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Showing posts with label Chocolate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chocolate. Show all posts

Saturday, February 14, 2015

Buckwheat Love

So the other day, I bought a small bag of Bob's Red Mill organic cracked buckwheat (marketed as "creamy buckwheat") thinking I would make porridge for breakfast and use the rest in a rustic bread. Maybe because I grew up eating buckwheat crêpes regularlyI have a huge fondness for blé noir (literally black wheat) as my grandmother used to call it (the other name being sarrasin) and as it is still called in half of Brittany and I was looking forward to a new buckwheat experience.
Well, I was disappointed: not only did the cracked buckwheat boil into a solid clump but it had no taste at all. To the point that it ended up in our little dog's food bowl (she didn't seem to mind, maybe because I added a non-inconsiderable amount of shredded chicken and sweet potatoes). In any events it had a very positive effect on her innards which had been rather scrambled because of her unbridled passion for sand crabs (we walk her on the beach most days and she treats it not only as her personal race track -which is good- but also as an all-you-can-eat sushi bar -which is less beneficial to her health).
Anyway I had buckwheat on my mind in a generally dispirited sort of way when French chef and pastry chef Philippe Conticini was invited on On va dégusterone of my favorite French weekly food radio shows, and I heard him describe, among other things, a topping he makes with buckwheat and hazelnut meal. Unlike the other recipes the chef shared on that day, this one was pretty simple and I jotted down the reference, thinking it could come in handy.
A few days later I got an interesting oat chocolate crumble recipe in my mailbox from Smitten Kitchen, a blog I love not only for its food but for also the verve, energy, humor and otherwise sheer New-Yorkishness of its author, Deb Perelman.
The recipe called for pears. That caught my attention. A dozen big organic pears had been ripening on the counter for the better part of two weeks and I knew they were about ready to eat. I was idly trying to remember if we had any oat flakes left over from the last time I made granola when the Conticini buckweat topping popped into my mind. Bingo!
Next thing I knew, I was caramelizing pears and grinding cracked buckwheat into flour. When all the ingredients were ready, I put the caramelized pears in an oven dish, covered them with a layer of unsweetened frozen raspberries, added dark chocolate chips and a generous sprinkling of buckwheat topping, and into the oven it went for about thirty minutes. I won't lie by saying it came out gorgeous. In my experience, melted chocolate always looks iffy under a toasted surface but it smelled divine and tasted even better, especially with a scoop of vanilla ice-cream.

For 5 or 6 people

Ingredients 

For the fruit base
  • 4 ripe pears, peeled, cored and diced
  • 60 g sugar
  • 60 butter 
  • 200 g frozen raspberries
  • 1 teaspoon of corn starch
For the topping
(makes way more than you need for this recipe but can be refrigerated and used on other desserts or even on oatmeal or yogurt)
  • 100 g buckwheat flour
  •  50 g salted butter
  • 50 g brown sugar
  • 65 g hazelnut meal
  • 2 generous pinches of fleur de sel (or regular coarse sea sal
Since Deb explains in details how to make the fruit base and the process is pretty straightforward, I won't go over it again. As suggested, I added a teaspoon of cornstarch to the caramelized pears to thicken up the juices a bit. If you do that, remember to mix the cornstarch with some cold liquid first. (I took two tablespoons of pear juice out of the pan, added an ice cube until cool, removed the ice cube, mixed in the starch and put the whole thing back in with the pears.)
The recipe for the buckwheat topping being given in French, I'll run it by you in English: basically all you have to do is mix the buckwheat flour, butter, salt and hazelnut meal in the food processor until you get a finely granulated powder, toast it for a few minutes in a frying pan until satisfyingly blonde and fragrant. Et voilà, you have a dessert that's both reasonably healthful and decidedly decadent. Enjoy!

