Showing posts with label Dough. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dough. Show all posts

What Challah Make For Breakfast?

Ha ha.

To continue with my breadventures I decided to make a plaited Challah loaf. I was really excited about the plaiting part cos so far I've only really made flatbreads, which don't come in overly exciting shapes (although that might be an idea). I'm not honestly sure how tasty this bread is on its own, but it really shines when used in dessert, as I will get to later. The lack of a distinct flavour is probably because I used wholewheat flour, so it just tastes like quite simple brown bread. Although the crustiness of the plait does make it infinitely more exciting.

Let's weave
I'm giving the recipe I used here but recommending that for a tastier bread, go with white/any other interesting flour. 

Simple Wholewheat Challah Bread.

2 teaspoons active dry or instant yeast
1 cup/230ml lukewarm water
400g wholewheat bread flour
200gish white flour
40g white sugar
2 teaspoons salt
2 large eggs
1 large egg yolk (reserve the white for the egg wash)
60ml vegetable oil

On writing up this recipe I now realise that I think I forgot to add the sugar, which is probably why the bread tasted just like wholemeal. Lol. Excuse to retry I suppose.
How to: I got this recipe directly from the kitchn and the directions are really well laid out, so there is no point in me trying to do it justice.
Minor changes: I used a mixture of white and wholewheat flour, and proved the dough overnight in the fridge.
Doughn't forget the sugar
You knead to make this bread




I can prove it
I mean, it's the yeast you could do


I'm on a roll with these puns
Don't be abraid to get it wrong
It takes some willflour
But rise to the challenge

Go on, you'll loaf it
Get a slice of the action


This bread is perfect for use in desserts as-is (the wholewheat recipe). I used it for peanut butter and banana French toast, which was delicious. The simple flavour and robust crust makes it the perfect topping carrier.

For PB French toast for two:

Toast 4 slices bread, soak one side of each in 2 whisked eggs with a splash of vanilla. Spread un-soaked sides with peanut butter then fry egg side in butter, place slices of banana on the peanut butter, stick together, butter with a thin layer of golden syrup or honey and sprinkle with cinnamon.

It's also perfect to use the last few stale-ish slices in cinnamon bread and butter pudding.

Warm Cinnamon Monkey Bread with Rum Spiked Frosting

I don't really like tradition.

'We have to have sprouts', 'We can't have Yorkshires', 'We have to have Christmas pudding'.

Why? Christmas is supposed to be one of the most enjoyable days of the year, why set any restrictions? With regards to Christmas food, my view is that if you want it, have it. 

I'm not saying I'm a tradition anarchist who eats spaghetti and garlic bread on December 25th, but there's nothing wrong with those who do. If I fancied it, I would. That's why this year I decided to replace the tradition of eating aged, brandy-soaked dried fruit (otherwise known as Christmas pud) with a similarly-spiced hot and sugary baked dough.

Behold the Monkey Bread:


It's like one giant sweet cream-cheese covered cinnamon roll doughnut. 

Christmas has passed, but in lieu of following tradition, why not make this dessert all year round?

The dough:                                                                                        

4 tsps yeast (from a packet)                                                                
1/2 cup warm water                                                                           
2 tbsps sugar (any)                                                                              
2 tbsps salted butter                                                                            
1 large egg                                                                                          
1 tsp salt
2½ - 3 cups plain flour

Sugar topping:

2½ tbsps white sugar
1 level tbsp ground cinnamon
6 tbsps salted butter, melted
2½ tbsps brown sugar
½ tsp vanilla extract


Combine the first 3 ingredients and whisk til combined. Leave to sit for 5 minutes until yeast has activated and the top is slightly frothy. Add the butter, egg, salt and gradually begin adding the flour, until the dough comes together and is manageable by hand. Work onto a floured surface and knead for around 5 minutes. Roll into a ball and place into a large bowl (the one you used for mixing is fine) and cover loosely with a tea towel. Leave in a warm-room temperature place for around 2 hours, or until doubled in size. When the dough is ready, turn out onto surface and cut into around 34 pieces. Mix the dry ingredients of the sugar topping in a bowl. Roll the individual dough pieces into the sugar mixture and arrange into a greased round cake tin. If you have a ring mould, excellent! Use it. I sadly did not but managed to DIY one by use of a small ceramic jug.





