Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Oo De Lally!

A little while back I made a purchase that changed my life.  It revolutionized my thought process, made me excited at the prospect of something more to life, and gave me a renewed belief in humanity.


Rose, well she’s a genius.  That bia knows anything and everything about yeast.  All I know about yeast is that it smells pretty wicked and makes cinnamon rolls magically jump into your mouth.  (tricky little bastards) (I am leaving the yeast jokes at that, get your head out of the gutter, GOOD MARTHA!)

I mean, the first 100 pages of this book, are about starters, technique and equipment. Not a single recipe in the first 100 pages.  Lady is SERIOUS.  So serious that she’s got me thinking starters.

How cool would it be to have my own sourdough starter that I kept alive, and fed just like a pet? Hell, I’d even name it, something regal like “Sir Reginald” or “Little John”.  I may just take the plunge of adding a third pet to our home.  A starter pet. I would whisper encouraging words to it like “Go forth and multiply!” or “Reproduce, my little munchkins!”  
When it came time for Cheesy Clintons, I really wanted a bang out, stick to the roof of your mouth homemade sandwich bread, and Rose gave it to me.  Martha Bless her.  Rose is pretty particular about bread baking, so I wasn’t even going to pretend like I effed around with her recipe.  I read it, and I followed it, and you should too.  Heaven forbid you have a flat loaf and blame Rose.  You better not!  I have this weird feeling from reading her book that she’s sassy. And I like it.

Basic Soft White Sandwich Loaf
By Rose Levy Beranbaum



Dough Starter (Sponge)
  • unbleached all-purpose flour (use only Gold Medal, King Arthur, or Pillsbury): 2 1/4 cups plus 2 1/2 tablespoons (12 ounces or 341 grams)
  • water, at room temperature (70° to 90°F) : scant 1 3/4 liquid cups (14.3 ounces or 405 grams)
  • honey: 2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon (1.5 ounces or 45 grams)
  • instant yeast: 3/4 teaspoon (2.4 grams)

Equipment
  • two 8 1/2-in-4 1/2-inch loaf pans, lightly greased with cooking spray or oil
  • a baking stone OR baking sheet

Flour Mixture and Dough
  • unbleached all-purpose flour (use only Gold Medal, King Arthur, or Pillsbury): 2 cups plus 3 tablespoons (about 11 ounces or 311 grams)
  • dry milk, preferably nonfat: 1/4 cup (1.5 or 40 grams)
  • instant yeast: 3/4 teaspoon (2.4 grams)
  • unsalted butter, softened: 9 tablespoons (4.5 ounces or 128 grams)
  • salt: 2 1/4 teaspoons (15 grams)
  • Optional: melted butter: 1 tablespoon (0.5 ounces or 14 grams)
1. Make the sponge. In a mixer bowl or other large bowl, combine the flour, water, honey, and instant yeast. Whisk until very smooth, to incorporate air, about 2 minutes. The sponge will be the consistency of a thick batter, Scrape down the sides of the bowl, and cover with plastic wrap. 


2. Make the flour mixture and add to the sponge. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour (reserve 1/4 cup if mixing by hand), dry milk, and instant yeast. Sprinkle this on top of the sponge and cover tightly with plastic wrap. Allow it to ferment for 1 to 4 hours at room temperature. (During this time, the sponge will bubble through the flour blanket in places: this is fine.) 

3. Mix the dough.
Mixer Method
Add the butter to the bowl and mix with the dough hook on low speed (#2 if using a KitchenAid) for 1 minute or until the flour is moistened enough to form a rough dough. Scrape down any bits of dough. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and allow the dough to rest for 20 minutes. 

Sprinkle on the salt and knead the dough on medium speed (#4 KitchenAid) for 7 to 10 minutes. It will not come away from the bowl until the last minute or so of kneading; it will be smooth and shiny and stick to your fingers. With an oiled spatula, scrape down any dough clinging to the sides of the bowl. If the dough is not stiff, knead in a little flour. If it is not at all sticky, spray it with a little water and knead it in. (The dough will weigh about 44.25 ounces/1258 grams.) 



Hand Method
Add the salt and butter to the bowl and, with a wooden spoon or your hand, stir until all the flour is moistened. Knead the dough in the bowl until it comes together, then scrape it onto a lightly floured counter. Knead the dough for 5 minutes, enough to develop the gluten structure a little, adding as little of the reserved flour as possible to keep the dough from sticking. Use a bench scraper to scrape the dough and gather it together as you knead it. At this point, it will be very sticky. Cover it with the inverted bowl and allow it to rest for 20 minutes. (This resting time will make the dough less sticky and easier to work with.)
Knead the dough for another 5 minutes or until it is very smooth and elastic. It should still be tacky (sticky) enough to cling slightly to your fingers a little. If the dough is still very sticky, however, add some of the remaining reserved flour, or a little extra. (The dough will weigh about 44.25 ounces/1258 grams.) 

