11.18.2007

...And Bread

I love making bread. I had the baking itch Friday night and decided to start my favorite bread, a really rustic, grainy, kind of gnarly looking bread called a Cocodrillo. I modified it from a recipe in Williams-Sonoma's Essentials of Baking, which is a gorgeous book full of big, full-color photos, and to which I jokingly refer as my "Food Porn." Seriously, the pictures, of brownies and cakes on deliberately messy, shabby-chic, flour-covered counters, or of someone's arms elbow-deep in a pillow of yeasty dough, are Pavlovian-reaction-inducing. Anyway, the recipe is a bit drawn out, but simple (it's really only 30 or 40 minutes of hands-on work spread out over an evening and a morning), and turns out two absolutely beautiful loaves of artisanal bread with so much flavor and the most amazing crust. I've passed it on to two first-time bakers and they had just as much success as I've had with it. You could sneak these onto the shelf at Whole Foods between the Ancient Grains Sourdough and the French Levain, and nobody would suspect that they didn't belong; they'd just ask the bakery dude to slice 'em. For real.

Side note: if you love baking or are just giving it a go for the first time, I'd strongly encourage you to pick up Essentials of Baking. My cake-loving roommate Angela has made a couple of the cakes with great results (I'm not much of a cake person, but Angela has a serious knack for them, ahem, single guys? Anybody? Anybody?), and I can also vouch for the deliciousness of the cookies and pies found therein. Really, it's a miracle I don't weigh 400 pounds.

I'm also in charge of the rolls for Thanksgiving, and was searching around for something unique. Well, I found it: a potato-dough bread that you can keep in the fridge for up to five days before you bake the rolls!! ACK! Amazing! So the dough's in my refrigerator right now, but I stole enough to make 8 little rolls just to test them, I swear.

My baking technique, while I'm on a roll here (HA!), is symptomatic of my fickleness. I told my friend Leesa that I have a disease called, "I can never, ever make a recipe as it's written or make anything the same way twice, even if it worked perfectly the first time." The old saying, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it," clearly means nothing to me. I prefer to characterize that as a quest for excellence, but let's be real, people. It's totally just fickleness.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I always called refusal to use a recipe, uhm, well, PRIDE. :)

I'm getting excited about Thursday. Tomorrow we're taking the kids and my cousin Hunter out, and then I have to be at the church at 5:10. Pray Ms. Hannah likes me better this week. I don't want us to be rushed, so it might be better if we go after you get off Tuesday. Unless you want me to call you after we get the kids down for a nap. Let me know what works for you. Levi gets his first round of shots this week.:(

And what's up with your potato dough Ms. tradionalist?

You think we can fit that table in the back of our van? See if we can snag a few chairs for a couple hours since ours are so hard.

Anonymous said...

tradiTIONalist, that is. I KNOW you caught that. ;)

Neil Cameron (One Salient Oversight) said...

Fresh Bread... yuuuuummmm.

GloryandGrace said...

There was a nice scent wafting up through the stairwell after returning from a long flight home :)

Unknown said...

so the cross-smith house is sick ONCE AGAIN. i think maybe yr bread recipe can HEAL us? y'think? lots or prayer + juice + yr bread. i'm thinking so. i'm thinking yes.

i adore you, miss.

Christi Lee said...

Hey Laura,

Would you mind emailing me the bread recipe? I've never been able to successfully make fresh bread that has to rise. I make wonderful flat-bread, but my baking skills need help.

Sounds yummy!