Any thin, round oven-safe object should work for this, just place it in the middle of your greased cake tin (and grease the object too). Once this is set up you can arrange the dough balls around the shape. Leave to rise in this position for another hour, half an hour through the waiting time is a good time to preheat the oven to 200ÂșC. Just before baking, mix the remaining ingredients from the sugar topping and pour over the balls.


Bake the dough for around half an hour, or until risen and nicely browned. Leave to cool for 10 minutes then turn onto a plate, then back on to another plate so the bottom is the side that was touching the cake tin.

Frosting:
3½ tbsps butter
4 tbsps cream cheese
3 tbsps icing sugar
1 tbsp alcohol of choice (I used Captain Morgan's Spiced)
1 tsp syrup (maple or golden)

Melt the butter and cream cheese in a small bowl in the microwave, Stir and add the remaining ingredients until smooth. Transfer to a small jug and drizzle over the bread. Use the leftovers for extra moisture when serving. 






















Best enjoyed warm with a mug of coffee.

Hard work? There's just no knead.

Another post, another bread recipe. Inspired by a blog favourite of mine Budget Bytes, I prepared this unbelievably easy focaccia in time for a dinner party turned booze-up at fellow food enthusiast Hester's apartment. The guests were impressed.

I felt almost embarrassed to take compliments for something that was so simple to make, but not so embarrassed that I didn't glowingly reply 'it was nothing'. (It really was.)



Not out of place at a gourmet meal

Ingredients:

120g wholewheat bread flour
360g white bread flour
1/2 teaspoon instant yeast
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
480ml water
3 tablespoons olive oil (the better the quality, the better the bread)
Sprinkling of herbs - salt & rosemary is a classic combination, or basil and garlic

Method:

Add all of the dry ingredients to a large bowl and stir. Add the water and stir gently with a spoon until the mixture is combined and in a sticky ball. Cover loosely with a tea towel and let sit overnight/about 14 hours.

When you're around 2 hours before needing the dough to be ready, prepare a tin with oiled greaseproof paper or foil and and pour the dough onto the sheet. Stretch to the edges of the tin and let sit for another hour. Poke dimples in the dough and drizzle with extra olive oil, don't worry about adding too much. Sprinkle with extra herbs and salt. 

With the oven preheated to 200°C, place a sheet of foil over the mixture and bake for 20 minutes. Remove the foil and bake for a further 20 minutes, or until brown.
 Wait until cooled to slice or enjoy hot.

If you're worried about cooking times or leaving the dough for too long, you could always mix the dry ingredients before you go to bed and add the water when you get up in the morning. Minimum time and effort involved, and lovely risen dough for when you get home.




Prep time: Around 16 hours (the majority of which you will be sleeping for)
Hands-on time: 20 minutes
Oven time: 40 minutes


Extra step-by-step photos:












Naan Bread

Bread always seems like one of those foods only to be tackled by those who know what they’re doing - ‘leave it to the professionals’ - you probably think. No matter how many times you've baked a cake, made cookies or cupcakes, there’s something daunting about using yeast. What if it goes wrong?!

Really, it’s just as likely to go wrong as a cake, and in turn, just as likely to go right.

Flatbreads are a lot easier than loaf-style breads as there is little work in the way of kneading and shaping. Proving means it takes that little bit extra longer than making a cake, but if you plan ahead you’ll have fresh naan quicker than you can walk to the shop and buy a packet. And nothing makes you feel more like a genius than when your own bread looks like REAL bread, (except maybe getting a 1st in your degree, but never mind that when you can make naan).



Ingredients:

Makes 6-8
½ packet dry active yeast
1 tsp sugar
110ml room-temperature water
Around 400g wholemeal or white bread flour (I used wholemeal)
½ tsp salt
50ml oil (vegetable, olive, any)
75ml natural/greek yoghurt
1 egg

Directions:

In a large bowl, mix the yeast, sugar and water. If the water is cold from the tap, warm in the microwave for 10 seconds to help to activate the yeast. Let sit for a few minutes until the mix seems bubbly and slightly frothy. Then stir in the oil, yoghurt and egg. Add the salt, and work in the flour about a third at a time until well combined. Keep adding flour until the mix becomes doughy and you are unable to stir it. At this point, turn out the dough onto a floured worktop and begin kneading for around 3 minutes until the dough is smooth and soft but not sticky. Use your own discretion with the amount of flour, you may not need it all or you may need a little more. Cover the dough with a tea towel and leave in a warm or room temperature place (DON’T leave it in the oven on low – I did this and ended up with half cooked dough which went in the bin).

