Tag Archive | "Breads/Pastries"

No-Knead Nutella and Roasted Hazelnut Challah

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No-Knead Nutella and Roasted Hazelnut Challah


Wow, I can’t believe how many of you made the No Knead Sticky Pecan Caramel Cinnamon Rolls! As promised, I’m not going to leave you hanging with extra dough in the refrigerator. Here’s your recipe for No-Knead Nutella and Roasted Hazelnut Challah from the book, Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day by Jeff Hertzberg and Zoe Francois.  By the way, if you haven’t entered the contest to win a copy of their book, make sure you do!

Ok, I love their basic Challah recipe, but thought I’d be a bit fancy and make a Nutella and Roasted Hazelnut version. Screw the diet - just for a day, ok? Hey, don’t look at me like that - I’ve been testing the book’s recipes all week long JUST FOR YOU and I took one 3 lbs for the team!

Damn. I need to review a diet book next. Anyone have a good diet book that needs reviewing?

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No-Knead Sticky Pecan Caramel Cinnamon Rolls

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No-Knead Sticky Pecan Caramel Cinnamon Rolls


Do you know what I call smart? Taking something from “works awesome” (No-Knead Bread) to the level of “KICK-ASS.” Which is exactly what authors of the book  Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day, Jeff Hertzberg and Zoe Francois have done.

Oh yeah, and I hold them both directly responsible for the extra 3lbs I’ve just gained testing their recipes.

Keep reading for the recipe and a free cookbook drawing!

So, they’ve taken the basic No Knead Bread recipe and added 2 big concepts to it:

1) Make enough dough to store in the refrigerator for 2 weeks. Pinch off what you need and bake. Return the rest to refrig. This allows you to bake a loaf of artisan bread in as little as 20 minutes rest + 25 minute bake any day of the week. Perfect for spontaneous cooks like myself. Want dinner rolls for just 2 tonight? Pinch off a smaller chunk of dough. Plus, the “aging” of the dough produces the most amazing flavor, something that was lacking in the original No Knead bread.

2) Create over 100 different bread/pastry recipes, all no-knead. Um. Let me see if I can whet your appetite (I love the ones in red)

PEASANT LOAVES: Baguette, Batard, Pain d’Epi, Ciabatta, Crusty White Sandwich Loaf, Olive Bread, Caraway Swirl Rye, Limpa (Scandinavian bread wit honey and orange zest), Portuguese Corn Bread, English Granary Style, Oatmeal-Pumpkin, Raisin Walnut Oatmeal, Vermont Cheddar Bread, Caramelized Onion & Herb Dinner Rolls, Spinach Feta, Sun-Dried Tomato & Parmesan, Granola Bread, Roasted Garlic Potato Bread, Eastern European Potato Rye, Bagels, Bialys, Soft Pretzels, Montreal Bagels

FLATBREADS/PIZZAS: Pizza, Spinach & Cheese Calzone, Philadelphia Stromboli with Sausage, Prosciutto & Olive Oil Flatbread, Pissaladiere, Focaccia with Onion & Rosemary, Olive Fougasse, Fougasse Stuffed with Roasted Red Pepper, Sweet Provencal Flatbread with Anise Seeds, Pine-Nut Studded Polenta Flatbread, Arabic Za’atar Flatbread, Pita, Amenian Lavash, Moroccan Anise and Barley Flatbread, Naan, Scandinavian Rye Crisp bread

ENRICHED: Challah, Turban Shaped Challah with Raisins, Onion Pletzel, Sticky Pecan Caramel Rolls, Brioche, Brioche a Tete, Almond Brioche “Bostock”, Brioche Filled with Chocolate Ganache, Beignets, Chocolate or Jam Filled Beignets, Panettone, Soft-Style American White, Buttermilk Bread, Cinnamon Raisin Bread, Chocolate Bread, Swiss Muesli Breakfast Bread, Sunflower Seed Breakfast Loaf, Chocolate Prune, Chocolate Raisin Babka, Apple & Pear Coffee Cake, Sunny Side up Apricot Pastry, Blueberry Lemon Curd Ring, Braided Raspberry Almond Cream Pastry, Cinnamon Twists

Wipe that drool off the keyboard!

