of the oven.

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by CarefreeSpirit View Post
    Yum that olive bread looks delish! Can you truly make bread in 5 minutes (not counting rising and baking)? I may have to purchase this book. I can just smell the fresh baked breads coming out of the oven.
    Hi,
    I think the 'five minutes' thing is a bit exaggerated. But once you make up a batch of the wet dough (enough for 3 loaves), you simply combine the water, yeast, salt and flour and stir it with a spoon right in a tupperware box or bowl (no kneading), leave it out to ripen/rise for 2 hours (it doubles, then starts to deflate), then just cover it and stick it as is in the fridge for up to about 12 days is fine. Each time you want to bake a loaf you pull off 1/3, (or 2/3 if you want to bake two loaves at once) shape/cloak it into a ball or baguette etc, (still no kneading) then let it rest like 40-50 minutes (preheat your oven sometime during that time), then bake for 30 minutes.
    That's the basic recipe, but the book has all kinds of fun creative variations on the basic idea. The bread actually tastes and comes out better if it's been in the fridge for at least two days i found.

    Today I had two different containers of dough in the fridge so I pulled off, shaped and baked two loaves side by side- a plain white chewy boule, and a golden semolina loaf topped with sesame seeds. the semolina loaf is gone already, the boule is for tomorrow. I did this pretty much while weeding and hoeing my tomato patch- just brought my kitchen timer with me to know when to do each step.
    Last edited by BleeckerSt_Girl; 05-08-2009 at 03:22 PM.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

  9. #24
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    Thumbs up Five minute artisan bread

    I finally got around to baking a a few loaves while Dh was home. (I've only had the book for a month or so.) It really is fool-proof. I'm pretty baking-challenged and the loaves I baked turned out great. I don't have a baking stone (yet) so I placed a cookie sheet on top of my cast iron griddle and that worked out well to keep the temp stable enough to bake. I made a dip for my bread by heating up some EVOO on med. low and adding sliced garlic. Very tasty. I might trying adding some herbs next time, like rosemary, and a splash of balsamic vinegar after the oil cools. Of course, bread dipped in a good quality olive oil by itself it delicious. My "adopted" Italian grandfather taught me that.
    Everything in moderation, including moderation.

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  10. #25
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    sgtiger- that is so cool! I want a picture next time!

    I have been enjoying making bread so much that I now keep like two different batches of dough 'ripening' in the fridge at any given time, plus some sourdough starter.

    My loaves always seem to be rather small, but DH loves them anyway and they taste so good! So I just solve the issue by baking two at a time.

    Today I pulled out a portion of my semolina dough, and also the basic white dough. I made a plain white boule (still the favorite) and a semolina loaf. I experimented with the semolina- it traditionally is topped with sesame seeds, but this time I used black sesame seeds and I envisioned that after slashing it and it puffing up a bit in the oven, that it might look like tiger stripes, especially since the semolina flour is rather golden colored. As you can see it did indeed turn out very tiger-looking! So I'm naming that variation my "tiger semolina".




    Though small, the two loaves were very lovely in both taste and texture.
    I may experiment with giving them a shorter resting time before baking, to see if that increases the 'oven spring'.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
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  11. #26
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    Lovely. I'm okay with the smaller loafs, just enough for a couple-three people. Nothing like the fresh bread!

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

  12. #27
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    Today i baked four small loaves of bread. Tonight we are going to a little potluck dinner with friends, and I'll bring two loaves with me to share. That leaves another two for home eating.

    I made one "tiger semolina" (with the black sesame seed stripes), two olive/sundriedtomato/onion loaves, and one plain white boule with sesame seeds on top, slashed in a sun pattern. I'll take one olive loaf and the semolina to the potluck tonight.



    I really really like the bread from the Artisan Bread In Five Minutes a Day book. Not only is it the best tasting bread I've ever had, but it takes little time to prepare as well.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
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  13. #28
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    your bread loaves are works of art! they are truly lovely. Do you get the stripes just from cutting slits in the bread before it rises?
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  14. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by Biciclista View Post
    your bread loaves are works of art! they are truly lovely. Do you get the stripes just from cutting slits in the bread before it rises?
    Hey thanks, Mimi!

    After the loaf is formed, it's allowed to 'rest' for 40 minutes and it puffs up part way. Then you either: dust with flour and slash, or paint with cornstarch wash and sprinkle with seeds and slash....then they go in the hot oven and will rise and expand a bit more while baking. (that's called 'oven spring') The slashes are then seen as bare spots with no flour dusting or seeds.
    I want to do some onion garlic bread topped with poppy seeds soon too.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

  15. #30
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    I turned a good friend on to this book and they tried the pita recipe and LOVED it.

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

 

 

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