Thursday 19 September 2013

Maple Bacon Bars

All my hard work has finally paid off! I've been scheming up this idea for a while now, and with summer just around the corner I wanted to make up an ice cream sandwich that I could be proud of... and this one definitely made me happy.


Maple Macadamia Nut Ice Cream: I take two bottles of real CANADIAN :) maple syrup and some milk, eggs, and cream, and make an amazing maple ice cream. Then, after thinking through all my nut options, I settle for macadamia nuts. Normally I would use pecans or walnuts because those are the nuts I've grown up around. But since I'm in Australia now, and macadamia nuts are typical Australian nuts, I thought I'd throw them in. I toasted them first before lightly crushing them and folding into the ice cream so that they would stand up to the strong maple flavor. I normally find macadamias quite mild, but once they were nice and toasted, their nuttiness jumped up tenfold! Delicious. Creamy, not too sweet, crunch from the macadamias (which I must admit hold up much crunchier than pecans or walnuts which can have a tendency to go soft), and a punch of maple syrup flavor that lingers in your mouth. Perfection!

But maple macadamia nut ice cream is the easy part. The piece de resistance is the bacon brown sugar cookie that holds everything together! Smokey, chewy, bacon-y. It turns your maple macadamia ice cream into breakfast! Well my kind of breakfast at least :D

For my first batch, I sprinkled brown sugar on the bacon and baked it in the oven at 400F until it was crisp and the brown sugar was caramelized.
Looks good for a picture... but these cookies deserve more than just good looks
But I wouldn't advise you to do this. It makes the bacon taste more like brown sugar than anything else and you lose most of the bacon goodness. In the recipe below I have you chop the bacon finely before frying it in a pan on the stove at a medium heat until all the fat has rendered out and you are left with only really crispy bacon. Any fat or rind that remains on the bacon will only go soft and chewy in your cookie, not what you're looking for.

Bacon Brown Sugar Cookies

8 rashers streaky bacon
3/4 cup unsalted butter, room temperature
1 cup brown sugar
1/2 tsp salt
2 eggs
2 1/4 cups flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp baking powder

First off get your bacon ready. Finely dice it and throw it into a cold frying pan. Put the pan over a medium to medium low heat and render all the fat out of the bacon. Once it's rendered out, fry the bacon until super crispy. In the end you want little bacon bits.

In a mixing bowl, cream together the butter, sugar, and salt until dissolved. Add the eggs one at a time. Then add the flour, baking soda, and baking powder. Stir until almost combined. Add your bacon bits and stir the whole thing until the dry flour has just about disappeared.

Drop the cookie dough by the heaping tablespoonful on a parchment lined baking sheet and bake in a preheated 180C oven for 8 minutes.

Make sure not to over bake these babies! You want them still soft with edges that have ever so slightly begun to caramelize.

Now all that's left to do is sandwich!


To make these bars, just bake one big thin cookie on a sheet tray. Cut it in half, pile on the ice cream, top with the other half and cut!

Thursday 5 September 2013

Franken-yeast... it's alive!

This is part 2 of my bread making adventure. Part 3 is actually proofing in a nice and warm spot at this very moment! Where did this mild obsession come from you ask? Well I’m not quite sure, but it may have stemmed from the fact that bread is just SO GOOD. And that somehow when I make home made bread it is okay for Nick and I to devour an entire loaf in two days without feeling bad about ourselves… I put whole wheat and other whole flours in my bread so it has to be good for us right??!

No matter. My motto is if it’s homemade it has to be good for you! No more questions. Now on to part 2 of my bread making adventure…

Last week I finished “Cooked” the book by Michael Pollan I mentioned in my last post. If you haven’t picked up a copy yet, you really should. He might inspire you the way he inspired me! In the book, he becomes obsessed with sourdough bread. And when I say obsessed, I mean it. He must have spent almost an entire year researching sourdough bread and travelling around the US to go to various famous bakeries trying to learn what their magic is behind some of those famous loaves. He even brought his sourdough culture with him on his field trips hoping to capture some of their “local bacteria” in what he described at first as his sad sludgy mixture of flour and water.