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Meet the Baker: Leslie Mackie

I first met Leslie Mackie, owner of Macrina Bakery in Seattle, Washington, back in the winter of 2011, at The Bread Bakers Guild of America (BBGA)'s Wonders of Brioche class she was teaching. From the start I was awed by her creativity and captivated by her passion, energy and obvious delight in her craft. I next attended her workshop at the Kneading Conference West 2011 where she demonstrated baking with various percentages of barley, a grain I was starting to fall in love with myself. I saw her again at WheatStalk in Chicago in June 2012 and loved the simplicity and openness with which, together with Amy Scherber of Amy's Bread, she discussed the joys and pitfalls of opening your own bakery.
Our paths crossed again in February 2013. Our grandson Noah had died two months earlier and our lives had changed irrevocably. Although I had registered months before for her BBGA class on flatbreads at South Seattle Community College, I had lost all desire to go and were it not for the fact that my friend breadsong had also enrolled and was actually staying with us for the weekend, I would probably have stayed home. As it was, I am glad I went: a little flame got rekindled during that class, tenuous and fragile, barely there, a spark in ashes. I still couldn't bake, couldn't write, couldn't think except about our family's horrific loss, but I remember that weekend as the first glimpse of a life that might be envisioned again one day.
Watching Leslie make, bake and fill her flatbreads, I noticed she was building flavor the way I imagine one makes music: every note matters, none eclipses the others and the end result is an harmonious whole. So when I emailed her earlier this year to ask if she would agree to a Meet the Baker interview, I said I would love to watch her create a new recipe for the bakery. In reply she invited me to the home she recently built for herself and her family in a renovated barn a short ferry ride away from West Seattle. The barn is equipped with a professional kitchen where she now does most of her research and development.
It was cold and bleak out on the day I went over. Spring hadn't quite arrived yet and the world was a study in grey with barely a touch of green heralding the change of season. But Leslie's house was bright and cheerful and her two dogs greeted me with passionate indignation. What with Leslie's warm welcome, the frantic barking and the scent of fermenting dough permeating the air, I felt right at home.
Leslie explained that her goal for the day was to experiment with a new flatbread to use for sandwiches at the bakery. Years ago, she had had a delicious focaccia in Lucca, Italy: it was a stretched-out piece of bread, about four feet long, brushed with salt water and olive oil and baked in a wood-fired oven. As she remembers,  it baked very fast. The customers would order a certain length which the baker would then cut off and sell. It was delicious on its own, toothier than what we call focaccia in the United States, maybe biga-based, with a medium-bodied crumb, spongy, not as dense as sourdough, not as light as regular yeasted bread. The crust had a flaky and chewy texture.
Back home, Leslie had recreated it for Macrina but although it had come out really tasty, she had found it a tad too "bready" for sandwiches. Also the crust tended to get too hard when grilled. So she was looking to create a new bread that would translate into a different kind of focaccia. Having recently traveled to Portland, Oregon, and eaten the most delicious pizza bianca at Roman Candleshe knew exactly what she wanted: a focaccia with the same taste and texture.
It is fair to say that, more than France, Italy is a major source of inspiration for Leslie when it comes to bread. She was attending chef's school at the California Culinary Academy (CCA) when Il Fornaio opened up in San Francisco. It was a revelation: Leslie had never seen that kind of baking. Until then, her passion had centered around pastry. It now spread to bread. Carol Field's The Italian Baker became her major source of inspiration and her go-to reference book.
There were not many good artisan breads then. Steve Sullivan (of Acme Bread) still worked at Chez Panisse Restaurant where the bread was phenomenal. Leslie graduated from CCA in 1982 and went on to do an internship under Jacky Robert at Ernie's, the celebrated San Francisco restaurant. Jacky was doing avant-garde things: scallops with kiwi, avocado mousse for dessert. He was recognized at the time as very unique. His cuisine was French-based but California-inspired. The California food movement was just taking hold. Jeremiah Tower was doing great things. James Moore went on to work at Zuni Bar & Grill, today Zuni Café. All these creative chefs were so passionate about their personal philosophies that they strove to make it the foundation of their businesses.
Leslie moved to Boston where she worked as a cook for Lydia Shire whom some call "the Meryl Streep of the culinary world." Leslie learned from her the importance of tracing a recipe back to its origins. Mindful of the precept, she next followed Carol Field's bread recipes to Italy.
This "bread pilgrimage" was an eye-opener and to this day, even though she also went to baking school in France for an intense weeklong bread class at the French School of Baking, Italy, its cuisine and its breads occupy a very special place in her heart and imagination, not to mention her future travel plans. As Field wrote in her preface to the flavor-packed Leslie Mackie's Macrina Bakery & Cafe Cookbook: Favorite Breads, Pastries, Sweets & Savories), during that bread-packed trip, Leslie "absorbed more than the formulas and techniques she saw and brought home not only memories of exceptional tastes but a commitment to reproducing them with fresh, organic, local and seasonal ingredients."
Several years later when Leslie opened Macrina, she remained true to this early resolve: "I am not a trendy kind of person, I haven't jumped on the bandwagon of all organic sourcing. We do use organic flour but not for everything. I am looking at the taste profile, never losing track of sustainability and of the need to support the local economy. As a bakery owner, I believe my job is to bring the best product forward: all our whole-grain flours come from Fairhaven Organic Flour Mill in Burlington, Washington. Their grain is locally grown and more nutritious, and the flavor is simply phenomenal." Leslie's customers certainly agree: Macrina is regularly listed among the top bakeries in America for its bread and pastries and as a frequent visitor, I too am under the spell. Not only is the decor whimsical and dreamlike, but the menu stands as an invitation to a journey into a world of flavors...

