Thursday, December 22, 2011

Other dried fruit bread


Some of you might be interested in other fruit bread I've made in the past.  Here are two that I love that I've already blogged about, and I'm sure there are more to come.  One day I'll post about our fruitcake recipe, and there's a Peter Reinhart whole grain bread recipe that uses pureed prunes and flax seeds. One year I made a cranberry walnut bread that was tasty.

Prune and Flax seed Bread 




Stollen








Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Jamaican Black Cake


 The past few years, Slow Learner (actually Mr. Bread Maiden's mother) and I have been celebrating Christmas by baking a batch of fruitcake.


Fruitcake, if you don't know, is that much-maligned dessert bread chock full of fruit, nuts, spices, and a whole lotta alcohol.  When you think (or, before meeting Mr. Bread Maiden's kin, what I THOUGHT) of fruitcake looked something like this:

http://whatscookingamerica.net/Q-A/fruitcakesec.htm

I don't even know what those green and red things are.

But all that changed.  Well, not the part about the green and red things.  I don't know if I want to know what those are.


The story goes, Slow Learner got the recipe from (you guessed it) Alton Brown.

http://www.politico.com/click/stories/0910/brown_gets_political.html

Starting a few months ahead, she bakes the loaves and then once a week gives each loaf a spritz of brandy, which as an added bonus helps preserve it.  By the time Christmas rolls around, those things are good and smothered in the stuff. She serves it with whipped cream and more spritzes of brandy.

If you want to make the world's best fruitcake, Alton's recipe is here.

This year I'll be leaving the fruitcake-making to the expert.

Instead of making fruitcake this year, I decided to try my hand at a different type of fruit-alcohol-spices-bread combination.

I found a recipe for Jamaican Black Cake, which as one person online so eloquently phrased it, "is what fruitcake wants to be when it grows up."


I got the above picture from a google images search and then was sucked into this website.  It shows why this cake bears more than a passing resemblance to British Christmas puddings.



Not too sweet, made with spiced rum instead of brandy, and mixed with some heaping spoonfuls of molasses, the recipe made my little Latin Americanist heart sing.
www.amazon.com


The recipe began here, but I made quite a few alterations along the way.

The cake also goes by Trinidadian or West Indies Black Cake.



You will need:

FOR THE DRIED FRUIT

3 cups dried fruit
3/4 cup spiced rum
zest from one lemon

A few days before you want to bake the cake, put about zest and dried fruit in a large plastic zip-top bag with spiced rum.  Suck all the air out of the bag before closing.  Let sit in the fridge for a few days.


FOR THE DOUGH


1/2 lb butter (softened)
1 cup sugar
2 tbsps dark molasses (the original recipe calls for browning, but I didn't have any)
1 tsp vanilla
11/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp allspice
1/2 tsp salt
4 large eggs
dash of rum 
1/4 cup slivered almonds 

1. Preheat your oven to 325 degrees F and position a tray in the middle of your oven.  Butter two loaf pans. 




2. In one large bowl, whip the butter, sugar, vanilla and molasses. Set aside.


3. In a second medium bowl, whip the eggs with a dash of rum.  Set aside.


4. In a third medium bowl, mix together the dried ingredients.  Set aside.


5. Add the egg mixture to the butter and sugar mixture.


6. Add your rum-soaked fruit and nuts to the wet mixture.


7. A little bit at a time, add the flour to the batter and fold it with a spatula to lightly combine.


8. Divide your dough into the two loaf pans, and bake for 90 minutes or until the top is firm.


In order to make sure both loaves would bake equally, I used a kitchen scale to divide them by weight.


9. Let the loaves cool about 30 minutes in the pan, then take them out and let them rest on a cooling rack.  Since it was already 10:30pm and I was tired, I let them rest overnight.



My first thought was, "those aren't as dark as I was hoping."  I think if I had used dark rum, the "browning," brown sugar, or blackstrap molasses, they would've been darker.


YUM.



10. After they are cool, pour a good jigger of rum over the top of each cake and store in a plastic zip-top bag.  The alcohol acts as a preservative, so pour on!  The cake really absorbs a lot of liquid, so don't be stingy.



Even though they aren't as dark as they're supposed to be, when we took a bite this morning the cake was very tasty.  Success!  If I don't post before then, Bread Maiden and family wish you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!




Sunday, December 11, 2011

St. Lucia Buns


It's getting to be that season when all I can think about is deliciously rich holiday breads.

While I can't make a decent cookie to save my life, I LOVE traditional breads with loads of dried fruit, maybe some alcohol, some nuts, in a special traditional shape.  I love all the regional variations: kugelhopf, stollen, panettone, pan dulce, yulekage, fruitcake, etc.



