Have you ever wanted to choose what to put in your florentine? Mine can be considered as a florentine or nut and oats bars. Here are a few tips and my recipe.
Through a trial at making the florentine I really liked, I ended up with a pretty good cereal bar. I was after an oat and nuts dark chocolate coated florentine. I am not a big fan of the dry candied fruits in those, neither of the cornflakes nor of the very high dose of sliced almonds.
Tip 1 – the “glue” of your florentine
In the end, I realised it doesn’t matter too much what you want in it, it is important to make sure you have a good “glue”. I looked at a number of recipes for that binding mix and opted for my own made with simple ingredients (butter, honey and brown sugar), so no glucose syrup or other fancy items.
Tip 2 – you need salt in your florentine
One thing I did wrong was having a little too much salt. So put salt but go slowly, once added you can’t remove it
Tip 3 – solid ingredients: let yourself go!
There are no limitations there. You need to think of the flavours you are combining together, this is crucial but not too hard. if not sure, stick to a few nuts, seeds, or dry fruits in addition to the oats.
Mine was a little extravagant as I went through the pantry nuts jars: brazil nuts (cut), shredded coconut, pepitas, walnuts, roasted hazelnuts, and macadamia pieces. And some dry cranberries.
This is the recipe of a simple strawberry tarte. While simple, it is still excellent. A more complex recipe may have a small sponge layer and a vanilla thick custard layer over the pastry base or an almond vanilla custard. All options if you want to add flavours. Note that cake shops would often have a sponge layer to absorb the juices as they prepare more in advance than you do at home (else you would have a soggy pastry).
This version for a simple strawberry tarte is always a success, is light, perfect for a summer day. This is the recipe I mostly make. The quality of the strawberries is important. You can choose to use full strawberries or cut them in half, especially of they are big.
Preparation – 1 hour maximum.
Ingredients:
250 g of plain flour
1250 g of soft butter
125 g of white sugar
one large egg
Strawberries, a couple of punnets (sometimes 3)
Method:
Prepare a sweet shortcrust pastry by mixing all ingredients together and making a ball. Don’t overwork it. If very friable, add a few drops of water. Allow resting for 1/2 hour, or up to a couple of days in the fridge.
Place it in the tin by either rolling the dought or by pushing it into the tart tin with your fingers.
Make dots with a fork on the bottom, this will prevent the formation of bubbles.
Cook on 170 °C until lightly golden.
Cut the bottom of the strawberry removing all unripe parts. You can use full strawberries or you can cut them in half.
Place the strawberries on top of the pastry (part cut facing the pastry) and brush them with red currant or apricot jam slightly warmed up and diluted with a few drops of water (to make it runnier).
This dessert is better done on the day, that said, you can do the bottom sweet shortcrust pastry earlier. Do not place it in the fridge.
A couple of weeks ago now, a friend asked for some help with food photography. The hero not being the food but the chopping boards my friend is selling. It was an afternoon marathon making cakes and presentations on chopping boards then taking photos. When it came to food, the lemon butter cake was the hero because of the runny lemon icing. Yum!
My lemon butter cake, in French we call it “le cake”
I have already posted the recipe of this lemon butter cake some time ago. It is a simple cake, one recipe you need in your recipe book. Technically, nothing difficult, make sure the butter and sugar are really well beaten (by hand or with your mixer). For the runny lemon drizzling, it is simply icing sugar and lemon juice. I am amazed at how little lemon juice is required. If you put too much it will be too runny, the consistency must be quite pasty. I made it twice recently, the second time was not so runny.
Other food products depicted on the chopping boards
Here is a little gallery of the food products depicted. The round little biscuits are ” palets bretons“, a biscuit originated from Britany in Western France based on a very buttery shortcrust pastry.
The chocolate cake is one I make all the time, le gateau de Suzy, easy and adaptable. Here it was adapted to gluten-free (swap flour for a mix of cornflour and rice flour, the quantity being a quarter more than the wheat flour one).
The lemon butter cake with lemon drizzling is the one above, “le cake“.