Bird pictures by a local artist as part of a monthly exhibit 

Mural by Jean Bradbury
Back at the barn, the dogs have finally realized that I don't have evil intentions upon the house or its inhabitants. They settle down on the couch and soon start snoring gently.
 We get to work. Leslie takes out of the cooler the "seed dough"she will be using for the demo and I get my notebook and camera ready.
Seed dough is a preferment. In her enticing second cookbook, More From Macrina: New Favorites from Seattle's Popular Neighborhood Bakery, Leslie explains that it "gets its name from being the very first thing one makes when crafting a loaf of Italian-style bread. It's a short step that will add texture and complexity of flavor to your finished loaf. Essentially, it's a small amount of dough -a simple mix of water, yeast, and flour- that is prepared prior to making your bread dough. It rises for several hours, then rests in the refrigerator for a minimum of twelve hours."
Seed dough will keep for three or four days but it gradually loses its lift (although it increases in flavor as it ages). If you like the flavor of a really ripe preferment, you should use more yeast in the final dough. However you get the best crumb when the seed dough is one to one and a half day old. Leslie has mixed this one the night before. I ask if she has ever considered using a starter instead of seed dough. She says she has tried combining seed dough and starter to "inspire" the dough (don't you love her use of the word "inspire" to describe adding a layer of flavor?) but found that the flavor became too assertive when the dough was retarded overnight. She was definitely looking for a creamier taste.

Seed dough (mixed the night before) straight out of the cooler

First fold
Leslie has pre-mixed a batch so that we can have the resulting bread for lunch (yay!) but she offers to make another one from scratch, so that I can observe. She gives the premixed dough a fold, commenting that it looks very wet but that it is part of the experiment. Adapting such a wet dough to the bakery will be a different story. The recipe must be kept to what the bakers at the bakery already know, which means that Leslie must find out how to create the desired result AND how to incorporate the new dough into production.
From the details she later communicated via email, the exciting part of devising a new bread was what I was observing, the rest is nitty gritty work, pure and simple:  "I work out the recipe at the barn in terms of flavor profile and hydration. Then I increase it in size and transfer it to weights.  I still mix it at home. Then I transport it to Macrina to shape, proof and bake in our ovens.  It usually takes a few trials to get just the correct temperature and bake time (thinking of its shelf life and when it needs to be baked within the production shift.) Then I give it to our head bakers: talk them through it and have then mix it and follow it through production.  I usually see it at completion of the mixing, forming and ready-to-bake stages. If it is successful I will finalize the recipe and then we need to determine who might buy this bread and what delivery route it will need to be on. This determines how we fit it into the production schedule."
"We also need to determine oven space and packing needs after it is cooled. We then set it up as a product for our wholesale department. This entails the production cycle ( so it can be added to the mix sheet, forming sheet and bake sheet). The full product description is needed to describe the product to potential customers and to list out all ingredients for labeling and nutritional information ( now required of us)."
"We then test the product for two weeks in production before we go live.  The test batches are checked for quality and presentation and sampled out in the café to get customer feedback. We determine packaging, shelf life and labeling needs at this point also.  We let our wholesale sales staff taste and take it home with the hopes they will genuinely talk about the new products to customers calling in to place an order or change standing orders. We try to create a flyer for new products. These will go out to wholesale customers the Friday before the product is  available for purchase which usually falls on a Monday."
In other words, there is still a long and arduous road ahead for the bread Leslie is seeking to develop...
Back at the barn though, we are having fun. Time to give the dough its second fold: it receives two or three, at one hour interval. The first one involves six half-turns, the second one one single turn four times (the dough is holding its shape better). It is important not to do too many folds or the dough could become too strong.

