The Standard White well... standardised...

Here's a shot of my now regular white. Works a treat with good open texture and very soft and springy. I use a Kitchenaid but it should be fine if you just give the dough enough time and some good hard kneading.

500ml water 1 yeast sachet
Honey
900 grams strong white
Salt

Mix water (hand hot) with yeast and a splash of honey. Wait 5 mins

Add 500 grms flour and mix to sloppy dough. When mixed leave to autolyse for 20 mins or at least sometime more than 10 mins. Give this stick mess a good mix now. TIP if no kitchenaid available cover our hands with olive oil to prevent stick and work the dough hard til it starts to go stringy. Leave until tripled in volume. About 2 hours. Add remaining 400 grams of flour and knead for 10 mins. Rise to double volume. Shape and prove for 30 mins. Bake at 220 Celsius for 35 mins in humidified (ice cubes etc) oven. The trick here is to let the gluten strands develop in the sponge starter. That's why you want the first mixture to be loose and to increase in volume to such a degree.

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Get Ciabatta Here (old joke for Orlando)

The sensation of smugness is almost overwhelming. I now know how it feels to bake bread with holes in!!! 

In truth this recipe relies on the power a kitchen aid can bring to mixing and kneading dough. The recipe came from the excellent thefreshloaf.com. I'll post a link.

I've just eaten some with lemon curd. Delicious doesn't begin to describe it. 

Cheers, Alex

http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/2984/jasons-quick-coccodrillo-ciabatta-bread

This is a formula originally posted on usenet in the great alt.bread.recipes group by Jason Molina all credit to him and the 'King of Gloop', I'm reposting it here for those that missed it there. I've made this quite a few times and it's always a huge hit. Giant bubbles and a golden crust. Best part is you can do the whole thing in about 4-5 hours. It does not use the traditional stretch/fold method for a ciabatta because it's so damn wet, the only stretch is the final shaping.

THIS WILL NOT HURT YOUR PRECIOUS KITCHEN AIDS

Variaton 1

500g bread flour 
475g (~2 cups) water
2 tsp. yeast 
15g salt

Varation 2 (Semolina)

350g bread flour 
150g semolina flour 
475-485g (~2cups) water 
2tsp. yeast 
15g salt

 

  1. In Kitchen Aid style mixer: Mix all ingredients roughly till combined with paddle, let it rest for 10 minutes.
  2. With the paddle (I prefer the hook to prevent the dough from crawling into the guts of the mixer), beat the living hell out of the batter, it will start out like pancake batter but in anywhere from 10 to 30 minutes it will set up and work like a very sticky dough. if it starts climbing too soon, then switch to the hook. You'll know it's done when it separates from the side of the bowl and starts to climb up your hook/paddle and just coming off the bottom of the bowl. I mean this literally about the climbing, i once didn't pay attention and it climbed up my paddle into the greasy inner workings of the mixer. It was not pretty! Anyway, it will definately pass the windowpane test.
  3. Place into a well oiled container and let it tripleit must triple! For me this takes about 2.5 hours
  4. Empty on to a floured counter (scrape if you must, however you gotta get the gloop out), cut into 3 or 4 peices. Spray with oil and dust with lots o' flour. Let them proof for about 45 minutes, which gives you enough time to crank that oven up to 500F.
  5. After 45 minutes or so the loaves should be puffy and wobbly, now it's iron fist, velvet glove time. Pick up and stretch into your final ciabatta shape (~10" oblong rectangle) and flip them upside down (this redistributes the bubbles, so you get even bubbles throughout), and onto parchment or a heavily floured peel. Try to do it in one motion and be gentle, it might look like you've ruined them completely, but the oven spring is immense on these things.
  6. Bake at 500F until they are 205F in the cnter (about 15-20 minutes), rotating 180 degrees half way through. Some people like to turn the oven down to 450F after 10 minutes, but whatever floats your boat. I usually bake in 2 batches.

Alex Schneideman

07909 964 534

331 Portobello Road
London W10 5SA

ALEXSCHNEIDEMAN.NET
SCHNEIDEMAN.POSTEROUS.COM

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Sourdough Bagels...

Sourdoughbagels

Yes, that's right, I thought I'd mix it up a bit...

Alex's Sourdough starter, left overnight.

Formed into bagel shapes and left to prove for an hour or so.

Then boiled for quarter of an hour, and baked on full until just going golden.

You don't need to glaze them or anything, the boiling makes it all happen. Just be careful they don't stick to the bottom of your saucepan.

Virtuous Bread

Herewith a copy of an email sent from Nakedloafer, Tinca regarding an inspirational bread site...

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morning daaaarls

when you have a moment (which is almost never i know) would you check out www.virtuousbread.com 

i have been in touch with this woman recently about doing one of her bread courses. she has set up Virtuous Bread as a social enterprise rather than a commercial one. she is a true believer in the social act of baking and breaking bread and feels that the world would be a much better place if everyone were doing this. i'm quite interested in becoming one of her Bread Angels in fact. i love this. i think she has really hit upon something. and it seems that the enterprise is starting to take off. thing is she is desperately in need of premises to teach in. has no money natch but needs space. i suddenly thought of you and wondered if you might have any ideas. no worries whatsover if you don't have any time for this but i love people like this who make something happen for a truly good reason and i thought you might too. 

so check her out and let me know what you think 

Prehistoric Sourdough

Continuing in Alex's mediaeval bread vein, I made this little fella yesterday with Chappatti flour...

Left overnight with a very excitable starter, knocked back and left to prove for about seven hours (I had to go and do a few things...)

Tastes great, excellent texture too.

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Kickass Marmalade

Img00008-20110208-0742

Wow I just tried this for the first time. Its so very chunky and wobblesome and so very fluorescent orange that at the first bite, I fairly levitated and I don't think I've come down since. Kicks like a mule. There are some things I would change when making it again but for a first attempt, not bad. Who wants some? T x
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device