I call this pumpkin soup light because I include a zuchini in it which lightens the texture and the taste. It makes for a warm dish, comforting but not as heavy as many pumpkin soups can be.
Note that I do not use stocks in my soups. I find the taste of the vegetables sufficient to provide a great flavour. If you want to use stock, I would advise to choose one which only includes natural ingredients. You will also need to decrease the salt you add in.
Serves 4
Ingredients:
1/2 a butternut pumpkin
1 medium size brown onion
1 zucchini
salt and pepper
1/2 cup (125 mL) of cream.
Bread, olive oil, cracked pepper and/or parmesan cheese to serve
Method:
Peel and slice the onion, brown the onion in the saucepan with a little olive oil for a few minutes.
In the meanwhile, peel the zucchini and cut roughtly, peel and seed the pumpkin.
Place both pumpkin and zucchini to the saucepan. Add just enough water to the saucepan to cover. Also add one teaspoon of rock saltSimmer until the pumkin is soft (use a small pointed knive to test).
Use a stick blender (or a mixer) to mix the soup. Add the cream.
Serve your pumpkin soup with a piece of bread and as wished a drop of olice oil,cracked pepper and/or shaved parmesan.
For this standing pear chocolate cake, you will need some small pears, preferably ripe, although not so much they crumble in your fingers. If your pears aren’t ripe, you should cook them partly in a sugar syrup . Note, there are many ways with sugar syrups for pears, for example, if you don’t have any wine for the poaching, you can use orange juice. The flavour will be different but still beautiful.
As for the nutmeg, I was experimenting and probably put a little too much (1/2 teaspoon) which was not overbearing but maybe not to everyone’s taste. I have reduced it in the recipe. You could also put a pinch of cayenne pepper or medium chilli powder.
Ingredients:
For the cake
5 small ripe pears, peeled and cored from the bottom, stem on
4 eggs (about 60 g each)
160 g of sugar
200 g of butter, melted
30 g of hazelnut meal
140 g of plain flour
1 tsp of raising powder
1/4 tsp of freshly grounded nutmeg
60 g dutch cocoa
For the chocolate sauce (from Pierre Herme):
250 ml of water
125 ml of cream
130 g of dark 70% chocolate
70 g of sugar
Preparation:
Line the bottom and side of a springform pan, about 25 cm wide (it can be less but no wider).
Preheat oven to 170°C.
Mix the eggs and sugar until quite moussy. Add in melted butter, nutmeg, cocoa powder and hazelnut meal.
Add in the flour and raising powder.
Pour the batter into the lined mould, placing on pear in the middle and the other pears evenly as a ring. Make sure there is batter underneath each pear.
Bake until just set (about 30-40 minutes, it varies between ovens), the cake will show a few cracks on the sides and the top does not appear wobbly when the cake tin is slightly pushed. Allow the cake to cool down a little (or more if time allows) before transferring to a serving plate. The cake will collapse in the middle as it should still be gooey.
To prepare the chocolate sauce, cut the chocolate in small pieces. Place in a thick based saucepan the water, sugar, cream and chocolate. Slowly heat up and stir until smooth with a wooden spoon. Bring to boiling point and simmer while stirring constantly until the sauce becomes unctuous and covers the back of the wooden spoon. Use the sauce hot, or allow to cool at room temperature and use warm. The excess sauce keeps in the fridge for two weeks.
Tip- transferring the cake can be a little tricky. I use the removable metal bottom of a tart tin as a very large spatula.
Tip – Keep the cake at room temperature if leftovers (i.e. not in the fridge).
After trialing a few recipes to make sure my 16 years old niece who has become a fan of this little hot cakes could reproduce crumpets in France, I am putting here my pick of the recipes trialed.
If you want to read about the comparative testing, go to the post dedicated to it HERE.
Otherwise, get some flour, sugar, yeast, milk, salt, bicarbonate of soda and a little butter and get cooking!
Makes 6 medium crumpets.
