Sharing some tested recipes

Today I am sharing some tested recipes. I have not posted for a while.   Not that I have not been cooking.  Rather I did not get a chance to take photos and choose to spend time outdoors more, maybe to offset being so much on a laptop during this increased working from home period.

I have tried quite a few recipes found online, often randomly, at other times simply because I am looking up a specific ingredient.  I will share a few below.

At the same time, I have changed my baguette recipe. It calls for less starter and overall is the same ratio of flour and water. Why that you may ask.  I realised that my baguettes were not getting as many air pockets inside that they used to. The idea was to give the yeast more “food”.  The outcome is great.

Updated baguette recipe

I bake on a weekly basis minimum.  I make nine baguettes per batch.  This works for me, this is the amount I can bake in one go, all on the same oven level.  Some baguettes go to neighbors, others we will freeze on the day of baking and unfreeze as we need them. They come out quite surprisingly well.

The updated recipe is HERE.

sourdough baguettes sourdough baguettes

 

Tried from scratch

I have been getting these gorgeous grape tomatoes from our weekly fruits and vegetable delivery. I was trying a way to display them in a dish where these tomatoes are the hero of the dish.  The idea was to make a tomato tarte.  In practice, the taste was amazing, but the bottom was too soggy the first time. The second time, I added some ricotta as a bottom layer which seemed to sponge off the juices. I also baked it at the lowest level in the oven.  Get started with your version, for me, this is still a recipe in development.

BreadNbutterkids BreadNbutterkids

Tried online recipes…and yes, all chocolate-based…

Cocoa powder biscuits

I found this recipe of cocoa cookies when looking at how to use a large quantity of cocoa powder (actually raw cacao) I have at home. This has been adopted by my children, batch four is now baking!

 Oven-baked thick crepe

This was a recipe I tried for dessert for our dinner on the 14th of July.  I remember getting the feed from GoodFood and being curious about this recipe.  That evening, we also had snails in its parsley garlic butter as an entree! That recipe is for another day.

While crepes are a national food in France and come with regional variations, this oven-baked version is not a traditional dish. The recipe is fund and worth a try. Ours puffed up on one side which had a pretty cool effect.  For the chocolate sauce, I did not do a ganache (i.e. I did not use cream), we had run out of cream. I made a water-based chocolate sauce. I think it is better for this dessert, it is lighter.  I really liked the dark chocolate vs orange taste contrast.

Hazelnut chocolate torte

That chocolate hazelnut cake recipe is from BBC Food. I can’t remember how I stumbled on it. It is a similar type of cake to the one from Flour & Stone, which recipe is already on this blog and has become a favorite. It is gluten-free.  Verdict: a very good cake, more compact than the Flour and Stone one and similarly rich.  While I used a milk chocolate ganache for the topping, my preference is dark chocolate, just a matter of preference.

 

 

 

The brownie recipe!

The brownie recipe

The brownie recipe! Yes, it is uploaded HERE. This is my recipe for a brownie, chocolatey, gooey, not too sweet.  I made it one day when friends were visiting between the very short time of ending a bushwalk and them getting back on the road with what was going to be an empty stomach.

I have read a number of good posts about brownies, wondering when I would finally find a recipe I would really like.  This blogger went on a mission of recipe testing,  others (there is a good post I read a couple times, just can’t find it now)  discuss the different versions: with cocoa (which I must say I have not yet tried) vs with chocolate, more cake-like, more fudge-like.  As for me I tend to like a brownie with some texture and a melting centre.

The brownie must be not too sweet, this is important as many brownies recipes have enormous amounts of sugar. Note that it is not sugar free either.  One of the keys of a good brownie is using brown sugar. It holds moisture better than white sugar due to the molasses.

Another important ingredient is the chocolate you use.  I like using 70% dark cooking chocolate. For some of you, it may be a bit strong, you can then use a bittersweet chocolate or 60% dark chocolate of good quality. If you are going to use milk chocolate for the choc chip in this recipe, decrease the white sugar by 40 g.  Now if you want a brownie for the children, try this brownie recipe with dulce de leche (i.e. caramel sweet concentrated milk) , my children love it!

chocolate and nuts soft brownies

Bread and brioche

A good brioche is a treat.  I use this start brioche recipe on this blog but do not necessarily shape it as a star brioche.  How beautiful!  Note that for a nice brioche, you will need a dough hook mixer.