Second fold
Leslie sets the dough to ferment a bit longer and begins the mise en place for the demo. Out come the measuring cups. My eyes open wide! Cups and spoons? Seriously? Laughing, Leslie confirms that she doesn't work with bakers' percentage and has actually developed most of the breads at Macrina without ever referring to a recipe. Pulling the scale closer, she adds that while she does like to use volumes (and does in both her cookbooks), she also keeps track of weights when she does research and development.
Leslie deftly scoops out some seed dough which she covers with three cups of lukewarm water. From experience she knows that three cups of water will give her enough dough to fill a half-sheet pan. Next comes a teaspoon of active dry yeast and one third of a cup of extra-virgin olive oil, soon followed by six cups of all-purpose flour and three teaspoons of salt. (Please note that these amounts were experimental. For the final amounts, you want to refer to the formulas below).
The dough doesn't look quite right. The flour is a new one, the only kind available at the island supermarket. Leslie adds another half-a-cup. The dough takes shape.
 
Leaving the second batch aside, Leslie now turns her attention back to the first dough. It is ready.

Leslie spreads it into the prepared oil baking sheet (the extra dough will proof and shape free-form) and sets it to proof...

Drizzled with olive oil and dotted with fresh rosemary, it will bake in a 455°F oven for about 20-25 minutes.

Leslie lets the two breads cool down some, then begins assembling our lunch. She paints both halves of the focaccia with a light coat of fragrant aioli, then chops up some membrillo (quince paste) which she distributes evenly on the bottom half...
...before covering it with thin slices of ham and turkey.
Next come cabbage and red onion, thinly sliced and quick-pickled with a splash of vinegar...
Down comes the top half of the focaccia and voilà, our sandwiches are ready.
They are excellent. The focaccia is tasty and tender, yet it has a satisfying crunch and, yes, all the flavors and textures play off one another to create a delectable whole. There is nothing to add, nothing to substract. A perfect balance...
A few weeks later as I check with Leslie before posting this, she says the bakers have taken well to the new bread. They are calling it Pizza Bianca and using it as a rotating sandwich bread. They do mix it by hand but they bake it on a half-sheet pan in the hearth oven which gives it an overall better top-crust appearance and bottom-crust finished bake. The customers are loving it.
Dessert was just as scrumptious: Leslie had adapted Bon Appétit's Darkest Chocolate Cake with Red Wine Glaze recipe by replacing some of the all-purpose flour with grape seed flour she picked up at the Fancy Food show in San Francisco earlier this year, thinking it would pair well with the red wine glaze. It did, although the flour gives the cake a grainy texture that doesn't really soften if kept for a day or two. She has presented the cakes to the bakery but that they haven't been incorporated into production yet. They would need to find a niche first as the bakery already offers similar products. Needless to say, I am delighted Leslie decided to try them out on the same day she was experimenting with the pizza bianca.
What I learned from watching Leslie make these little beauties is that any recipe can be re-interpreted and made your own. I might have thought of using grape seed flour (I actually have some at home and need to use it up) but it would never have crossed my mind to spoon the batter in mini-muffin pans instead of a cake form and yet it makes so much sense. Now it's decided. In my next life, I want to go to culinary school and become both a master bread baker and a pastry chef!

Monday, March 10, 2014

Whole Wheat Chocolate Levain Cake

There is cake and there is cake. Of the really good ones, some are dazzling, others unassuming. This one is of the second variety. A simple dessert relying in a large part on a century-old leavener for lightness. When birthdays are involved, I usually glaze it (with dark chocolate melted together with a bit of butter and a hint of powdered sugar) but most of the time, I leave it bare or just sprinkle it with confectioners' sugar. Either way, it is always a hit (it was a favorite of Noah's) and I love it that it makes use of surplus starter I might otherwise have to throw out.