The first recipe I tried was to satisfy my sweet tooth. I love the No-Knead Bread from Lahey, but after an entire year of spoiling myself with crusty, homemade round loaves, I yearned for a sweet bread. This Sticky Pecan Caramel Cinnamon Roll truly is a no-knead, no-brainer!  Read the recipe first, then the free cookbook contest!

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MiMi’s Shortbread Cookies

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MiMi’s Shortbread Cookies


When I married my husband, I knew I was also marrying into generations of family holiday traditions. In fact, I think it was written in the marriage contract, squeezed right between not touching his BBQ grill and promising to love him even when he’s 80 years old and I still look 35. The first Christmas together was a little stressful, but I kept notes of all the little things I needed to remember – like what kind of candles to buy for the German pyramids (skinny, small), the placement of hand blown glass ornaments on the tree (big ones on bottom), and what kind of cookies are served Xmas morning (shortbread).

I did ok when both kids were too young to really understand the holidays, so I mostly winged my way through it. I mean, would they really remember that I spaced out opening their chocolate Avent calendar the first 2 weeks of December? Oh, and that I ate all their chocolate for them because pediatric dental visits are expensive?

Last year though, both kids were of speaking age, meaning that they could rat me out if I forgot something or did something wrong. There’s nothing more embarrassing than a 2 year old shrieking to Grandma, “SANTA DOESN’T LIKE US!” …continued…
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No Knead Bread, Revisited

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No Knead Bread, Revisited


 

It’s been almost a year since NY Times unveiled the secret to the uber-simple No-Knead Bread.  And while fads come and go, this certainly is a recipe that has transcended the fickleness of foodies.  It’s time to revisit the bread…. as many of us have been brainwashed by this summer’s ice cream! We’ve made close to 60 loaves since last November and I’ve got to tell you, it is still one of our family’s favorite things to eat.

I firmly believe that every person should bake a loaf of bread at least once in their lifetime. Granted, it’s easy to just drive to your local bakery to pick up a loaf, but have you ever experienced the intense joy of smelling freshly baked bread coming from your very own oven?!  Foodgasmic eyes-roll-to-back-of-head, soul softly moaning as you tug a piece of warm, pillowy mound gently with your teeth….. By the way, No-Knead Bread is such a dumb name. Can’t we come up with a better-sounding, sexier name than NKB? In case you’d not heard of NKB….let me tell you about it.  Baking bread does sound intimidating…all that kneading and loaf-shaping business is best left to pros.  But what if I told you that you don’t even have to knead or shape, that it is so easy my little son makes it.  This bread recipe so insanely brilliant - no sticky fingers, no doughy mess, no intricate measuring, no complicated kneading.  Totally hands-off.  The crust is thin, crisp  and snaps as you cut into the loaf.  The interior of the bread holey, chewy, airy and light.  If bread could sing, this would be an angelic choir. in Dolby digital surround sound.  Now, with that, how could you not try NKB?  It only takes 3 minutes to mix and a wooden spoon.  You can’t even boil spaghetti in 3 minutes!

So, without further blabbering, I’ve pimped out my son to demonstrate that baking bread is so simple a caveman 4-year old can do it.

Of course I had to bribe him with 2 temporary tattoos.  Cheap labor. 10 cents apiece.  There is nothing that says, “I’m a kick-ass bread baker” more than a tattoo of a killer whale. Move over Bourdain, here comes someone younger…

So, let’s start.  3 cups of bread flour in a big bowl. 

secret: I sometimes use 1/2c whole wheat flour + 2 1/2c bread flour

1/4 teaspoon of instant yeast:

1 teaspoon of table salt secret:  I use 3/4 tablespoon of kosher salt. Why the difference?)

