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Monday, March 28, 2016

Butterzopf- A Savoury Butter Bread


I wanted to make an ornamental, braided bread for easter, but already had more than enough sweet things on the table. So, I went for a traditional zopf, only unsweetened so that you've got a buttery, rich bread that can accompany anything. It's light, soft, and very pretty. 


I think that this bread would make especially good french toast, grilled cheese sandwiches, or perhaps with cheese and seeds on top. You can also make it sweet by using 60 grams of sugar and some lemon zest or vanilla extract. 



Butterzopf
Adapted from Kochtopf

500 g. Flour
1 TBSP Vital wheat gluten
1 Tsp. Honey
1 Tsp. Sugar
290 g. Milk
90 g. Butter, room temperature
21 g. Fresh yeast, or 2 1/4 Tsp. Active dry yeast
1 Egg
12 g. Salt
1 egg or egg white, to glaze

Whisk together flour and vital wheat gluten. 

Warm milk and dissolve yeast, honey and sugar.

Add the milk mixture and egg to the flour and vital wheat gluten and knead until smooth. Add the salt and butter, in pieces. Knead until well-incorporated.

Let rise, covered, for 1 hour.

Divide dough into 3 equally sized pieces and roll into long, thin strands. Braid together and tuck the endings underneath. Let rise covered for 1-2 hours, or until doubled.

Preheat oven to 200℃. Brush with egg or white and bake for 25-30 minutes, covering with foil if it browns too quickly.

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Hot Cross Buns



While not traditional for my family, hot cross buns are very popular in the area where I live- so they make a guest appearance at the easter table. Some are more breadlike and some are more sweet with crosses made of icing, so mine are a kind of intermediate that's not too sweet, uses a pastry cross, and has lots of spices, orange zest and currants. 


I glazed mine with an Azerbaijani white cherry jam, but any light-coloured jam can be used. you can also skip the crosses and just make these any-occasion buns. I imagine they'd make really good bread pudding. 



Hot Cross Buns
Adapted from I Love Bake

500 g. Bread flour
1 1/2 Tsp. Gingerbread spices
1 Tsp. Salt
75 g. Demerara or regular sugar
21 g. Fresh yeast, or 2 1/4 Tsp. Active dry yeast
300 ml. Milk
50 g. Butter
1 Egg
Zest of 1 orange
1 TBSP Oil
50 g. Candied orange peel
80 g. Currants

For the Pastry Crosses:
1/2 C. Water
75 g. Flour

Apricot jam or marmalade, to glaze (optional)

Sift together flour, salt, spices and add sugar.

Bring milk to a rolling boil. Remove from heat and add butter to melt. Add orange zest and let cool until lukewarm.

Dissolve yeast in milk mixture and add to the flour mixture, along with the egg and oil. Knead until smooth, then add currants and peel and knead until well incorporated. Let rise in a covered, greased bowl for 1 hour.

Divide into 12-15 round balls. Shape into buns and cover. Let rise 30-60 minutes.

Preheat oven to 200℃.

Mix pastry cross ingredients well with a fork and pour into a pastry bag with the tip cut off. Pipe the mixture in a cross shape onto each bun.

Bake for 15-20 minutes. Glaze with warmed jam or marmalade, if desired.

Friday, March 25, 2016

Carrot-Almond Squares for Easter



I love carrot cake, and it just seems right to have something with carrots for easter. But these squares are nothing like regular carrot cake, apart from the earthy taste of the carrots, moisture from the oil and mildly spiced flavour. Instead, these are more like blondies- almost fudgy because of how moist they are and not as light as a loaf or layer cake. I use almond extract and slivered almonds to complement the almond flour that helps contribute to the texture.

As an added plus, this recipe is really, really easy- even accounting for the sour cream glaze I made as a slightly tangy alternative to cream cheese frosting, it takes hardly any time to make and only really requires a couple of bowls. Perfect if, like me, you still have a lot of easter baking to get through.

Carrot-Almond Squares
Adapted from chefkoch.de

200 g. Grated carrots
125 g. Flour
125 g. Sugar
1 Tsp. Baking powder
Pinch of salt
1 Tsp. Cinnamon
1/4 Tsp. Cardamom
100 g. Ground almonds/almond flour
1/2 Tsp. Almond extract
125 ml. Oil
2 Eggs
1/2 C. Unskinned slivered almonds to decorate, if desired

Preheat oven to 180℃ and grease an 8"x8" pan well. 

Sift together dry ingredients. Mix with the remaining ingredients in a food processor or by hand until well combined. 

Bake for 20-30 minutes, or until a fork poked in comes out clean. Let cool before using a knife to cut around the edges and inverting the pan onto a plate to remove the cake.

For the Sour Cream Glaze:
2 TBSP Sour cream
2/3 C. Powder sugar
Drop each of vanilla extract and lemon juice

Blend all until thoroughly combined and pour onto cooled cake. Sprinkle on slivered almonds if using.

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Key Lime Pie Bars


I lost these pictures for a while amongst the other things I baked this summer- but I'm glad to find them again, because these are really delicious. I made them with what was left in the pantry just before departing on vacation as a gift for the family watching our cats, and they were extremely popular from the reviews I got.