Ingredients:
200 mL of milk
125 g of flour
1 tbsp of butter chopped (10 g)
7 g of dry yeast
½ tsp of salt
½ tsp of sodium bicarbonate
1 tsp of white sugar
Method:
Warm up half of the milk with butter and sugar. Add the remaining milk. Why do it in two go, you may ask? This will ensure the temperature of the mix is initially hot enough to melt the butter and sugar but with the total volume of milk just warm. The yeast would not like it otherwise!
Add the yeast. Set aside for 10 minutes.
Add together the flour, sodium bicarbonate and salt.
Mix well (use a whisk) until completely smooth.
Set aside for 45 minutes.
Use non-stick crumpets rings.
Oil the bottom of a crepe frypan or non stick fry pan slightly. Heat up the frypan then reduce to ¾ heat.
Add 2 tablespoons of batter in each ring. When bubbles come up and have popped up regularly over the surface of the crumpet (2 to 3 minutes), remove the ring (it should come undone pretty easily by just pulling it up. If the crumpet is not fully cooked on the top, flip back and lightly cook for 10-15 seconds.
This lemon curd tiramisu is a fresh tangy delightful dessert! Just writing about it makes me smile. This dessert happened just one day while wanting to do a tiramisu which is not coffee based.
The recipe is super easy. Serves 12. Depending on the dish you use, you may have a bit of leftover of the lemon curd or mascarpone mix.
a few tablespoons of a liquor (fruit based) if desired.
Tip: if you don’t have any sugar syrup, dissolve 1 cup of white sugar in 1/4 L of water in a saucepan (roughly 1 cup), let it reduce until syrupy, it will keep for month in a glass bottle. You can make larger batches. You can use it for a number of desserts, cocktails (ti’punch for example) or sorbets.
Method
For the lemon curd:
Melt the butter with the lemon juice and sugar in a saucepan. Add the lemon zest. In the meanwhile, beat the eggs slightly in a large bowl. Once the butter is melted, slowly transfer the liquid hot mixture to the eggs while whisking continuously. The mix will start thickening, transfer back to the saucepan and place on low heat until it thickens but without reaching boiling point. Transfer to a clean bowl. The mixture will thicken further when cooling down. If you have cooked the curd too much and got a little bit of scrambled eggs, pass it through a sieve.
For the tiramisu:
Choose a dish wide enough and tall enough to enable the layering. At least 12 cm high to allow for consistent layers.
If you have a kitchen Aid or similar, it is time to get it out, if not, a whisk will work perfectly. Mix the mascarpone and egg yolks until smooth and fully combined. Whip the cream to soft peaks, adding the sugar slowly towards the end. Combine first 1/4 of the whipped cream with the mascarpone, then combine the rest.
In a deep plate, mix 1/4 cup of hot water with 1/4 cup of sugar syrup and our chosen spirits (2 tbsp).
The bottom layer is made with the savoiardi. One at the time, place a biscuit in the syrup mix for 5 seconds until moist but not crumbling ad transfer to the bottom of the dish. Repeat to cover the bottom, you will most likely need to cut the biscuits to size to fit the corners or fill up the voids.
Cover with mascarpone, about 1.5 cm thick. Now, add a layer of lemon curd (1 cm thick maximum).
Repeat the biscuit layering stage making sure you soak them before placing them down. If you run out of the soaking liquid, make a new quantity. Add a layer of mascarpone, then a layer of lemon curd. This second layer of lemon curd can be thicker (up to 2 cm). Now place the remaining of the mascarpone mix on top in a little dome structure, using a round knife or chop stick , lightly swirl through the mascarpone layer with the lemon curd right underneath.
Toast some almond flakes in a frypan or under the grill (don’t forget them!) and place on top of the tiramisu. Don’t forget that this steps makes the dessert happen!
Tip: if you have too much mascarpone mix, place in ramequins and cover, keep in the fridge, it will make a nice little treat for someone in the coming days. Lemon curd keeps in the fridge in a plastic box for a week or so.