Add 1-1/2 cups of lukewarm water. Sorry no pic - he dumped water before I could pick up camera.  But you know what “dumping water” looks like! Stir. Use those muscles, boy.  Stir like a badass-baker with whale tattoos would stir!

See? This is what it is supposed to look like…a shaggy, goopy mess.

Wrap it up:

Give it a kiss good night and let it sleep for 12-20 hours on countertop.

secret: I’ve let it sit for as little as 8 hours and it still tastes great!  I did knead with wet hands just a little tiny bit to make up for the time.

After sleeping, it should look like this: (which is what I look like in the morning too)

Dump out on floured surface:

Wet your hands. This will prevent the very sticky dough from sticking to your hands.  If you find dough sticking to your hands, wet again.  Why not flour your hands? You could, but  you want to keep the flour: water ratio pretty even. Since we are adding flour to the surface, I balance it out by wetting my hands. It is the high water content that makes this bread so deliciously light and the crust very crisp. With wet hands, grab the dough and fold over all ends towards the middle.  Turn dough blob over so that you get a nice, smooth, tight surface. Try to tuck the dough ends under to get that taut surface.

  Gently move dough onto a floured towel. Cover. Let nap for 2 hours. It should puff up nicely and double in size. secret: When I run out of time, I sometimes let it sit only for 1 hour - still good!  If you let it nap in a tall, narrow bowl (pictured below), the dough rises nice and tall, about 6″ high.  If you leave it out on the counter - that is fine too, the dough will rise up and also out….making a flatter loaf, about 3″-4″ high.  They will both taste the same, just looks a little different.

A half hour before the nap ends, slip covered pot into your oven. Crank up the heat to 450F. Let it pre-heat for 30 minutes or longer. Let’s talk about the pot. So, you know you’re going to put the pot into a very very hot oven. Make sure that the pot can withstand 450F.  Generally, if the pot is cheap, flimsy, has plastic handles and a remnant from your poor college days, it’s probably not going to be safe to use in that hot of an oven.  Use a 5-qt or larger cast iron, ceramic, Pyrex, stainless steel or enamel pot.  Just check your pot collection - look for large, heavy, no plastic. Round, oblong - doesn’t matter. Should be at least 4″ tall. I use my Le Creuset emameled cast-iron.  Yes, my cover has a thick plastic knob - but I did call Le Creuset’s customer service and they said while their literature says safe to 400F, it is still fine at 450F.  Now, I don’t know whether the gal who talked with me really had the authority to tell me such a thing….but after over 30 loaves, my pot is still unblemished.  After pre-heating, remove the hot pot from oven. Now plop this wobbly dough into the hot pot. Doesn’t matter how it lands - actually, the messier it lands, the more “rustic” it looks.  Shake pot a bit to even out the dough. secret: if you aren’t using a well-seasoned cast iron pan, you can put a piece of parchment paper in the pot first so that the bread won’t stick to the bottom.

Cover and put back into the oven.  Bake covered for 30 minutes. Photo below is peeking through oven door after 30 minutes. Then uncover and bake further for 15-20 minutes.  To check - you can either tap the bread (should sound low, hollow, like a drum) or take its temperature (should be 210F in middle).

Here is bread just after baking. See? I told you that “messy” turns out “rustic!”  Kids- don’t you DARE tell me that your toy room looks “rustic!!!”  GO CLEAN YOUR ROOM!

Remove and let cool.  This bread really does sing - the crust crackles as it cools.  Listen to it! secret:  Because the bread has such high water content- the crust will not stay crisp forever.  If you aren’t eating soon, you can re-crisp the crust by re-heating it in a 350F oven for 10 minutes. 

Thats it! You will be rewarded with a thin, crunchy brown crust, large, open holes. The bread is slightly chewy, flavorful and perfect texture. Making your own bread is deeply soul satisfying, it makes me feel like I am so close to the earth.  Eat with good butter - like Kerrygold or Lurpak - splurge on your butter for this loaf! 