These St. Lucia buns are not a bread laden down with all the add-ins, but it is a Christmas bread.  I first learned about these buns when I was seven or eight, and totally obsessed with the American Girl book series.

http://americangirl.wikia.com/wiki/Kirsten_Larson
  Kirsten Larson was a Swedish immigrant girl who came to the United States with her family in the mid 1800s.  They celebrated St. Lucia Day, and so it's been in the back of my mind ever since.

St. Lucia was a saint from Scandinavia who sacrificed herself for her faith some way or another.  Anyway, the shape is supposed to represent her eyes, and the day (December 13) serves as a reminder that the dark days of winter are almost over (Lucia means light).  According to custom, the eldest daughter wakes up the family with St. Lucia buns and tea or coffee.  This post from someone I've never met makes me tear up a little.  What a sweet and dutiful girl! 

I wish I had an eldest daughter :( Although I am glad my family never celebrated St. Lucia day, because I AM the eldest daughter and when I was younger I would've been loathe to wake up early to make breakfast for my family.  Good thing we're not Swedish.

http://indiebeauty.com/profiles/blogs/the-origin-of-candles-on-st

I think it is important to point out that I have never eaten St. Lucia buns, made by someone Swedish or otherwise.  But Peter Reinhart has a recipe for whole wheat buns, and I'm always interested in trying another of his recipes from the Whole Grain Breads book.

The recipe starts out similarly to his other WGB epoxy method breads, with a soaker and a biga.  However, he uses scalded milk in the soaker and an egg in the biga, so that's a little interesting.

To make St. Lucia Buns a la Peter Reinhart, you will need:

BIGA
227g whole wheat flour
3/4 cup scalded milk (heat the milk up to just below a boil, then let cool and skim off the top)
1g yeast (I used 4g since I began the dough in the morning and wanted to bake them in the afternoon)
1 egg, lightly beaten

Here is the scalded milk, in case you were interested.  This is before I skimmed off the film.






SOAKER
227g whole wheat flour
142g lukewarm water
5g salt

This is the soaker dough first mixed up.


Here is the dough after a 15 minute rest.


One thing that I've learned since making a whole bunch of Peter Reinhart's WBG recipes is that you want the biga and the soaker to be about the same hydration and texture.


If one is overly runny, that is not a good sign.  You want to be able to stack one dough on top of the other to cut them into little pieces before adding them to the final dough.
 


If you want to make the final dough and bake these buns the next day, you can throw the biga in the fridge and leave the soaker out on the counter overnight.



While you're waiting, here are some pictures of herbs from our garden that Mr. Bread Maiden has tied up and hung in our kitchen.





 If, like me, you want to make the dough after a few hours (and you've added the necessary extra yeast) you can proceed to the next step, which is:

FINAL DOUGH
All the biga
All the soaker
113g whole wheat flour
5g salt
7g instant yeast (Mr. Bread Maiden was making cassoulet during the time I meant to bake the buns, so I omitted the extra yeast in an attempt to draw out the rise time until the oven was free)
71g honey, agave nector, sugar or brown sugar (I usually add both 71g of sugar and 71g honey)
56.5g vegetable oil or melted butter
1 egg (for egg wash)
raisins (for topping)

1. Chop up the soaker and biga into small, tablespoon-size pieces and mix them together with the flour, salt, yeast, honey, and vegetable oil.






2. Dust a work surface with flour, then knead the dough for 3-4 minutes until the dough feels tacky.  Let it rest five minutes, then knead another minute or so and remove to an oiled bowl.  Cover with plastic wrap and let it rise about 60 minutes.

*I let the dough rise for about two hours since oven space was scarce.  I added more yeast in the biga than PR's recipe calls for, and no yeast in the final dough.


3.  Line a sheet pan with parchment paper and preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.  Divide the dough into 8-12 pieces, and shape each into a ball.  Let each piece rest for 10 minutes.  I've found they cook more evenly if I don't try to eyeball them, but take the total weight of the final dough and divide by the number of buns I want to make.  That is the weight of each bun!


4. Roll out each ball into a tube, like you're making a strand of challah.  Roll them a little and then let them relax before continuing to roll.  Mine were about 1.5 feet long.



5.  Roll each end back up towards the middle like a yo-yo, into an "S" shape.



6. Place each shaped bun on the parchment paper, cover with plastic wrap, and let rest another hour or so.


After an hour rise


7. Take the plastic wrap off the buns and brush with the beaten egg.  I also sprinkled them with sugar for extra sweetness.  Place the pan in the oven and knock the temperature down to 350 degrees F.  Back for 15 minutes, then rotate the pan and bake another 10-20 minutes until golden brown and hollow when given a good thump.

9. Transfer the buns to a cooling rack and serve when they're ready or you just can't wait anymore.  You can pretend with all the whole wheat flour that they are healthy.  Actually, compared to most Christmas confections, they ARE :) 


You can eat two for me!  Merry Christmas!