Friday, February 6, 2009

Potato and Rye Vienna Twist - Part Two

The potato dough is on the left; the rye dough is on the right.



  • When both doughs have doubled in size, gently turn them out onto a floured surface.
  • Divide each dough into 2 equal parts.
  • Roll each part into a 14 inch roll.
  • Take a roll of rye and a roll of the potato dough and twist the two together, pinching the ends together.
  • Place the twists on a parchment lined baking sheet, cover and allow to rise until doubled.


Previous to putting the bread in the oven, mist the bread with water and sieve them all over with 1 to 2 T flour. Note: I used 1 T and it was almost too much. Bake in a preheated 400 degree oven for 35 -40 minutes.

Cool completely on a cooling rack before slicing. The slices will be part rye and part potato dough.
Posted by Picasa

Potato and Rye Vienna Twists - Part One

This must be one of Beth Hensperger's favorite recipes because she put it in both Baking Breads: Old and New Traditions and in The Bread Bible. Making this loaf involves making two types of bread at the same time.

For the potato dough, you have to cook a potato and then puree it. Here's that part of the recipe:

1 unpeeled 6 ounce russet potato, washed and cut into large chunks
1 1/2 tsp active dry yeast
7/8 cup warm milk
4 T unsalted butter at room temp
1 T sugar
1 large egg at room temp
1 1/2 tsp whole aniseed
1 1/2 tsp salt
3 1/2 - 3 3/4 cups unbleached all purpose flour or bread flour

You cut the potato up and put it in a pot. Cover the potato with water and bring the water to a boil. Reduce the heat, cover the pan, and cook the potato for 20 minutes. Drain the potato, reserving 1/4 cup potato water. Puree the potato with a food mill or an electric mixer. This was Dylan's first experience with a food mill. He thought it was just amazing.

At first it's hard to turn the handle of the food mill while the potatoes are in big chunks.


Then it gets faster and easier! He thought this was great!



He likes to look at the flour on his hands when he is chief kneader.

  • In large bowl, pour in the reserved 1/4 cup of potato water.
  • Sprinkle the yeast over the potato water and stir until smooth.
  • Add the potato puree (2/3 cup), milk, butter, sugar, egg, aniseed, salt, and 1 cup of flour.
  • Beat until smooth, about 1 minute.
  • Add 2 1/2 cups more unbleached flour and beat until smooth - about 3 minutes.
  • Knead dough either with dough hook or by hand until smooth and springy.
  • Put in greased bowl to rise.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Seven Grain Honey Bread

Today Dylan and I baked another of my favorite Hensperger recipes from my falling-apart-at-the-seams copy of her Baking Bread: Old and New Traditions.
The recipe calls for seven grain cereal and I only had five grain but I used it and hoped for the best.

Here are the ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 cups boiling water
  • 1 cup seven grain cereal (I used five-grain cereal)
  • 1 1/2 T active dry yeast
  • pinch sugar
  • 1/4 cup warm water
  • 1/4 cup warm buttermilk
  • 1/3 cup local honey (as a beekeeper, I was thrilled to use my own honey from my backyard bees)
  • 3 T corn or other vegetable oil
  • 2 T unsalted butter, melted
  • 3 eggs (we were almost out of eggs and had only two but I soldiered on)
  • 1 T salt
  • 4 1/2 - 5 cups unbleached bread flour.
And here's what you do:
  • Pour boiling water over the cereal and allow to stand for 1 hour
  • Proof the yeast in the warm water with the pinch of sugar (about 10 minutes)
  • In a large bowl, combine the buttermilk, honey, oil, butter, eggs, salt, and 1 cup flour.
  • Beat hard until smooth
  • Add the cereal mixture and the yeast
  • Add remaining flour, 1/2 cup at a time until the dough clears the sides of the bowl.
  • Knead the dough until it is soft and springy (about 3 minutes), adding flour as necessary
  • Let rise in a greased bowl covered with plastic wrap for about 1 t0 1 1/4 hours
  • Turn dough onto work surface and divide into three parts.
  • Make round loaves - I have round baking pans - they are actually called pudding pans - and I used those
  • Let rise about 30 to 40 minutes
  • About 20 minutes before baking, preheat the oven to 375.
  • Bake until golden brown and hollow sounding when tapped about 35 - 40 minutes.