Gateau Mozart (Pierre Herme) is a cake for celebration days!
The Gateau Mozart is a Pierre Hermé’s chocolate mousse cake combining chocolate, a subtle cinnamon flavour and cooked apples (in butter!). This recipe is part of Le Larousse du Chocolat. The cake consists of three thin and very friable disks of sweet cinnamon shortcrust pastry with layers of chocolate mousse and cooked apples. The recipe is rather easy, the difficulty is in making the thin circles without breaking them.
In my version, I wanted a cake higher than 4 centimetres, so I doubled the quantity for the mousse and apples (here I am giving the original recipe). I find that that the dough pastry makes 4 circles rather than 3 (one spare one just in case)!
Serves 6-8.
Sweet shortcrust cinnamon pastry
180 g butter, at room temperature and diced
40 g icing sugar
35 g almond meal
8 g ground cinnamon
2 hard-boiled egg yolks, thinly passed through a sieve
1 cl dark rum
Pinch of salt (except if using salted butter)
1/2 teaspoon baking powder (1/2 sachet)
200 g flour
In a bowl place the butter and work it with a spatula, add the icing sugar, the almond meal, ground cinnamon, salt, flour, egg yolks, baking powder and rum. Do not work the dough too much, it is very friable.
Rest for 4 hours cell-wrapped in the fridge.
Roll the dough between 2 sheets of baking paper to 2 mm thick and make 4 disks of 21 cm diameter. Watch out for creases. Place the disks flat in the fridge for half an hour. You may want to take only 1/3 of the dough each time and do one disk at the time. I find that 4 disks can be made.
In the meanwhile, preheat the oven at 180ºC.
Bake each disk for 18-20 minutes then cool down on a cooling rack (bake each disk on the baking paper you rolled it on).
Apple chocolate mousse
100 g Granny Smith apples – I like to double almost double the quantity of apple.
10 g butter
1 g cinnamon
35 g caster sugar
6 cl cream
2 cl of dark rum
1 small cinnamon stick broken
165 g dark chocolate 70% cocoa
120 g egg white
Peel the apples and cut in cubes. Cook in a fry-pan for 3-4 minutes with the butter, 10 g of the sugar and the cinnamon powder.
Add the rum and flambe.
Set aside to cool to room temperature
Bring to the boil the cream with the cinnamon stick, filter. Melt the chocolate in a bain-marie. Mix the cinnamon cream and chocolate together to obtain a ganache.
Beat the whites to snow with the remaining 25 g sugar, incorporate 1/3 to the chocolate, then the rest folding gently, add the apples and fold again gently.
Assemblage
Place one disk at the bottom of a 21 cm springform tin, cover with half of the mousse, now, gently add a second disk, cover with the remaining mousse. Place the third disk.
Refrigerate for a minimum of 30-45 minutes.
Run a knife between the wall of the tin and the cake. Remove the outer circle and base and slide on the serving plate.
You can now decorate the side with broken chocolate curls (or large pieces grated chocolate), you can also decorate the top with a little cocoa powder, cinnamon sticks and sliced apples.
“C is for Cookies, that’s good enough for me Oh, cookie, cookie, cookie starts with C”
I use these choc chip cookies for many occasions: lunch boxes, presents, travels, picnics, playdates, …
What I like with this recipe is that you can make them very small, bite size like or maxi over indulging size! This recipe describes medium (normal) size biscuits.
Ingredients
200 g of butter, melted
150 g of white sugar
200 g of brown sugar
2 eggs
450 g of flour
1 teaspoon of raising powder (1 sachet if using that version)
300 g of good cooking chocolate chopped with a knife (or use packets of chocolate chips from the shop)
Method
Heat the oven up on 180°C
Mix together the eggs, white sugar, brown sugar
Add the butter and mix well
Add together the flour, raising powder and chocolate chips. Mix by hand.
Cover 2 baking sheets with baking paper, with a spoon (or with your hands) place on the baking sheet little mounds the size of an apricot,push down very slightly. Make sure the mounds are not to close to each other (at least leaving space of the size of one mound between two mounds) as they will spread during baking.
