A baking experiment
I know, I know...
I am supposed to be using recipes in actual books... but sometimes I can't help myself...
A little flour, a little yeast, some water, olive oil and salt...
What do you have? Bread of course.
And the girlies love it when I make fresh bread... and so today I goofed around again...
2 cups of whole wheat flour
1 cup of unbleached flour
1/4 cup of ground flax seeds
1 1/2 teaspoons of flour
mixed with
1 1/2 cups of warmish water
1/4 cup of unbleached flour
1 package of rapid rise yeast
2 tablespoons of honey
Let the liquids mix together for 10 minutes or so until bubbly.. then pour the entire mess into the dry ingredients. Once they are mixed together pour out onto counter and knead (this dough was stiffer then the last time I made bread... so we will see how it effects the finished product.)
put in an olive oil coated bowl, coating the dough and cover with a damp towel and let rise for 1/2 hour (it is rapid rise yeast after all). After rising pour back onto the counter and cut in half... form into baguettes (that is the kind of pan I have... )slice the tops of the bread to make pretty marks (this makes me feel like I am a real boulanger) and recover with the damp towel and let rest for another 20 minutes...
Pop into a 375 degree oven and bake for 20 minutes or so... or until it looks crusty and smells bready... Oh, and I put a pan of water into the oven too... I think this helps with the crustiness...
I will come back on and tell you how it worked out.
But it smells good and looks pretty good too....
I am going for more of a country bread feel this time... You know of course that riots over bread led to the end of the Marie Antoinette, but did you know at the time the baguettes that we see as "official" French bread were available only to the people of Paris... if you lived in the countryside your bread by law was required to be coarses, harder? In some cases there was virtually no flour used in the bread and often contained ash and sawdust. This was seen as a way to keep the peasants hearty. White bread would make them soft. And brioche? Heaven forbid. Oh, and it was probably brioche that La Reine was speaking of when uttering the famous quotation (or completely made up quotation) that cost the queen her head....
I am supposed to be using recipes in actual books... but sometimes I can't help myself...
A little flour, a little yeast, some water, olive oil and salt...
What do you have? Bread of course.
And the girlies love it when I make fresh bread... and so today I goofed around again...
2 cups of whole wheat flour
1 cup of unbleached flour
1/4 cup of ground flax seeds
1 1/2 teaspoons of flour
mixed with
1 1/2 cups of warmish water
1/4 cup of unbleached flour
1 package of rapid rise yeast
2 tablespoons of honey
Let the liquids mix together for 10 minutes or so until bubbly.. then pour the entire mess into the dry ingredients. Once they are mixed together pour out onto counter and knead (this dough was stiffer then the last time I made bread... so we will see how it effects the finished product.)
put in an olive oil coated bowl, coating the dough and cover with a damp towel and let rise for 1/2 hour (it is rapid rise yeast after all). After rising pour back onto the counter and cut in half... form into baguettes (that is the kind of pan I have... )slice the tops of the bread to make pretty marks (this makes me feel like I am a real boulanger) and recover with the damp towel and let rest for another 20 minutes...
Pop into a 375 degree oven and bake for 20 minutes or so... or until it looks crusty and smells bready... Oh, and I put a pan of water into the oven too... I think this helps with the crustiness...
I will come back on and tell you how it worked out.
But it smells good and looks pretty good too....
I am going for more of a country bread feel this time... You know of course that riots over bread led to the end of the Marie Antoinette, but did you know at the time the baguettes that we see as "official" French bread were available only to the people of Paris... if you lived in the countryside your bread by law was required to be coarses, harder? In some cases there was virtually no flour used in the bread and often contained ash and sawdust. This was seen as a way to keep the peasants hearty. White bread would make them soft. And brioche? Heaven forbid. Oh, and it was probably brioche that La Reine was speaking of when uttering the famous quotation (or completely made up quotation) that cost the queen her head....
Labels: baguettes, bread, experimentation...
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