Dylan's favorite part is licking the beater!

Here are the three loaves. I'm lucky they came out at all. I had baked rolls in my convection oven at 375 and thought it was still on when I put the loaves in the oven, but actually I had turned it off.

When the timer went off for me to take the bread out, I realized the oven wasn't even on, the bread was pale blonde and although it had achieved "spring" in the oven, it wasn't done in any way. I left the bread in the oven, turned the convection back on at 375 and baked it for another 20 minutes.

Despite the rocky baking experience and the lack of one egg, the loaves turned out pretty. They are a little softer than I would have imagined and the loaf on the left in the group picture shows the indentation from the cooling rack.

Posted by Picasa

Gourmet's Rye Walnut Rolls


Today I made Gourmet's Rye Walnut Rolls in this month's magazine on page 87. I didn't follow the recipe exactly because at my house we were all out of eggs by the time I got finished and I couldn't do the egg wash at the end. We also didn't have any onions (tomorrow is grocery day) so I used the lone shallot - a rather large one - that I had.

Regardless, my family loved them.

Here's the recipe:

1 medium onion, chopped (1 cup) (I used a large shallot)
1 T salt, divided
1/2 cup olive oil
2 cups whole milk
2 tsp active dry yeast
1/4 cup warm water
1 T honey
5 1/2 cups all purpost flour
1 cup rye flour
1/2 tsp black pepper
3/4 cup walnuts, toasted and coarsely chopped
1 large egg beaten with 1 T water for egg wash (didn't have this)
1/4 cup nigella or poppy seeds (didn't have this either so tried black sesame seeds - which I did have!)

  • Line baking sheets with parchment paper ( I didn't have any so I sprayed Pam on the baking sheets! - I was out of everything.)
  • Cook onion with 1/4 tsp salt in oil in a 10 inch skillet over medium heat until softened - 4 to 5 minutes
  • Drain onions in a sieve over a bowl, reserving the oinons.
  • Stir milk into the onion oil in the bowl
  • Stir yeast, warm water and honey in large bowl and allow to start to ferment
  • Mix flours, pepper, milk mxture and the remaining 2 3/4 tsp salt into yeast mixture until soft dough forms
  • Knead the dough until elastic and smooth (about 6 minutes).
  • Pat dough into a 9 inch square and sprinkle with onions and walnuts (see picture below)

(note: the little hands belong to my grandson and chief kneader who helped me)
  • Fold dough over to enclose filling and pinch edges to seal
  • Knead to distribute the walnuts and onions for about two minutes.
  • If anything peeks out (see below) just push it back in.


  • Allow dough to rise until doubled
  • Halve the dough and cover one half with plastic. Roll the other half into a 12 inch log and cut it into 12 pieces.

  • Roll each piece into a ball and place it on the baking sheet about 2 inches apart
  • Allow to rise, covered with a non-terry kitchen towel for about another hour

  • Preheat oven to 375 and brush each roll with egg wash. Sprinkle seeds on the rolls (I used olive oil but the seeds didn't really stick. You can see how they looked at the end in the first picture).
  • Bake 20 - 25 minutes and cool 20 minutes before eating
These smelled scrumptious while baking and turned out great - thanks, Gourmet, for focusing on rolls this month. Here's the third good recipe so far.

Posted by Picasa

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Fantail Rolls - Part Two

Although I used a pizza wheel to cut the strips, I used a bread knife to cut the stacked strips into six rolls.
Then you turn the strip stack on its side and put each one in a muffin cup.



After you've done the first six, then you make the second half of the dough into six rolls.

Here they all are - I've fooled with this picture and can't get it to rotate to the right perspective without changing the rotation on all the others in this post - forgive its sideways orientation! The recipe says to fan the rolls out in the muffin cups before rising.