Just a little story for you: The first time Andrew and I made this bread together, I let him mix all the ingredients together the night before. We watched it bake together. When it came out of the oven, Andrew wanted to cut into it immediately. But we had to wait until it cooled. Then it was time. As I placed the tip of my knife into the bread and moved down through the crust, the snap and crunch of the crust gave way to tender, spongy body. I knew even without tasting it, that it was the most perfect loaf of bread that I have ever made. Andrew and I slathered butter on our slices. We sat on the kitchen floor, my hands still with traces of flour, and had a wonderful moment of just enjoying bread that we made together. Just like his Po-Po, Andrew loves bread. Each time, he would come ask, “More bread please” with arms outstretched. I would place a warm buttered slice in his small hands - he cradled it so gently, carefully ran to the stairs, never taking his eyes off the prize. He sat on the third step and ate his bread, wiggling his toes between bites. Three times he did this. Yes, this is my son. Perhaps one day when he is older, he will read this recipe and story and remember how his Mommy taught him how to eat homemade bread - with lots of butter and with eyes closed, totally savoring every single bite.

No Knead Bread

adapted from Mark Bittman of NY Times who got it from Sullivan Street Bakery.  When the recipe first came out, it was the blogging community who took the bread to new heights, especially Rose Levy Beranbaum, author of The Bread Bible. I followed Rose’s experiments through the weeks and learned from her recipe adjustments and the why’s of how this bread works. Yield: one 1½ lb loaf 3 cups bread flour (I like Harvest King bread flour) 1/4 teaspoon instant yeast 3/4 tablespoon kosher salt (or 1 teaspoon table salt) 1 1/2 cups warm water Covered pot (five-quart or larger cast iron, Pyrex, ceramic, enamel…something that can go into a 450F oven.) 1. Mix dough:  The night before, combine all ingredients in a big bowl with a wooden spoon until the dough just comes together. It will be a shaggy, doughy mess. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit 12-20 hours on countertop. 2. Shape & preheat:  The dough will now be wet, sticky and bubbly.  With a wet spatula, dump the dough on a floured surface.  Fold ends of dough over a few times with the spatula and nudge it into a ball shape. You can use your hands if you like, just keep your hands wet so that the dough does not stick. Generously dust a cotton towel (not terrycloth) with flour.  Set dough seam side down on top of towel. Fold towel over the dough.  Let it nap for 2 hours.  When you’ve got about a half hour left, slip your covered pot into the oven and preheat to 450F. 3. Bake:  Your dough should have doubled in size. Remove pot from oven.  Holding towel, dump wobbly dough into pot.  Doesn’t matter which way it lands. Shake to even dough out. Cover. Bake 30 minutes.  Uncover, bake another 15-20 minutes or until the crust is beautifully golden and middle of loaf is 210F.  Remove and let cool on wired rack.  If not eating right away, you can re-crisp crust in 350F oven for 10 minutes. Best way to eat it? Smear a warm slice with some good butter (Kerrygold and Lurpac are both found in your grocery stores, usually on top shelf)

***

See the kids make German Oven Pancakes  

Also try:  Dip bread in Olive Oil and Dukkah

 Dip in Bagna Cauda

 Sop up juices in Killer Cajun Shrimp 

Here is a new feature of the blog that I am testing out.  Shall we see if it works?

The question of this post is…. Have you made No-Knead Bread? Write in your blog and link to your No Knead Bread post!  I’ve jump-started the list with my favorites. ***

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Baking the Perfect Loaf of French Bread

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Baking the Perfect Loaf of French Bread


The time: 10am: Dear Cravings, I would really appreciate if you would give me a little more notice when you creep up on me, especially if it involves baking fresh bread. Don’t know you that my favorite recipe, No Knead Bread takes 18 hours notice? Its 10am and suddenly you appear and ask for demand Killer Cajun Shrimp with Fresh French Bread for lunch?! Thats just rude, crude and socially unacceptable!