Bake until the colour starts to change slightly golden brown. Do not overbake.
Slide the baking paper with cookies on it on the cooling rack. Leave to cool for a few minutes before moving them.
You should expect to need two bakes if using two baking trays at the same time.
This page will provide you a step to step approach to making sourdough bread. If you have a stand mixer, feel free to use it. The below method explain both the technique with and without stand mixer. And if you do not have a stand mixer, all you need is just a bit more time up your sleeve.
I am about to forget to say that sourdough bread making is very forgiving, about to go to the beach? Place the covered bowl into the fridge, you will take it back where you left it when you come home.
Overview of the different steps
Step No
Step
No hook machine
With hook machine
1
Starter feed and growth
The day before
Same
2
Save your starter for next time
Save your starter, prepare for storage.
Same
3
Ingredients mixing & autolyse
All at once, making sure the salt is NOT put in direct contact with yeast.
Water, starter and flour mixed, salt added after hydrolyse.
Seeds/berries can be added at this stage.
Seeds/berries (if used) added with salt
1h rest
4
Dough development
Punch dough + 1h rise/rest x 2
Mix up to 10 min or until dough does not stick to bowl and can do the window stretch.
5
Rising
The dough would have started to rise already during the previous rest periods. If not risen about double, allow longer.
Let rise up to 2-5 h sometimes -depending on temperature & humidity until about double in size
6
Pre-shape
Depending on books, pre-shaping is either done here, or earlier half way through the rising (if so disregard this step here). The action aims at diving the dough in loafs sizes and prepare a rough ball. Rest for « h.
Same
7
Shaping
This is where we give the round or long shape (or other) to the bread.
Same
8
Final rising
Highly dependent on temperature. If you reach that stage in the evening, leave out for 1/2h to an hour then refrigerate, you will bake the next day. Otherwise can take 1 to 3 hours. Dough should almost double. Finger test (not necessary if refrigerating the dough)!
Same
9
Bake
Get a starter started
This is a section I have recently added as some people have asked. Keep in mind that this is an easy process and all you need is time up your sleeve!
Apart from time, you also need:
unbleached organic rye flour
bottled water (has no chloride)
A large tall jar (platic or glass), must be super clean!
You do not need any sugar honey or grapes and anything you may found on some other blogs. You can use them, but they are not strickly necessary.
Now, why unbleached rye flour? Because it has a lot of natural yeast on it, more than plain flour. Latter on, you can feed it plain flour and it will be fine.
Tip: I sometimes feed my starter unbleahed rye flour to give it a boost.
Tip: yeast do not like being in a draught!
Tip: It doesn’t matter if you use 120 g or 50 g to start with. What matters is the ration water to flour, must be the same weight.
Ready? Go!
DAY ONE: in the jar mix 120 g of the bottled water with 120 g of the rye flour. Stir. Cover with a cell wrap loosely and set aside in a warm place for 24 h.
DAY TWO: Nothing much will have happened. Don’t worry.
DAY THREE: A little of activity should start to appear, just a few small bubbles. With a clean spoon, remove about half and add 60 g bottled water and 60 g rye flour.
DAY FOUR: The starter will start to have a small acidic nice smell. Remove half of the content of the jar and add 60 g and 60 g of flour and water
DAY FIVE: The starter should show good activity and significanlty increase in volume. If not, keep doing the Day 4 step for a few more days or until the starter becomes active. If the starter is active, keep half of it and feed it 120 g of flour and 120 g of water. The next day, it will have about trippled in volumes. This is when you either expand it further to make your bread (feed it, see next paragraph) or store it (further below).
Feed your stored starter
Remove the starter from the fridge, in a large bowl, mix with 160 g of warm like water, then add 160 g of baker’s flour, mix well. Using your hand may be necessary. Cover but not tightly and let it be until you are ready to make the bread.