Both Methods
4. Let the dough rise. Using an oiled spatula or dough scraper, scrape the dough into a 4-quart dough-rising container or bowl, lightly oiled with cooking spray or oil. Push down the dough and lightly spray or oil the surface. Cover the container with a lid or plastic wrap. With a piece of tape, mark the side of the container at approximately where double the height of the dough would be. Allow the dough to rise (ideally at 75°to 80°F) until doubled, 1 1/2 to 2 hours. 

Using an oiled spatula or dough scraper, scrape the dough onto a floured counter and press down on it gently to form a rectangle. It will be full of air and resilient. Try to maintain as many of the air bubbles as possible. Pull out and fold the dough over from all four sides into a tight package, or give it 2 business letter turns and set it back in the container. Again oil the surface, cover, and mark where double the height would now be. (It will fill the container fuller than before because it is puffier with air.) Allow the dough to rise for 1 to 2 hours or until it reaches the mark. 

5. Shape the dough and let it rise. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured counter and cut it in half. Shape each piece into a loaf: begin by gently pressing the dough (or lightly rolling it with a rolling pin) into a wide rectangle; the exact size is not important at this point. (A long side of the dough should be facing toward you.) Dimple the dough with your fingertips to deflate any large bubbles. Fold over the right side of the dough to a little past the center. Fold over the left side of the dough to overlap it slightly. Press the center overlap section with the side of your hand to seal the dough. (If you have a lot of experience shaping, you may prefer at this point to rotate the dough 90 degrees—a quarter turn.) Starting at the top edge of the dough, roll it over three or four times, until it reaches the bottom edge of the dough: with each roll, press with your thumbs to seal it and at the same time push it away from you slightly to tighten the outer skin. As you roll and press, the dough will become wider. If it is not as long as the pan, place both hands close together on top of the dough and, rolling back and forth, gradually work your way toward the ends, gently stretching the dough. For the most even shape, it is important to keep a tight skin on the surface of the dough and not to tear it. If you want the edges of the loaf to be smooth, tuck the sides under. 

Place the loaves in the prepared loaf pans; the dough will be about 1/2 inch from the top of the pans. Cover them with a large container, or cover them loosely with oiled plastic wrap, and allow to rise until the center is about 1 inch above the sides of the pan, 1 1/2 to 2 hours. When the dough is pressed with a fingertip, the depression will very slowly fill in. 

6. Preheat the oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F 45 minutes before baking. Have an oven shelf at the lowest level and place a baking stone or baking sheet on it, and a cast-iron skillet or sheet pan on the floor of the oven, before preheating. 

7. Bake the bread. Quickly but gently set the pans on the hot baking stone or hot baking sheet. Toss 1/2 cup of ice cubes into the pan beneath and immediately shut the door. Bake for 50 minutes or until medium golden brown and a skewer inserted in the middle comes out clean (an instant-read thermometer inserted into the center will read about 210°F). Halfway through baking, turn the pans around for even baking. 

8. Glaze and cool the bread. Remove the bread from the oven and set it on a wire rack. Brush the top of the bread with the optional melted butter. Unmold and cool top side up on a wire rack until barely warm, about 1 hour. 

ULTIMATE FULL FLAVOR VARIATION
For the best flavor development, in Step 2, allow the sponge to ferment for 1 hour at room temperature and then refrigerate it for 8 to 24 hours. If using the hand mixing method, remove it from the refrigerator about 1 hour before mixing the dough. 

POINTERS FOR SUCCESS
• If not using the dry milk, you can replace 1 cup of the water with 1 cup milk, preferably nonfat, scalded (brought to the boiling point) and cooled to lukewarm. 

UNDERSTANDING
A greater amount of sponge dough starter (pre-ferment) offers a fuller flavor in this “plain” bread, so almost 50 percent of total amount of flour is used in the sponge, compared to the usual 30 percent of hearth breads.
If using liquid milk, it is scalded to deactivate the enzyme in it that could make the dough sticky. 

Baking the bread at too high a temperature, would result in too thin a crust, which would cause keyholing, or caving in at the sides of the loaf. Therefore, this bread is baked at 350°F. It is also important for the bread to be thoroughly baked so that the crust is firm enough to prevent it from compressing. The loaves should not be cut until completely cool for the same reason. 



Wow, you’re still here?  Well, I hope you’re inspired to go make your own loaf, and maybe even inspired to have a starter of your own too.  Tomorrow I have a super special surprise for you.  It is the ONLY family recipe that I have. The only one. The lonestar.  Holdin’ down the fort, all by himself.  I’ll give you a hint. 
Whats brown with beans and spicy all over?

Love,
Whit

4 comments:

  1. I'm saving this! I loved having a starter several years ago, but I killed it. Made me sad. Like having a funeral for the mini roses I've killed. You give me hope that someday I might not starve a starter. Might name it Sue to go with Bessie my Kitchenaid mixer. Thx for the inspiration.

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  2. WOW - please start a starter! "Go forth, and Multiply!" BAhahahaha

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  3. bahahahah you COULD have a starter bread pet! Amish Friendship bread .. you get a starter and build it up and bake most of it and give the rest of the batter (?) to friends .. or keep some for yourself and name it.

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  4. I love me a girl who makes their own bread. That loaf is nicely shaped too!

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