Later that afternoon Ok, I forgive you. I’m sorry for yelling. It was not very nice of me. The bread wasn’t all that difficult to make in 3 hours. I had to adapt different recipes and different techniques to fulfill your request, but I’m totally satisfied now! You were right, Killer Cajun Shrimp with Fresh French Bread was EXACTLY what I needed.

Secrets to a Perfect Loaf of French Bread in 3 Hours

I don’t consider myself an expert baker - in fact, I really don’t bake anything other than bread. When I host dinner parties, I either make Tiramisu or have the guest bring a dessert. But I will say that I can make a pretty awesome loaf of bread. Usually, my stand-by recipe is the No Knead Bread (because its so damn easy and I can even make this hung-over). However, when I only have a three hours, this is my recipe which is based on trial-and-error from baking over 40 loaves in the past 8 months. The techniques are a combination of things I learned from Pamela Anderson (no not the big boobie actress arm candy), the original No Knead Recipe published in the NY Times, Rose Levy Beranbaum (author of the Bread Bible)

Secret #1: Knead dough with dough hook for 2 minutes. Let it rest for 7 and then knead again for another 3 minutes. If you are doing this by hand, then your formula is 6 min-7 min-7 min. Letting the dough rest at this stage allows the gluten to relax, redistribute, and get all cozy. It results ultimately a smoother, well-mixed dough. After the brief rest, you’ll feel a difference in the dough. Its more supple and soft.

Secret #2: Pinch! When you form the dough into a loaf (see photo below) pinch all ends tightly to create a seal. Basically, you are creating surface tension so that the gas from the yeast (or as Alton Brown describes “When the yeast burps”) the dough expands up and out evenly. If I don’t create this surface tension, the dough in the oven will just go “blah” like Al Bundy on the couch. Something called gravity makes the dough expand down and flat.

Secret #3: Use a pizza stone, cast iron dutch oven or my favorite Pampered Chef Covered Baker. Just make sure that your loaf will fit into the vessel. Stone or cast iron retains heat and radiates the heat of the oven evenly. If you don’t have one, don’t worry, just use a good quality, thick baking sheet inverted.

Secret #4: Steam = thin, crunchy, beautiful crust. In the No Knead recipe, there is a high proportion of water to flour. Because the NK dough rests for multiple hours, lots of water in the recipe works. In this 3 hour french bread recipe, you can’t do that. To make steam (a.k.a. crust) - you have to do one of 2 things, depending on the baking vessel. -> Pizza stone or baking sheet: Once you put the bread in the oven, throw 1/2 cup of water on the oven floor (electric oven) and immediately close the door. No, it won’t harm the oven. Its a technique that professional bakers recommend for home ovens (professional ovens have a built in steamers). Once the water hits the hot oven floor, it creates steam, which creates the crust. -> Covered baker or dutch oven: You’ll need less water - about 1/4 cup. Once you put the loaf into the very hot pot, throw in the water and over the lid immediately. Put the pot directly in the oven. Because you’ve pre-heated the oven AND the pot for 1 hour, the trapped water in the pot will create steam. If you are shy about throwing water in, grab a pie pan or loaf pan, preheat it along with whatever you are baking on, and throw the water in that instead of the oven floor. Basically, cold water in hot pan + hot oven = steam. I have an electric oven (heating element is on the top of oven). Some bakers throw ice cubes in, but I prefer water.

Secret #5: Timing and temperature:

  • Have an instant read thermometer. The internal temperature of the bread should be 190-210F.
  • All ovens are different and I’m sure our loaves will be different shapes.
  • The timing in the recipe below is just a guide for you - this is what works in my oven and how I shape my loaves.
  • Please make sure that you check the internal temp of your bread to gauge doneness.