The starter will double in size and should have a nice slightly acidic smell. The starter will develop small then large bubbles, when fully fed, it will reach the maximum height. This is when you should use it, after this is will start deflating. You can still use it, but don’t wait too much.
Tip: Use wet hand when handling the starter manually, it will not stick.
Tip: The starter can be put in the fridge if you cannot make your bread the day planned and thus slowed and retarded.
Tip: starter feeling a bit down? Rejuvenate the yeast by using unbleached organic rye flour for half the weight of flour. The unbleached rye flour contains wild yeast which will provide a boost to the starter.
Save your starter and store it
Once your starter is ready, you should ensure you save some for the next breads.
Place in a jar or plastic box:
50 g of starter
50 g of baker’s flour
25 g of water
Mix well, pour on the workbench and knead it lightly to form a small ball, then put back in the box and close it. If you are going to use it in a day or two, leave outside for 1 hour, otherwise within the next half hour place in the fridge.
Remember, this starter is a stiff starter and will store for up to a couple of weeks at the back of your fridge. Some recipes call for liquid starter, which is obtained after feeding twice your stored starter or requires adapting the water ratio to flour in the recipe (not covered here).
Basic White Sourdough Bread
We will make 700 g breads. The measures in the table below are given for the two loaves and also the single one.
Ingredients
2 x 700 g
1 x 700 g
Flour
670 g
335 g
Salt
18 g
9 g
Water
380 g
190 g
Starter
385 g
190 g (rounded up)
Note: the salt must be un-ionised salt.
MANUAL METHOD
Mix all the ingredients together until a rough dough forms. Now, a note for the salt. Salt in direct contact with yeast kills the yeast, I often put the starter at the bottom, then water, flour and salt.
Stand for 20 min or so, then take one corner and pull to the centre, give a quarter turn to the bowl and repeat until done 4 times. Alternatively, some recipes may call for a couple of envelope turns. Cover.
Rest for 1 h.
The dough will have risen slightly and will feel much lighter and stretchy. With one wet hand, pull one corner of the dough and “punch back” inside the middle. Turn the bowl a quarter turn. Repeat 3 times. This will deflate the dough slightly and it will become hard again. This develops the gluten strands.
Rest for 1 h
Repeat the previous 2 steps.
Now the dough should be quite smooth and elastic. It should also be about double the initial size. It is time to pre-shape. Put your dough gently on a very slightly floured work bench. If you have done the quantity for 2 breads, divide here in 2 roughly even portions. The pre-shaping, only gives a round form to the portion of dough. Place your hands (cup them) behind the dough piece and slide them towards you without lifting them. The dough will roll on itself and tuck underneath itself creating some tension. Give a quarter tune, repeat once. Then let to rest covered on a board for 30 min.
Turn the pre-shape dough head down and press gently without deflating to even the dough either in a round (for a ball) or a rectangular (for a long loaf).To shape a ball: pull one corner at the time to the centre of the dough. Repeat once with the “new” corners”. Draw up the edges to the centre. Pinch them together to “close” the ball (this will be the bottom of your bread). Turn over. With cupped hand, pull the ball to stretch the skin of the dough on all sides (see the bubbles visible under the skin on photos below).
To shape a long loaf: Placing the rectangle long side in front of you, fold the left side just over halfway across the right, then fold the right side to the left so they slightly overlap. Take each top corner from the short side of the rectangle and fold in towards the middle (see photo). The dough will become quite narrow at the top.Fold the top towards you and press it lightly into the body of the dough. Repeat this action (corner and fold the point) several times until there is one fold left. Fold the dough down the bottom edge and seal. With your thumbs. Roll the dough forward to place the seam underneath.
Place the shaped dough(s) in a floured banneton head down, cover slightly with flour and with a damp cloth and place in the refrigerator if retarding. The dough is ready when it pushes back halfway when you insert your finger in it (this is the finger test). Retarding the bread has for advantage to increase the fermentation length and develop further the taste. The dough cannot over-rise when put in the fridge (i.e. rising is controlled).
