Oct 6
Cinnamon Raisin Walnut Bread MKII
icon1 Jack E. Ambrose | icon2 Food | icon4 10 6th, 2009| icon3No Comments »

People loved my first batch I did of this bread, and have been bothering me to make more. This weekend, flush with my success making empanadas, I decided to kick out a double batch of this bread. Yes, four loaves of cinnamony, raisiny, wanutty goodness.

IMG_0456
OMG a huge blob of dough! over 8″ in diameter. I didn’t have a bulk fermentation vessel large enough to hold this thing, so I had to split it in half and stash some of in the refrigerator to retard the rise. I didn’t want to process all of it at once since I only have two bread pans. I may have to invest in another pair if this becomes habit.

IMG_0459

This second attempt was even better than the first. I concentrated on getting the dough right, and kneaded properly. Towards the end, after all the fruits and nuts were added I turned the blob out on the counter and kneaded by hand for a few. Once again, butter and more cinnamon-sugar on top. Yum.

Oh another little secret, I pre-soak the raisins so the absorb some liquid. Not only does it plump them up, it seems to add some moisture to the bread so it remains soft and moist.
IMG_0457

There are my little lovelies! All baked and lined up. I ended up giving away three of the loaves, because that is how awesome I am. That’s right, who’s your daddy? I am. I kept one for myself. Hey I’m not totally selfless.

Oct 6
Empanadas
icon1 Jack E. Ambrose | icon2 Food | icon4 10 6th, 2009| icon31 Comment »

Taking an almost non-bread side track this time. Empanadas are a little stuffed pastry. In this case the filling consisted of: Chorizo, onions, black olives, egg and cheese. I’ve never done a pastry dough before, so I opted for a simple dough recipe.

IMG_0455

Pastry dough formula is courtesy of Alton Brown, which accompanies an excellent episode on Pocket Pies. He demonstrates all different things you can do with the same simple pastry dough. Even toaster pastries if you are so inclined. Excellent stuff.

The filling is based loosely on this one. By loosely, I mean almost not at all. :)

Mine is as follows:

  • 1lb of Chorizo
  • 4 hard boiled eggs, diced
  • 1 can of olives, sliced, diced, whatever
  • 2-3 cloves of garlic minced
  • 1 large onion
  • Cumin
  • Coriander
  • Parsley
  • Chili powder
  • Grated cheese

You will notice a conspicuous lack of measurements in my ingredients. This is intentional. Chorizo already has a lot of spices in it so I didn’t want to over power the dish with all kinds of spices. I ended up using 1tsp of freshly ground cumin, and coriander with a bit of hot chili powder to add just a bit of kick. I forgot to add the parsley, not that the dish needed the flavor, but it would have benefited from the extra color.

IMG_0449

Once you have everything made, it is time to assemble. One trick I’d suggest is stashing the rolled out rounds of dough in the refrigerator to cool them down. This makes them firm and easier to work with when it comes to filling time. Speaking of filling:
IMG_0451
The key here is, less is more. Only a small amount of filling is needed. About a tablespoon. Top with a bit of cheese, wet half of the dough’s edge with an egg and water mixture and fold over.
IMG_0453
I gently press out all the air. We aren’t trying to seal the pastry at this time, just get it into shape. Finally take a fork and gentry press the tines of the fork into the pastry using a rolling motion, working around the edge of the pastry. This actually takes a bit of time, and can be a bit tedious when you have 20 of these things to make.

Stick on a pan, and bake.
IMG_0454

In short order you will have a bunch of small, golden brown and delicious, empanadas. You can stash the baked pastries in the refrigerator for a week, but mine didn’t last that long. With egg, meat, and cheese these are perfect for breakfast, lunch AND dinner. You could also freeze these and deploy them as needed.

I was super pleased with the results. Filling was tasty, even thought I forgot the parsley, and the pastry was decent. I still need to work on my pastry dough, I thought it was a little tough and not flaky enough. However for a first attempt; it wasn’t a disaster so I’m happy. :) As an option you could deep fry these. While that would add some calories, I think deep frying might actually make them more flavorful. Pan frying is also an option.

Oct 6

More BBA madness. I’m somewhat behind on my postings, so playing catch-up today.

Next up, Cinnamon Raisin Walnut Swirl Bread. This bread is awesome. My new favorite.
IMG_0445

IMG_0443

What can I say. Cinnamon + Raisins + Walnuts = win. This bread is actually pretty easy to make. The only extra step is the rolling of the dough to get the cinnamon swirl. Other than that this is a pretty standard bread formula. I opted for a more cinnamon-sugar mixture as a topping. This added a really nice sweet burst of flavor to each slice.
IMG_0444

Biggest problem with this bread is all the stuff in the dough. Kneading took longer, and I still think it was under kneaded by the end. Also the oven spring was a little weak, although this is a really heavy bread with all the nuts and fruit so it will make a smaller, denser loaf.

Awesome bread toasted with a touch of butter. Highly recommended.

Oct 6
Ciabatta
icon1 Jack E. Ambrose | icon2 BBA challenge, Food | icon4 10 6th, 2009| icon3No Comments »

Another Bread Baker’s Apprentice formula down. This time Ciabatta. A pretty neat little bread that is characterized by crisp crust and distinct big, holes in the crumb.
IMG_0442

My bread got the distinct bubbles, but didn’t have the oven spring I had hoped for. Additionally the taste was rather bland. I attribute this to over active yeast. It was fairly hot the day I baked this and its possible they little yeasties just overworked themselves during the bulk fermentation. The dough probably could have been wetter too. Ciabatta is a pretty wet dough; wetter than I’m used to working with.

Tragedy strikes!
Do NOT put your expensive stoneware baking dish in the oven without having some liquid in it first. The idea was to add water to create steam in the oven. Unfortunatly the rapid temperature change caused by pouring hot water into a even hotter pan, lacking a thermal buffer, caused disastrous results.

IMG_0436

:(