This bread is our usual family stapple, I have now years of baking our bread. If you started on the journey and ended up with a brick, don’t be disheartened, try again.   If you have started going into sourdough bread making, you may want to read the tips on my sourdough bread making recipe. I do mostly baguettes now (I started with loaves, balls).  Sourdough baguettes are made from pretty much the same recipe but wetter (i.e. more sticky), see HERE.

briochhe parisienne et baguettes au levain
French brioche and sourdough baguettes, all homemade

 

my news? gnocchi week

Hello! My news? I am back populating this blog with recipes.  This week is gnocchi week.  And no, I did not stop cooking, more that I did not have the time to organise the photos and write up of the recipes.  Today baguettes and chicken liver pates are flying out the door.

Fabienne breadnbutterkids

And we are on chocolate hangover (for a few days at least) a bit before Easter due to family birthdays.

This one below was a trial from Pierre Herme’s book  “Le Larousse du Chocolat“.

It is an hazelnut daquoise (i.e.hazelnut meringue biscuit) with a rich chocolate filling.

Our finding: very good albeit in quite small quantities. The filling was too much chocolate to our taste. It looked good anyway!

Daquoise au chocolat Pierre herme

Recently I discovered ricotta gnocchis. gnocchi and roasted vegetablesWe were already doing regulalry (works well with left over mash) some potato gnocchi (that makes me realise that I need to take some photos next time), now we are also into ricotta gnocchi. Yum, we love them. Easy, quick, good! Try it out HERE.

For the potato gnocchi, you will have to do with my notes for now! See you for now.

potato gnocchi recipe
For now, you will have to do with my notes

Sourdough Baguettes

This recipe will make four  sourdough baguettes.  The baguette length is about 40 cm ( to fit in a home oven).  These sourdough baguettes have  beautiful crust and great bubbles inside.  They are delicious.

baguette

There is no dry yeast added in this recipe (not necessary). You will need an active starter.

As for all sourdough bread making, there is flexibility in the timing of the dough making and baking. Assuming STEP 1 (see below) is complete (24 hours required), in terms of timing for the making of your baguettes,  I propose two approaches:

  1. Shorter time-frame: start in the morning and have  sourdough baguette by mid-afternoon or dinner.  In that case, the second rising is done at room temperature.
  2. Longer time frame: if you want your baguette for, let’s say, Sunday morning, you would start the making sometimes on the Saturday, the latest mid-afternoon. Your sourdough baguettes will do the second rising in the fridge overnight.

NOTE: I posted this recipe a few years ago. I have slightly changed the ratio of starter to flour&water since. In the end, the wet to dry ratio is the same. What changes is the proportion of starter in the mix.   These days I do not use the Kitchen id for the baguette dough. I would punch it once  about half an hour after mixing the dough and forget the bowl (covered with a tea towel) in the fridge until the next day.  That leaves plenty of time for the yeast to slowly develop and grow. The next day, I shape them, let them rise, and bake them.

sourdough baguettes
A recent photos which I uploaded when updating this recipe
Starter

You will need 500 g of active starter. Once your starter is developed, don’t forget to save a little for next time.  I do not cover here how to develop a starter.  Here are a few pages that can help:

sourdough baguette
Healthy starter (developed)

For my starter I used organic rye flour and bottled water. Organic rye flour because it has the natural yeast you are after and bottled water because there is no added chlorine.  Then you will want to use unbleached white bread flour, organic or not. It worked every time, give it a go.  For the water, once the starter is established, tap water is fine, the yeast will at that stage be strong enough to resist a little chlorine.

A starter takes a few bread cycles to develop to its full strength.

Alternatively, contact me and we can explore options of me sending you some starter (I have done so before).

Ingredients:

Note: flour in this recipe is bakers flour.

  • 500 g of starter
  • 750 g of bread flour
  • 550 of water
  • 14 g of salt
  • spare flour for dusting

UPDATED RATIOS:

  • 225 g of starter
  • 890 g of bread flour
  • 640 g of water
  • 14 g of salt

You will also need:

  • Optional – a stand mixer with a dough hook (see tip in method if you do not have it)
  • a dough scraper
  • baguette tins (enough for 4 baguettes).  You can do without, the baguettes will be a bit flatter on the bottom.
  • a few clean tea towel
  • a large plastic bag
Method:
STEP 1:  Starter development and pre-fermentation.

Twenty four hours before preparing the dough, feed your starter to obtain 500 g of active starter. In my case I mix the kept starter (150 g) with 200  of flour and 200 g of water and leave in the corner of the kitchen for 24 hours. Leave at room temperature until it is about three times the size. If you are starting from another quantity of saved starter develop to obtain 550 g .  The 50 g extra is what you save to keep your starter for the next batch.