These rise again covered with a kitchen towel (not terry cloth) for about 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Bake the rolls in a 375 degree oven for 20 - 25 minutes. Then brush the tops with the remaining 2 T of butter and cool at least 20 minutes.

Well, these rolls taste great - I love the sour taste that goes with cooking with buttermilk or sourdough starter - but they fell apart. I don't know if I were too generous with the butter before cutting the dough into strips. However, my best guess is that you shouldn't separate the stacks fan-like when you put them into the muffin pans. The rolls that stayed together were not fanned before rising.

That's what I'd do if I were to make them again! On the cover of Gourmet, they show the rolls mostly on their sides - I think if they stood theirs up, they would fall apart too!
Posted by Picasa

Buttermilk Fantails - Part One

In this month's roll feature in Gourmet, I also made the buttermilk fantail rolls on pg. 86. This was an interesting recipe to try.

Here are the ingredients:

1 stick plus 2 T unsalted butter, melted, divided
2 tsp active dry yeast
1/4 cup warm water
1 T honey
3 cups all purpose flour (I used bread flour)
1 1/2 tsp salt
3/4 cup well-shaken buttermilk

Butter muffin cups (12) with 1 T melted butter.
Stir together the yeast, warm water and honey in a large bowl and let stand until foamy about 5 minutes - if this doesn't happen start over with new yeast. (Again, as a beekeeper, it pleases me to find recipes that include honey.)
Mix flour, salt, buttermilk and 6 T melted butter into yeast mixture until a soft dough forms. Turn dough out onto well-floured surface and knead (I used the dough hook on my mixer) for 6 - 8 minutes
Put dough in large oiled bowl to rise, covered with plastic wrap and a kitchen towel - takes about 1 1/2 - 2 hours
Turn out dough and halve it. Cover the half you are not using with plastic wrap.

Roll dough out with a rolling pin into a 12 inch square about 1/8 inch thick. Brush dough with 1/2 T butter.


Cut dough into 6 strips - as you can see, I used a pizza wheel.



Mine weren't exactly equal, but it worked out anyway.


Stack the six strips, buttered side up, one on top of the other.



Continued on next post.
Posted by Picasa

Cornstalk Rolls from Gourmet Feb '09

This month's Gourmet features rolls on the cover - lots and lots of rolls. Yesterday I baked two of the recipes. This recipe is for the Crusty Cornstalk Rolls on pg 86 of Gourmet.

Here's the recipe:

  • 1 1/2 tsp active dry yeast
  • 1 1/4 cups warm water
  • 1 tsp honey
  • 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour (I used bread flour)
  • 1 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 cup plus 2 T stone-ground yellow cornmeal, divided (I used white stone-ground corn meal)
and a spray bottle filled with water.

Stir together the yeast, 1/4 cup warm water and honey in a large bowl and let stand until foamy.
Note: I am a beekeeper and am partial to recipes that specify honey as an ingredient!)

Mix together flour, salt, 1/2 cup cornmeal, and remaining cup of warm water. (I messed up and put all of the warm water for the yeast to soften in and it didn't make a difference in these delicious rolls)

I mixed mine in the mixer, changing to a dough hook pretty much right away.

Continue to knead on the counter.

Put dough in oiled bowl to rise (about 1 1/2 - 2 hours) until doubled.

Turn out dough and gently roll into a 12 inch long log. Sprinkle a baking sheet with the remaining 2 T cornmeal and put dough diagonally in the center. Alternating sides, make 3 inch long diagonal cuts with kitchen shears. Gently pull apart cuts to stretch dough, forming rolls that remain connected to the central stalk. Allow to rise, covered with a kitchen towel (not terry) for about another 1 to 1 1/2 hours.

Preheat oven to 425 with rack in the middle. Spray rolls with water, then bake, spraying into oven 3 times in the first 5 minutes of baking. Bake until golden - about 20 minutes.



We had these with spaghetti on Saturday night. I reheated the rolls on a cookie sheet in a 350 oven for about 7 minutes.



Delicious - had a baguette like feel to them and even a little sour taste - don't know why since there's no starter or buttermilk involved?
Posted by Picasa