DOUGH MIXER METHOD:
Mix the ingredients at the exception of the salt. Once you get a rough dough, let it rest for 20 min.
Turn on the mixer, add the salt, then continue turning on medium maximum for up to 10 min or until the dough forms a ball and does not stick to the bowl anymore.
Transfer to a clean bowl, cover, let rise for 2 hours, maybe more until almost double
From here, the method is the same as the manual one from step 6.
Tip: The yeast does not like being in a drought (at all!).
Tip: Wet your hand when handling the starter or the dough, it will avoid sticking to your finger and a big mess.
Tip: the autolyse allows the flour to absorb the water heavenly and as a result requires less mixing time. The salt is added latter as it draws the water away from the flour and thus reduced the process.
Tip: The yeast activity decreases with decreasing temperature (and reverse), it starts to become dormant from 4°C.
Tip: It is important that the bottom of the bread be well sealed or it will become the point of least resistance during the baking and will open.
Tip: The loaves are too big? Reduce the quantities to make a 500 g loaf.
Ingredients
2 x 500 g
1 x 500 g
Flour
480 g
240 g
Salt
13 g
6 g
Water
270 g
135 g
Starter
275 g
135 g (rounded up)
Tip: Some flour require a bit more water, add a few drops at the time only.
Tip: during the retarding process, it is important to maintain some moisture in the covering cloth to prevent the formation of a dry skin.
Tip: if you let it rise too much, no drama, bake readily. Your bread will flatten a fair bit, it happens to each of us, the next one will be better. Do not score the bread before placing in the oven.
Tip: the manual method may not be suited when using dry yeast in addition of the starter. Dry yeast introduces millions of yeast cells compared to thousand contained in the starter.
BAKE YOUR BREAD
If the bread was in the fridge, take it out, let it adapt to room temperature, if the bread has not risen enough, let it rise further.
Place a pan with water at the bottom of the oven, place your cooking stone/sheet on the middle rack. Heat up your oven about 220°C fan-forced (240°C otherwise).
When the bread is ready to bake, remove your baking stone/sheet from the oven, quickly (no not to lose heat) place the bread on it making sure what was at the top of the banneton is now the bottom of the bread. Slash the bread and insert in the oven.
Decrease oven temperature to 190°C forced-fan (210°C traditional). Bake until golden. Check that a loaf is cooked by tapping the base, it should sound hollow.
Allow to cool on a wire rack.
Tip: the role of the water pan is to create steam all through the baking, this will mostly allow the bread to keep rising and opening and the crust to be crusty and thin. Alternatively, this can be done by steaming the oven for 10 sec at the start of the baking. Some ovens have steaming functions.
Tip: you can in theory keep your unbaked loaf in the fridge for a few days, ensure it is wrapped with a humid cloth. I find it not very successful after Day 2 though.
Tip: to slash either used a very sharp pointy knife or a Stanley knife. If you are going to make a lot of bread, you will find on the net some dedicated bread slasher. Do not leave any of those in the wrong places.
Variations
The introduction of seeds and currants is done generally after the initial 20 minutes rest. It is critical to maintain the ration flour to added element when changing proportions. It is also important to hydrate seeds and berries as specified to avoid those sucking all the water required for the dough itself.
Toasted seeds sourdough
Basically, if adding 50 g of seeds, also add 50 g of water.
For a 500 g loaf (480 g of flour):
50 g sunflower seeds
50 g pumpkin seeds
25 g sesame seeds
25 g poppy seeds
100 g water
Combine all the seeds and toast in a dry frying pan on medium heat until lightly coloured. Let the seeds cool down in a bowl and pour the water over the top and stir. The seeds will soak all of the water.
Seeds are introduced after the first 20 min rest.
Walnut, pepitas and cranberries sourdough
For a 700 g loaf:
70 g soaked cranberries
70 g pepitas
70 g walnut
Walnut and pepitas o not absorb water, so no need for additional one. If the dough is too sticky after the 20 min rest, I add 1 spoon of flour at the time. If too dry, a few drops of water at the time.