(To keep this post on the top of the page, I shall date it a week or so in advance).
Monday 24th December
This morning, with the help of my grandchildren, we baked (all with bread dough):
Mincemeat tarts and Reindeer droppings
Marzipan sandwiches - cut out the dough in a bell shape, say, roll out the marzipan and cut out the same shape, then another dough shaped bell on top
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Mincemeat tarts in the process of being filled, with marzipan 'sandwiches' and shapes |
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Unfamiliar ovens are a pain! These only took 10 minutes - on 195C. |
Christmas loaf
Christmas tear and share loaf [link to come]
Gluten free 'sizzlers' - bread wraps.
This evening I made 5 rolls from the rest of the GF dough which I'd had proving all day, plus a sunflower oil brioche with which to wrap my homemade haggis for Christmas dinner tomorrow.
The haggis en croute has just come out of the oven and I've had a taste of the crust - it is absolutely gorgeous! No, glorious is a better word!
While I'm writing this down I'll give the ingredients - otherwise I might forget.
160g mix of strong and plain flour (I'd run out of bread flour!)
1 stock cube
1 rounded teaspoon of curry powder
1/2 teaspoon mixed herbs
4 s-d-tomatoes chopped small
10g fresh yeast
70g lukewarm water
20g tomato puree
1 dessertspoon vegan pesto
25g EVOO
Mixed into a dough.
Then 80g of the oil from the s-d-ts was poured into the bowl and incorporated into the dough - with difficulty. After a couple of minutes squeezing and turning repeatedly it was pretty ragged and I thought I'd used too much oil. But I persevered and suddenly it became like a ciabatta dough - neither a batter or a dough, but somewhere in between. At this stage I added a further 25g of flour and, after a bit more kneading and squishing (to use the technical term! :)). I was able to begin rolling it out. It was a very wet dough and after a couple of attempts I realised I'd be better rolling it out on some baking parchment, which was what I did. Flouring it liberally, I got it to the size I required, covered the dough with thinly sliced mushrooms and gently folded the dough over the haggis. Normally I would hack away with a pair of scissors to get the least amount of dough to haggis ratio I could. Not this time. I was just happy I'd enclosed it.
I'll continue this story tomorrow - I have a load of pics I'll post on my blog and I'll give all the references I need to (including Tartine's olive oil brioche recipe, which I followed loosely).
Goodnight, and a Merry Christmas to all the bakers out there! :D :D :D
Thursday 13th December
More Christmas loaves this week - even Matt made one instead of his usual snake bread.
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Here's Guy going mad with the cherries! |
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First three proving... |
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...and baked. |
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Two more |
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And a view of the inside. Soft, squidgy and sweet - a taste of Christmas |
Saturday 8th December
Made a large focaccia without a topping, this evening. It produces a flattish loaf with a low dome. I cut it into chunks, freeze them, then take them out when I need them:
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500g Doves wholemeal, 50g Sonnenblumen-Kernbrot, 150g white flour plus 30g each sunflower and sesame seeds, toasted. 7g each fresh yeast and salt, plus 50g olive oil |
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I've made several of these, lately, but this is the first one I've proved and baked (for the first 10 minutes) under a roasting tray. It has given it a little more lift. |
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This was one I made a couple of weeks ago, without using the cloche method - and here it is cut into chunks ready to go in the freezer. As you can see it was a little singed, but I never mind that! |
Friday 7th December
Family Learning at Halcon Primary, with two families - and two year one children whose parents are unable to make the session also joined us with a Teaching Assistant, Di, who's always welcome. We made Pizzas and Christmas loaves.
Hit a bit of a snag with the loaves, since neither of the mothers were keen on marzipan - however, the kids liked it well enough, after being given a taste. So, while one just had cherries along the middle of the loaf, the other had marzipan halfway along!
The other two youngsters were very happy to include the marzipan.
That's it for this year, since Christmas and nativity plays take over for the rest of term.
(New Year resolution - must remember to take pics in this session next year!)
Thursday 6th December
Took along some olives and s-d-tomatoes to Longrun today and made several focaccias, two 'snake' breads, and a batch of Chelseas:
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The focaccias were nowhere near flat enough and Matt's snake breads nowhere near long enough - but, hey, they were very tasty |
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An olive with pimento for an eye! |
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The one on the left had olives rolled into the dough - the one on the right, Guy just took his olives and studded them all over the top of his loaf |
Wednesday 5th December