At the same time, mix in a plastic box the 750 g of flour with the 550 g of water, make a very rough dough. Place the lid on and put in the fridge overnight.

STEP 2: Dough making

Have your starter for the next batch? Take 50 g of developed starter from the starter, add to those 50 g, 50 g of water and 50 g of flour. Mix and place in the fridge for up to a week. If you are not a frequent baker, decrease the water to 25 g, this will keep the starter fed for longer, about two weeks.

Place the 500 g of starter, the water-flour mix and the salt in the mixer bowl.  Mix on low-speed for about five minutes or until the dough forms a ball and no longer stick to the side of the bowl.  Do not exceed ten minutes, you then run the risk of over-developing the dough.

Tip: if you do not have a mixer or prefer to do it by hand, this works as well. In a large bowl, place the flour, the developed starter, the water and the salt. Ensure the salt is not directly in contact with the developed starter at this point. With your hands (use the 2 of them), mix until it is homogeneous.  Let to rest covered for 30 minutes to an hour. With one wet hand, grab a corner of the dough and punch it in the middle, give a quarter turn to the bowl and repeat about 4 times (imagine taking each cardinal point and placing it to the centre, do this twice). Alternatively, after the first punching round, place in the fridge covered with a tea towel overnight. 

Tip: Because the baguette dough is more sticky than the bread dough, don’t forget to have a wet hand while doing the punching.

Place the dough in a large bowl, cover with a tea towel and allow to rise to almost double size.

Tip: The rising time will depend on the temperature and humidity level.

STEP 3: Preshape

This step is not strictly necessary, I often skip it.  It is possible to skip it as long as you cut your dough in 4 balls gently and are not tempted to rework it.

The dough has risen. Dust the kitchen bench and gently pull the dough on the kitchen bench. Using a  knife or the dough scraper, cut into 4 portions (4 baguettes).

sourdough baguette

One portion at the time, spread the dough gently (up to 20 cm wide) by pulling on it, this time in the shape of a circle.  Again imagine four corners and pull each towards the centre. Repeat another time or two. You are close to having a ball. Pinch the centre to close the ball, turn around and using your hands firmly placed on the kitchen bench (they must not lift), scoop the back of the ball and bring towards you. The dough should roll tucking the front underneath and simultaneously tightening the skin. Turn 90 degrees and repeat. If the ball does not tuck or roll, often it is because there is too much flour on your bench.

Rest covered  loosely with the tea towel for 10-15 minutes.

STEP 4: Shaping

It is now time to shape the 4 baguettes.

Take one ball of dough.  Pull it gently until you get a rectangle about 20-30 cm by 10-15 cm. Be mindful not to push the dough but to pull it gently.

Tip: Here it is very important to understand that you want to keep as much as possible all the bubbles and air in the dough, so you need to be gentle with it.

The short edge will be facing you:

  1. Imagine a line in the middle of your rectangle parallel to the narrow edges. Fold each narrow edge towards that line, the edges should just meet.
  2. Using the heel of your palm, flatten the dough pressing down on the new line. Repeat the previous step (alternatively fold only to a quarter length each end then another quarter so that the halves meet in the middle). Now pull the upper edge 2/3 towards you. Next, pull and stretch the lower edge over as to wrap the log as much as possible.  pinch the line where the dough stops to close the log.
  3. At each end of the log pinch the end to close the baguette.
  4. Turn the log seam down on the workbench.
  5. Roll the baguette back and forth and lengthen it (remember your high school pottery class!) to the length of your baguette tin.
  6. Transfer (seam down) on the baguette tin.

Tip: if you do not have a baguette tin, use a large tea towel and make little gutters, dust with flour and place your baguettes in each of them. 

STEP 5: Second rising

If you are baking the baguettes the next day, wrap the tins with a tea towel. You can place them in a large plastic bag to prevent them from drying (it depends on your fridge). Then place in the fridge.  You need to take them out of the fridge an hour or so before baking, you also need to ensure they have risen enough (almost double), else allow them to rise before baking.

sourdough baguetteIf you are baking them the same day, cover with clean tea towels and allow to rise.

You know the bread is risen sufficiently when a little poke bounces back slowly yet leaves a print.

 

SEPT 6: Baking

Heat up the oven to maximum (about 250 °C) with a pan of water at the bottom of the oven.

sourdough baguetteUse a scoring blade (available online) or a very sharp knife, do incisions at 45 degrees as suggested here on the left. Add a dusting of flour if wished.

Place in the oven without losing too much of the heat and steam.

Reduce heat to 200 °C and bake until golden. Remove from the oven, allow to cool down.

 

baguettes