You need very few ingredients to put these together, provided you can find key limes- but I think they'd probably be pretty good made with regular Persian limes (or maybe meyer lemons!) instead. Another garnish idea is toasted shredded coconut, seeing as coconut and lime go so well together.



Key Lime Pie Bars

Adapted from Brown Eyed Baker

For the Crust:

1- 1 1/4 C. Graham cracker crumbs
5 TBSP Butter, melted
2 TBSP Sugar

Mix all in a food processor until the consistency is that of wet sand. Pat onto the base and sides of a greased and parchment-lined 8"x8" baking tray. Bake for about 10 minutes, or until set firmly.

For the Filling:

1/2 C. Key lime juice
Zest of 6 key limes
4 Egg yolks
14 Oz. Sweetened condensed milk

Mix juice, zest and yolks with a whisk. Stir in milk and keep whisking until thickened. Pour onto the cooled crust and bake at 170℃ until set but still wobbly when poked, about 15-18 minutes.


For the Topping:

1 C. Sour cream
1/4 C. Powder sugar

Mix well and spread on top of the cooled bars.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Polish Sourdough Rye


This is my favourite basic sourdough loaf that I've tried. It's quick to make, requires few ingredients, and has both a lot of flavour and a soft, porous crumb. It's my ideal rye bread, especially for sandwiches. You can use light rye to make a more subtly flavoured loaf, but I definitely prefer dark rye.



I like it the best with sunflower seeds- you can also mix some into the dough, if you wish. In any case, this is a very impressive bread for minimal effort.


Polish Sourdough Rye
From Kochtopf

For the Sourdough:


70 g. Dark rye flour

70 g. Distilled water
10 g. Sourdough starter

Mix all and leave covered overnight, at room temperature (12-16 hours).


For the Final Dough:


All above sourdough
400 g. Bread flour
100 g. Dark rye flour
11 g. Salt
10 g. Fresh yeast, or 1 Tsp. active dry yeast
350 g. Water

Seeds, e.g. sunflower, to sprinkle if desired

Dissolve yeast in water and leave for 5 minutes. Dissolve the sourdough thoroughly. 


Mix flours and add the yeast mixture, kneading until smooth. Add the salt and continue kneading on a medium-high speed with a stand mixer (or by hand) for about 5 minutes. Increase speed and continue kneading another 5 minutes until elastic.


Let rise, covered and in a greased or floured bowl,  for 30 minutes. Stretch out and fold the dough like a letter. Let rise another 30 minutes, then repeat.


Shape an oval loaf and let rise on a parchment-lined baking pan, covered, until doubled (about 1 hour). Preheat oven to 230℃.


Cut 3 to 4 slits on the top of the loaf of bread. Spray with water and sprinkle on seeds or additional flour, if desired.


Bake for 10 minutes. Spray the oven with steam from a spray bottle of water, then reduce the temperature to 210℃. Bake for another 25-30 minutes, or until a thermometer registers 190℉ inside. Cover with aluminium foil if it is browning too quickly.


Let cool for at least 1 hour before cutting.




Tuesday, March 1, 2016

The Best Classic Carrot Cake


The two kinds of cake side-by-side: this recipe is for the one in the foreground.

For my birthday this year I made two kinds of carrot cake- one classic and one with an Indian dessert theme (that I'll post the recipe for later). This one is pretty much what I believe a carrot cake should be- some people are purists who prefer less mix-ins, but I like an everything-but-the-kitchen-sink kind of carrot cake with all the spices, pineapple, coconut, walnuts, and sultanas... of course, you can skip those if you wish, but I believe that they all contribute to the deliciousness of this cake.


I decorated it with marzipan carrots and walnut pieces, but if it isn't a special occasion you can still make this cake with less frills and have it taste just as good. I suspect I'm going to make it again come spring- you don't need a reason for cake this good!


Classic Carrot Cake
Adapted from Moje Wypieki

2/3 C. Flour
1 Tsp. Baking soda
1 Tsp. Baking powder
1/4 Tsp. Salt
1 Tsp. Cinnamon
1/4 Tsp. each nutmeg, allspice and cloves
1/2 C. Sugar
1/3 C. Vegetable or nut oil
1 C. Walnut pieces
1/2 C. Pineapple, finely chopped/shredded
1 C. Carrots, grated and packed
1 C. Sultanas
1/2 C. Shredded unsweetened coconut

Grease a 9" round cake pan with butter and line the bottom with a circle cut out of baking parchment. Grease the parchment and preheat the oven to 180℃.

Sift together flour, baking soda and powder, salt and spices. Separately, beat the oil, eggs and sugar until well-blended and add the dry ingredients until a homogenous mix forms. Mix in the pineapple, coconut and carrots until well-combined.

Stir in the sultanas and walnuts last. Pour into the pan and bake for about 40 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean.

Cream Cheese Frosting

300 g. Cream cheese (not low-fat!)
90 g. Butter, softened
1 Tsp. Vanilla extract
1 - 1 1/2 C. Powder sugar

Beat the butter, vanilla and cream cheese until well-combined. Add the powder sugar spoonwise until the consistency and sweetness is to taste.