Three Hour French Bread

makes 2 loaves the size I have in the pic

4 cups bread flour

2 tsp active quick rising dry yeast

2 tsp salt

1 1/2 cups warm water

1. Put 1/4 cup of bread flour on your clean counter top and reserve. Place remaining 3 3/4 cups bread flour in your mixer bowl. Spoon the yeast on one side of the bowl, and the salt on the other side. Pour in the warm water and with your regular mixer paddle, mix on low speed until the dough comes together in a mass. Switch to the dough hook. Mix on medium speed for 2 minutes. Dough should clear the sides but stick to the bottom. If it is too sticky, add 1 T of flour at a time. If too dry, add 1 T of water to dough to adjust. After 2 minutes, let the dough rest for 5 minutes.

The dough should look like this during the rest:

2. Turn the mixer on again and mix for 3 minutes. Take the dough out and place on the counter. Remember that 1/4 cup of flour that we reserved? We’ll use it now. As you knead the dough by hand, incorporate more flour as you need. You might not need it all. Knead by hand until the dough is very satiny, smooth, tight and formed into a nice, compact ball:

Place this dough in a large lightly oiled bowl (I use Pam spray). Turn dough over so that all sides have a thin coating of oil. Cover with plastic wrap and set in warm place for 1 1/2 hours. Dough should almost double in size. Punch dough down and form back into a ball. Poke your finger on the surface - the dough should give into the pressure and slowly creep back up.

3. About 1 hour into the rest stage, preheat your oven to 450F (convection 425F). Place your pizza stone, inverted baking sheet or covered cast iron pot into the oven to heat up.

4. Ok, here’s the fun part. Cut the dough into half - you’ll shape one half at a time (keep the other piece under wraps) Pick up the dough - stretch it out until it forms a big rectangle. On your countertop dusted with flour, fold over the ends like this:

Now do a little “karate chop” lengthwise down the middle of the bread and stretch out the long ends again. Fold over in half. The karate chop helps get the middle tucked inside. Pinch all sides shut. This is important - you want to make sure that all ends including the short ends are pinched tightly to create a seal. This allows the bread to rise & expand up and out evenly. If the bread looks a little lopsided, you can try to fix it by letting it rest 5 minutes and gently stretching it out again. Just don’t knead the dough again - you’ll pop all the beautiful gas that took 1.5 hours to create!

Here’s what it should look like:

5. Turn the bread over so that its seam side down. Cover the loaf with a damp kitchen towel. Repeat with the other dough halve. Leave the loaves to rest on your well-floured pizza peel or cutting board for 30 minutes. After resting, take a sharp paring knife and make 3-4 shallow, diagonal slashes on the surface of the loaf. This allows the steam in the bread to escape so that it expands evenly during the baking process:

When you are ready to bake, remove your baking vessel. Carefully slide the gorgeous loaf into or onto your baking vessel. I like baking one loaf at a time.  The most important equipment to have is an instant read thermometer to measure temperature of the bread.

If you are using pizza stone or inverted baking sheet: You can probably fit both loaves on it at the same time if you wish. -> Get a 1/2 cup of water ready next to the stove. Open the stove, put your bread in the oven and throw the water on the oven floor. Immediately close the oven door. This creates your steam. -> Bake 20-25 minutes. Check temperature of the bread - internal should be 190-210F. Remove and let cool before cutting into it.

If you are using a long cast-iron pot or covered baker: -> Before closing the lid on your pot/baker, put 1/4 cup of water directly in the pot. Cover immediately. Put pot in oven. -> Bake 10 minutes. Remove lid of pot. Bake another 14 minutes. Check temperature of the bread - internal should be 190-210F. Remove and let cool before cutting into it. Repeat with other loaf. (For convection ovens- bake 8 min covered, 10-12 min uncovered. Check temperature of bread) To re-crisp the crust, put in 375F oven for 5 minutes. Eat one loaf, share the other loaf with a friend!

***

Andrew bakes No Knead Bread

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