 Leave for around an hour or until doubled in size, then flatten the dough and cut into 6/8 equal portions. Roll each piece into a ball then flatten out to circle-resembling shapes. Heat a non-stick frying pan with a small amount of butter or cooking spray and fry each piece at a time, heating the bottom til bubbles have formed and the underside is brown, then flipping. Each naan should take about 4 minutes but it’s very easy to see done-ness by eye. Serve with curry, eat plain with butter or use as a wrap with salad and various fillings.










Bonuses:
-          Way healthier than shop-bought naan due to lack of preservatives
-          Amazingly cheap, no fresh ingredients required
-          Leftovers can be frozen and reheated in the microwave
-          Your friends will think you should go on masterchef

Next stop: paratha or peshwari naan. Anyone got a good recipe?

Gourmet Pizzas

Making pizzas at home is one of my favourite things to do as a group. If there are a few of you, you can club together to afford decent ingredients and at a fraction of the cost of a takeaway or restaurant pizza. It's also a lot healthier than eating out as you know exactly what's going into every component of the dish.


The most rewarding part is making the dough. Don't skip this, it's fun and will really add that authentic Italian touch to the pizza! This recipe comes from an Italian cookbook, so it's pretty legit:

Pizza Dough
- 15g packet dry active yeast
- 250ml lukewarm water
- pinch of sugar
- tsp salt
- 350-400g strong white bread flour

Place the yeast and lukewarm water in a mixing bowl, stir in the sugar with a fork and let stand for about 7 mins, til the yeast has dispersed and started to foam. Spoon in the salt and 1/3 of the flour until it becomes dough-like and starts to peal away from the sides of the bowl. Sprinkle some of the flour onto a clean work surface and knead for around 10 mins, working in the remaining flour bit by bit. This dough cannot be overworked, so it's a good idea to let everyone have a go at the kneading part. It can be quite fun to relieve any underlying anger by violently punching the dough, picking it up and throwing it at the counter.

When the dough is elastic and smooth, form into a ball and place into a lightly oiled mixing bowl, drape a moist cloth over the top and leave to rise for about an hour in a warm place. I sometimes heat the oven then turn it off and leave it in there, or quickly turn all the hobs on high for a minute then turn off and leave on there. You don't want the dough to start cooking to careful that the place is not too hot. To test if the dough is proved, poke fingers into it and if the indentations remain, it's ready. Stretch the dough as thinly as possible into 4 pizza shapes, and ease into a clean roasting tin. The bases are now ready to be topped.



Every pizza should be topped with a simple passata base, this can be shop bought but just as easily home made with a few pantry staples - you might as well make everything from scratch!

Passata
- tin of tomatoes
- tbsp tomato puree
- garlic
- 1 onion
- drop of tabasco
- drop of balsamic vinegar
- spoonful of sugar
- salt & black pepper

Finely chop the onion and fry with the garlic, add everything to a blender and zizz, bring to the boil in a large saucepan and simmer for 10-15 mins til you have a delicious passata.

Now you have the base, let your imagination run wild! Experiment with weird and wonderful topping combinations, you may come across a taste sensation. Or, if your creative juices aren't yet flowing, have a gander at the tantalizing flavours my house devised and devoured.



In reverse order, saving best for last.

4. The Stuff We Had Left Over
A mish-mash pizza consisting of a few sliced peppers, onion, olives and fresh mozzerella topped with basil leaves.

3.Everything Is Better With An Egg On Top
Vine tomatoes, spinach & ricotta pesto blobs, fresh mozzerella, and a cracked egg.

2.Funghi Fish
Anchovy base with sliced & fried garlic mushrooms, fresh mozzerella and basil leaves.

1.Heaven On A Plate
Caramelised onions, goats' cheese and fresh mozzerella.


Extra tips:

- fry mushrooms in a little butter and garlic before they go on the pizza.

- to caramelise onions, cook slowly in butter for around 5 mins, add sugar and a small shot glass of brewed coffee, then reduce for around 7 mins til dark and sticky. It's almost like a chutney which is why the coffee works, but make sure there is enough sugar to balance the bitter flavour.

- It's worth spending a few extra pennies on good quality mozzerella, I find basics stuff a bit rubbery and tasteless.

- If in the oven (on about 200) the toppings are done but not the bottom, you can slide the whole pizza base-down into a frying pan to crisp it up.

Serve with fresh & vibrant salad to keep it healthy

Please let me know what interesting topping combinations you come up with!