Apologies to my non bread-obsessed readers

As you know, I’ve been participating in the Bread Baker’s Apprentice Challenge since May, which means I’ve been baking a new type of bread more or less every week since then. I’ve managed to keep up with the baking fairly well and am only six or seven recipes/weeks from completing the challenge. But I’ve fallen woefully behind in writing about my experience.

This past weekend, I did a lot of writing — about bread. Which means I’m shortly going to be doing a lot of posting — about bread (interspersed, I hope, with posts about cats and goats and barns and mysterious notes left on the dining room table, and all that other stuff).

For those of you who don’t care about the bread thing, feel free to skip ahead. I don’t care. Really. Won’t bother me at all. Honest. *sniff*

Focaccia – BBA Challenge bread 13

Focaccia Collage

This focaccia recipe alone is worth the price of the book. It’s one of the few BBA breads I’ve made more than once since the challenge started because it’s so spectacular, we just needed to have it again, in spite of the fact that our bread drawer and freezer are now overflowing with bread (really, even for bread loving people, there’s only so much we can eat in a week).

How much did we love it? It’s the bread we chose to make for Michael’s 50th birthday party. That’s how much.

I wasn’t inspired at all to make this bread. Any focaccia I’d eaten before was bland, starchy, and tough. But as I read about fellow BBA Challenge participants who had gotten to this recipe before me and had loved it, I started to get excited.

The BBA provides two methods for making this bread — using a poolish created the day before or retarding the mixed dough in the refrigerator overnight — both of which allow for the long, slow fermentation that results in spectacular flavor and crumb. The recipe says that either method will achieve those results, so it was really a coin toss decision. I chose to go with the poolish method.

The day before I made the bread, I mixed up a poolish of flour, water, and yeast, let it ferment on the counter for four hours, and then put it in the refrigerator overnight.

The next day, after letting the poolish come to room temperature, I mixed the dough (flour, salt, yeast, olive oil, water, and poolish), then kneaded it in the mixer. This is an extremely wet, sticky dough, so kneading it in the mixer is a big help. When the dough was kneaded sufficiently (after about 5 minutes), I turned it out onto a well-floured counter, dusted the dough with more flour, and let it relax. Then I used the stretch-and-fold technique to fold it over itself into a rectangle. This stretch-and-fold routine is a gentle way of kneading and firming the dough, while, at the same time, allowing the dough to relax and retain its lightness. I repeated the stretch-and-fold two more times, then let the dough ferment for an hour.

Then came the fun part. I lined a sheet pan with parchment, coated it with olive oil, transferred the dough to the pan, poured herb oil (which I’d made while the dough was fermenting) over the dough, and then dimpled the dough with my fingertips to spread the dough to fill the pan and give the dough the distinctive pocked appearance. Each hole was filled with oil and herbs. My hands were coated in oil. Everything was coated in oil. There is so much oil in the recipe, you can’t believe it will all get absorbed, but it mostly does (and if the amount of oil in the recipe gives you hives, feel free to use less; the focaccia will still be amazing).

Proof. Drizzle on more herbed oil (if you dare). Bake.

What comes out of your oven will be puffy, fragrant, brown, with a crispy crust and a light, airy crumb. You will stand there at your kitchen counter and eat a third of it before you even know what’s happening. Hypothetically speaking, that is.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can see the step-by-step pictures for this bread here.

The Bread Baker’s Apprentice Challenge is a group of home bakers, scattered across the planet, focused on one goal: completing every recipe in Peter Reinhart’s book, The Bread Baker’s Apprentice, in order, and writing about our experience. Want to join us? Buy or borrow a copy of the book, open a big bag of flour, and plunge in!

English Muffins – BBA Challenge bread 12

English Muffin Collage

I will never, ever buy another store-bought english muffin again. Never. This recipe is so wonderfully easy, and the results so delicious, there’s no reason not to just make them myself.

The recipe is simple: mix flour, sugar, salt, and yeast, stir in unsalted butter and milk, and mix until everything’s incorporated, then knead for 10 minutes. You won’t believe the silky texture of this dough. Malleable, formable, kneadable.

After letting the dough ferment for 60 to 90 minutes, cut the dough into six pieces, shape into boules, and let proof for another 60 to 90 minutes.

Next comes the fun part. Heat a skillet or griddle, brush the pan with oil, place the boules on the griddle, and let them cook until brown on one side. Then flip and cook on the other side.

The result will be the beautifully browned and flattened top and bottom and the pale and puffy sides you want in an english muffin.

To make sure the interior is fully cooked, finish them off by baking them an extra 5 or so minutes in the oven. Remove from oven, try to let them cool for 30 minutes before fork splitting. I dare you.

You can see step-by-step pictures for this bread here.

I’ve never seen what the big deal about english muffins is, but now I know it’s because I’d only ever had bad english muffins. Cardboardy, flat, tasteless-unless-slathered-with-butter english muffins. I’d give you one of these to try, but there are none left, and as the recipe only makes six at a time, there will never be any leftover, unless you come here for breakfast and share them with me soon after they come out of the oven. Please come. I want to make them again.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Bread Baker’s Apprentice Challenge is a group of home bakers, scattered across the planet, focused on one goal: completing every recipe in Peter Reinhart’s book, The Bread Baker’s Apprentice, in order, and writing about our experience. Want to join us? Buy or borrow a copy of the book, open a big bag of flour, and plunge in!

Round up and let rise

Here I am, about to start bread 37 out of 43 in the Bread Baker’s Apprentice Challenge, and I find I haven’t written about any of my bread baking since, oh, bread number 11.