The recipe is an adaptation of one I found on the King Arthur's website (which I halved in this particular instance to tailor it to my shallow flower-shaped French mold). When I make the whole recipe instead of halving it (and I usually do), I use a nine-inch springform pan and I bake the cake a while longer.

Ingredients

For those of you who are using BreadStorm (including the free version), please click on this link to import the formula.  For more on BreadStorm, you may want to read this post.

* This time, I used Sonora whole wheat pastry flour that I bought from Nan Kohler in Los Angeles a couple of months ago but in the past, I have made this cake with unbleached all-purpose flour or with regular white whole wheat flour. They both work perfectly but you may find, as I did, that using a locally grown and milled soft wheat brings it an intriguing flavor and a lovely texture. I am not sure how the recipe would turn out with regular whole wheat flour though. It might be too heavy and the taste of the grain might be overwhelming.

Another thing to keep in mind is that the more interesting the flavor of your starter, the tastier your cake will be. In other words, this is a good recipe to make on bread-baking day: you will probably have taken your starter out of the fridge a couple of days before, kept it at room temperature and fed it regularly. It will be bubbly and happy and at its peak in every way. That's the way you want it, both for bread and for cake.


Method
  1. Combine mature starter, milk and flour in large bowl. Cover and let rest at warmish room temperature for 2 to 3 hours or until somewhat expanded
  2. Preheat oven to 350°F/177°C and lightly oil a cake pan
  3. In another bowl, beat together sugar, oil, vanilla, salt, baking soda and cocoa
  4. Incorporate the egg
  5. Gently combine chocolate mixture with the levain-flour-milk mixture, stirring till smooth 
  6. Pour batter into prepared pan
  7. Bake the cake for 30 to 40 minutes until it springs back when lightly pressed in the center and a cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean 
  8. Remove from oven and cool on a rack
  9. Enjoy!
 

Friday, February 7, 2014

Chocolate Ciabatta with Dried Cherries and Roasted Hazelnuts


Related post: All About Ciabatta: notes from a class

Okay, so with Valentine's Day in mind, I test-baked a version of this festive ciabatta (inspired by the Breakfast Ciabatta with chocolate pieces and bits of candied orange that Didier Rosada demoed during the All about Ciabatta class). The chocolate and cherries combo is one of the Man's favorites and when you add roasted hazelnuts to the mix, well, you'd think he had died and gone to heaven from the blissful look on his face. Since ciabatta has become one of my favorite breads to make, I thought it would be just perfect for the occasion.
But I needed a test run because I wasn't sure of the percentage of cherries and hazelnuts to use. Good thing I did because, as it turned out, I didn't put in nearly enough of either that first time. Also I had been so concerned that the ciabattas might stick to the couche when proofing that I had used way too much flour (as can be seen from image below) and they came out looking more like rustic Yule logs than Valentine Day treats!
I had made four ciabattas. I brushed one of them clear of flour, which made it less Christmassy but gave it the sorry look of a legless and jaundiced platypus (minus the tail and the bill but you know what I mean)...
Nevertheless I resolutely sliced into it...
...and was rewarded by a wonderful fragrance of poolish, chocolate and roasted hazelnuts. I couldn't smell the cherries but I could glimpse a few of them and certainly taste them and I resolved right then and there to make another batch.
At that point I was called away from the kitchen by some urgent task or other and the next time I caught a glimpse of the second piece of ciabatta I had sliced for further evaluation (no self-sacrifice being to great for my Valentine), it had hugely shrunk in size and was actually walking towards me, firmly grasped in the right hand of said Valentine. Before I could react, he beamed at me: "I love this cake!"
Cake? Seriously? The Man has been living with me for more than for thirty years and eating my bread for almost as long and he still mistakes bread for cake? I replied sternly that not only what he was devouring wasn't a cake but that it was supposed to be his Valentine Day's breakfast surprise. He remarked that if it weren't a cake, it sure tasted like one and added judiciously that if it were a surprise, I shouldn't have left it lying around on the kitchen counter. He further offered that, if I let him proceed with his tasting,  he would gladly submit to a spot of amnesia and allow himself to be deliciously surprised on February 14th...
Since there is a (huge) lot to be said for regaling your Valentine with a treat you enjoy just as much as he does, I decided to forgive him his brief lapse of culinary judgment and proceed with the second test-bake. This time, I think I got the proportions right. The appearance is still rustic but nothing I can't live with. Of course I could always use more chocolate and more cherries. But then why not just make a cake? The Man wouldn't know the difference.

