Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Anadama Bread, Day Two


Well, I finished it. Six hours later, this is the result.

It's pretty good. I made a few "mistakes" along the way, but I've got a good idea of how I'll do it next time. The end result is very hearty - but quite light. It is soft on the inside with a coarse texture, the crust is slightly sweet and a bit crunchy, but thin. Seems like it will make really good sandwich bread - one that will add a good flavor and texture to the sandwich. Probably will make great toast too - I'll find that out in the morning!

On to the recipe...

First, the ingredients:

4 1/2 cups bread flour
2 tsp instant/rapid rise yeast
1 cup warm water - 90-100 degrees F
1 1/2 tsp salt
6 T molasses
2 T shortening or unsalted butter at room temperature.

Directions:
1) Combine the starter with 1 cup of the flour, the yeast, and the water in a mixing bowl. Wrap and let sit for 1 hour at room temperature until it begins to bubble.

2) Add the remaining flour, salt, molasses, and shortening/butter. Stir or mix with a paddle mixer until the dough forms a ball. Add flour or water a tablespoon at a time until the dough is very soft and sticky.

3) Using a dough hook, or kneading by hand on a floured surface, knead for about 6-10 minutes until the dough ball is tacky, but no longer sticky. Add flour/water as needed.

4) Form the dough into a ball and lightly oil the mixing bowl. Spin the dough ball in the oil to coat and cover the bowl, set aside to rise at room temperature for about 90 minutes or until doubled.

5) When the dough has doubled, remove it from the bowl, cut in half, and shape into two loaves. Place the loaves into two lightly greased loaf pans. Cover and allow to rise for 60-90 more minutes, or until the dough has risen above the top of the pan.

6) Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 350F. Place the rack in the center position. Uncover the loaves and spray the tops with a light mist of water and then dust them with some extra cornmeal.

7) Bake at 350F for 20 minutes, then rotate the pans 180 degrees and bake another 20 minutes or until the loaf is brown on top and sounds hollow when tapped. Remove the loaves from the pans immediately and cool on wire racks.

Happy Baking!

The Sponge - nice and bubbly
Starts out sticky
Forms a nice ball
Oil it to rise
It's risen nicely
Divide and shape loaves
Ready to rise again
Shh! They're rising
Almost ready to bake
Cooling
The first slice
The final product

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Anadama Bread, Day One

The recipe that I found for Anadama bread has been adapted from a recipe in Peter Reinhart's "Bread Baker's Apprentice" which is a book I plan to purchase as soon as possible.

The first step in the process is to make a starter, or "soaker" the night before. This allows the flavors of the cornmeal to really permeate the bread. The ingredients here are simple:
1 cup cornmeal
1 cup room temperature water

Photos of the highly complicated process are included below for reference.

1. Place the cornmeal in a small bowl, and pour the room temperature water over it.
2. Stir to combine into what can only be described as a cornmeal "mush."
3. Wrap the bowl and let it sit on the counter overnight.

So far, pretty easy. It looks like some planning is required for making the loaf tomorrow. The entire process will take about 5 hours. I'll need some cooperation from my wife on this one ;)

Happy Baking!



Add the water and cornmeal
Mix them together
Cornmeal mush!
Wrap it up

Monday, April 25, 2011

Anadama Bread

So I have quickly come to realize that one of the most difficult things about this endeavor will be choosing the right recipe. Starting with Anadama bread is no exception - there are many variations out there. I think I've honed in on the right one though - I'll make the starter tomorrow and bake it on Wednesday.

Here's some basic information about the bread:

I'll post more info as I make the bread, so stay tuned!

A year in the baking

This evening when I was preparing dinner (soup), I decided spur of the moment that we needed to have some bread to go with it. I was able to mix, shape, and bake a small loaf of crusty Italian bread in about an hour. I realized that I have Italian breads mastered - I can bake you anything Italian at the drop of a hat. But I've always wanted to be a master of ALL breads.

So...

I've started this blog to track my progress. I'm going to attempt to bake (and hopefully perfect) every type of bread from around the world that I can find a recipe for. I figure this will take between 1-2 years to complete, just with the list I've already compiled. Some specific breads are listed because I want to make sure to try those (Angel biscuits is a subset of biscuits that I list specifically) and others are more general (I intend to make more than 1 kind of French bread and dinner roll)

Here's the list I have so far...

Anadama Angel biscuits Babka Babovka Bagels Baguette Banana bread Bara brith Bauernbrot Bazlama Beer bread Beigli Beignets Bimini Black bread Bolo Levedo Breadsticks Brioche Brotchen Buttermilk biscuits Buttermilk Challah Chapati Choereg Churros Ciabatta Cinnamon rolls Conchas Cornbread Cottage Bread Cowboy bread Croissants Crumpets Danish Kringle Dinner rolls Doughnuts English Muffins Ensaimadas Farmers bread Fastelavnsboller Foccacia Fougasse French bread Hamburger/Hotdog buns Hawaiian sweet bread Hoska Houska Hot Cross Buns Hum Bao Hunza Injera Italian Julekage Kalacs Knaakkebrod Kolache Ksra Kuchen Kugelhopf Lepinja Limpa Malasadas Molasses Bread Monkey bread Naan Nissua Noni Olie Bollen Olive bread Orange rolls Pain au Chocolat Pan de Muertos Pan de Sal Panettone Pani Popo Parantas Paska Peasant bread Pita bread Pizza dough Ponczki Potato Bread Potica Pulla Pumpkin bread Quick bread Pretzels Pumpernickel Rye San Francisco Sourdough Schnitzbrot Scones Semolina Sigtebrod Skolebrod Soda bread Sourdough Spelt bread Stollen Talamee Taralli Tarradls Toaster biscuits Tortillas Vasilopita Whole wheat bread Zeppoli Zopf Zucchini bread

This should be fun! Hopefully my family really likes bread ;)