You ever have that dream where you show up at school and find out it’s finals week and you forgot to attend class all semester? This is sort of like that feeling. I just came into the classroom, and the professor is sitting at her desk; she raises her head slightly and peers at me over her reading glasses, “I’m glad you finally decided to grace us with your presence, Ms. Siegel. I assume you’re prepared for the final exam?”

Gulp.

But I am. Honest! And I’m ready to show my work.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Bread Baker’s Apprentice Challenge is a group of home bakers, scattered across the planet, focused on one goal: completing every recipe in Peter Reinhart’s book, The Bread Baker’s Apprentice, in order, and writing about our experience. Want to join us? Buy or borrow a copy of the book, open a big bag of flour, and plunge in!

Half way!

I just noticed I’ve made it half way through NaBloPoMo as of last night’s post.

And, in an odd coincidence, I’ve also made it just past the half-way point of the Bread Baker’s Apprentice Challenge in the last week, having just completed bread #23 (Pane Siciliano) out of 43 total breads.

This feels good. I feel like I’m really in the swing of both. Of course, that feeling could easily change tomorrow when I feel too swamped to write, or find I have nothing at all to say. And, I have to be honest here and tell you I’m pretty much dreading making the next bread, Panettone, because it’s a slightly complex recipe and I don’t really like Panettone. (If anyone wants it, I’ll be happy to ship it anywhere in the continental United States.)

Panettone aside, I’m enjoying these new habits, and I hope I continue both after the official challenges are complete. Speaking of which, did you know that Peter Reinhart has a new bread book out?

Perhaps a brilliant discovery; perhaps not.

I know I haven’t posted about the Bread Baker’s Apprentice Challenge lately, but I really have been baking and I really do plan to catch you up on all the tasty things that have been coming out of oven and grill (yes, grill!) these days. In fact, I’m up to bread number 23, I believe, Pane Siciliano, which looks so delicious in the book, I pretty much start drooling whenever I see the picture.

But you didn’t really want to know that, right?

Anyway, just a few minutes ago, I was mixing up the pate fermentee for the Pane Siciliano. For those who don’t know already, pate fermentee is a pre-ferment, one of several bread baker’s tricks that allows you to get more flavor into a bread in less time. Essentially, it’s just a small portion of bread dough that you mix up in advance and allow to ferment for up to three days. When you mix the pate fermentee into the rest of the bread ingredients a day or more later, it imparts its developed flavors into the newer, less-developed dough you’re making.

So, I’ve made this pate fermentee recipe many times now and it’s easy, so I don’t stress about it. Michael’s cooking up a pot roast and Hyla’s off playing cards with the dog. I mix up the dry ingredients (bread flour, all-purpose flour, salt, yeast) in my electric mixer, and then go to add in the one remaining ingredient: 3/4 cup of luke-warm water.

And guess what happened next? Instead of picking up the beaker of water I had measured, I picked up my insulated tea mug, which, no, did not have tea in it. It had hot cocoa in it. And it took me a few seconds to realize my mistake, so my pate fermentee dough now has about 2 Tablespoons of hot cocoa in it.

I put in the water, and mixed, and the color of the dough returned to normal. I added a little extra flour to balance out the extra liquid, kneaded it up, and it’s now proofing in a covered bowl on my counter.

On one hand, I can convince myself that we’ll never even taste that hot cocoa. But a little part of me wonders: will this be the secret to the best bread I’ve ever tasted?

Stay tuned to find out….

Bread update

No, I haven’t been blogging, but I’ve still found time to keep on baking and taking pictures. Since my last visit here, I’ve made three more BBA Challenge breads:

  • English Muffins (hands down, the best English muffins I’ve ever tasted)
  • Foccacia (oh, dear – this might be the best, most delicious loaf I’ve ever made)
  • French Bread baguettes (good enough that all evidence of these was devoured within days)

I’d really like to spend some time writing about all of these breads, but I feel pressure to catch up on writing about other things in my life, so, for now, I’ll just refer you to the pictures and encourage you, if you’re in the mood to bake some bread this fall or winter, to try any of these recipes. The English muffins, in particular, are very easy to make and the results will blow you away. I’m positive.

And, in related bread news: our little group is in the news! Today’s edition of the Washington Post contains a very nice article about the BBA Challenge and other online baking/cooking communities. The article, written by Cheryl Tan (a fellow BBA Challenge baker), appears on the front page of today’s (9/2/09) Food section.

If you have a few extra minutes and are willing to sign up for a (free) seven-day trial subscription to the epaper version of the Post, you can see the article as it appears in print. This version includes a few small pictures at the top of the article that aren’t included in the online version of the article. And one of those pictures was provided by someone with the odd user name of “grongar”. 😉

Cranberry Walnut Celebration Bread – BBA Challenge bread 11

Cranberry Walnut Bread - Sliced

I made this bread weeks ago, but because of time constraints and my general lack of enthusiasm for yet another enriched celebration, I just didn’t get around to posting. You can see the step-by-step photos here.

Although this isn’t the prettiest loaf I’ve ever made, it was quite easy to make, and I liked the combination of the cranberries and walnuts (did I already mention that one of my favorite breads is a walnut ficelle?). I think this would be an exceptionally good loaf in the middle of the winter (either that, or several months after the last time I made a fruit-studded celebration bread). It’s not the recipe’s fault that I’m not enthusiastic about it. I just wasn’t in the mood for this particular bread.

I’m running late on the next BBA Challenge bread (English Muffins), but I think I’m going to like them, and am thinking I’ll be able to make them at my favorite “away kitchen”, my sister’s place in Boston. We had pretty good luck there with the cinnamon rolls, no?