Formula

Yields four ciabattas, scaled raw at 500 g



For those of you who are using BreadStorm (including the free version), please click on this link to import the formula.  For more on BreadStorm, you may want to read this post.

Process

Note: This bread is made over 24 hours and requires a mixer equipped with a dough hook (such as a Kitchen Aid).

The night before the bake
  1. Mix the poolish, cover it loosely and let it ferment overnight (12 hours) at 73°F/23°C
  2. Roast the hazelnuts in a 350°F/177°C oven for about 20 minutes (I keep all nuts in the freezer which is probably why they need 20 minutes to turn brown. If yours are room temperature, they may not need more than 10 or 12 minutes) until they turn a rich brown color and let them cool on a kitchen towel. When they are cool to the touch,  rub them inside the kitchen towel until a good part of the skin has peeled off, then transfer them to a rimmed metal dish and break them roughly (I use the bottom of a heavy mug)
  3. Cut the butter in small pieces and reserve
  4. Scale the sugar and the honey
  5. If possible, keep above ingredients overnight at same temperature as the poolish but leave the eggs in the refrigerator
On baking day
Desired dough temperature (DDT): 73°F/23°C to 76°FF/24°C
(Depending on the room and the flour temperatures, you will need to use cooler or warmer water in the final dough to obtain the DDT at the end of the mixing process)
  1.  Half-an-hour before mixing time, take the eggs out of the refrigerator, scale them, beat them lightly and reserve
  2. Scale water 2 and bring to a boil
  3. Combine the dried cherries and chopped up hazelnuts, quick-soak them with the boiling water, drain and reserve the resulting tea (it will be brownish-looking and quite fragrant), letting it cool down to room temperature. This water remains your water 2 (I didn't top it off to make up for what the cherries and hazelnuts retained but you might have to if your flour is very thirsty)
  4. Scale the flour, yeast and salt. Whisk yeast and salt into the flour and reserve
  5. Place the poolish, the eggs and water 1 in the bowl of the mixer
  6. Add sugar and honey (if using 10% or less combined, it can be added at the beginning)
  7. Add the butter (if using 10% or less, it can be added at the beginning)
  8. Add the dry mix (flour + yeast + salt)
  9. Mix on first speed (on a spiral mixer) or speed 4 (on a Kitchen Aid) for 4 or 5 minutes
  10. Mix on second speed (on a spiral mixer) or speed 8 (on a Kitchen Aid) for 2-3 minutes
  11. Check gluten development. When gluten is 80% developed, add water 2 by increments on first speed (4 on Kitchen Aid) and mix for about 3 minutes
  12. Add the cherry-hazelnut mixture and the chocolate chips. Mix on first speed (4 on Kitchen Aid) until just incorporated
  13. Transfer into oiled dough tub, cover and let ferment at 73°F/23°C - 76°FF/24°C for 2 hours and 30 minutes
  14. Transfer the dough to a generously floured surface (see relevant video in All About Ciabatta: Notes from a Class), taking care not to let it fold over itself
  15. Divide and scale at 500 g (you should have four ciabattas (again please refer to the relevant video) (Note that in class, Didier scaled the breakfast ciabatta at 200 g and all the others at 400 g)
  16. Proof on floured linen, top down, for one hour
  17. Bake with steam on a baking stone in a 420°F - 216°C oven for 30 minutes (turning oven down to 400°F-204°C after 10 minutes, tenting with foil if over browning after 20 minutes and propping the oven door open (with a wooden spoon) for the last five minutes
  18. Cool on a rack
  19. Enjoy!
The crumb is rather darker than normal for an all-white flour ciabatta: that's because I used water 2 as a quick-soaking liquid for the cherries and hazelnuts. If you wanted a lighter crumb, you could throw out the soaking water but it would be a trade-off: you would lose a big part of the flavor.


Poolish in center, then clockwise: butter, honey, sugar and post-quick-soaking water 2


Don't you love the strands of gluten in the middle bubble?
 

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