He goes into great detail about the entire process. I mean, if you aren’t a baker or just don’t know much about baking bread, I would definitely recommend his book. He is just a regular guy who learned how to make really great bread from a handful of recipes through trial and error. His recipe is a real “for dummies” kind of recipe. Sometimes when I read bake books, I find the bread recipes to be not specific enough for someone with no experience. How would someone who’s never made bread before know how “springy” a dough should be? Or how sticky is the right amount of sticky? These bakers have been making their bread for years and I find that when asked to explain their recipe, they just cant dumb it down enough for us normal once in a while bakers.

Michael on the other hand gives so much detail in his recipe it’s pretty much fool proof! Have a question about something? He’s answered it. He’s already laid down the ground work for us! He’s compared recipes, joined in amateur bakers discussion boards, picked famous bakers’ brains, and compiled all the information he can into an easy to follow recipe! At least one that’s a great jumping off point. Your first loaf may not be beautiful (mine definitely wouldn’t place in a beauty contest), but it will be delicious. And it will be great practice for your second, third, fourth, and fifth loaves until you have your perfect ratio of ingredients and have mastered the kneading, shaping, and scoring! I’ll tell you, I’m hooked. 


Michael Pollan’s Sourdough Bread 


FOR THE STARTER
50g whole grain flour
50g unbleached all-purpose flour
100g warm warm

Wash your hands with NON-antibacterial soap. Combine all the ingredients in a see-through container and use your fingers to mix them. (The naturally occurring bacteria on your clean fingers are what get the process started!) Leave your starter uncovered in the sun for a few hours. Now take your starter out of the sun, and put it in a cupboard keeping the container open to the air, stirring vigorously for about 30 seconds once a day.

Day 1
 
The wild yeast and bacteria on your fingers, on the flour, and in the air will eventually start to eat the sugars in the flour and ferment. Essentially the bacteria will start eating and then burping. This “burping” gives you the carbon dioxide bubbles which will eventually raise your bread!

Day 6

As soon as bubble start to appear on the sides and it smells like yeast, feed your started daily. To do this, throw away 80% of your starter, and replace it with the same 50/50/100 ratio you started with. Mix in the new mixture with the old mixture until smooth and cover it. Place it back in the cupboard. By the next day your starter will be ready to use! If you’re not ready to use it, dry it out with your 50/50 flour mixture, roll it in a ball, and leave it wrapped up in your fridge. When you’re ready to use it, throw 80% away and continue the feeding process until it comes alive again.

Day 8 after it's second feeding!
FOR THE LEAVEN
100g whole grain flour
100g unbleached all-purpose flour
200g warm water
2 heaping tablespoons of starter

The night before baking your bread, combine the flour, water, and your starter. Mix thoroughly, cover with a towel, and leave out overnight.

MAKING YOUR BREAD!    
600g whole grain flour
250g unbleached all-purpose flour
150g rye flour
900g warm water
25g salt
The night before baking the bread, combine the flours and 850g water. Allow to soak overnight, covered. This process helps soften the bran in the whole flours to produce a loaf with a better rise.

Now is time to test your leaven to see if it is strong enough to raise your bread. Drop a tablespoon of your leaven into a glass of warm water. If it floats you’re all set! If not, Michael advises adding 1 1/8 tsp of yeast to your dough. But I would just say to go back and make another leaven making sure your starter is super bubbly. What’s the point of making your own starter if you’re going to add commercial yeast to your dough anyways??

Combine your leaven with your soaked flours. Let this mixture rest for an hour. Now is time to mix your remaining 50g of water with the salt. Work this salt water mixture into your dough.

Knead until you get a smooth ball. Put it in a bowl and cover with a tea towel. Leave your dough in a warm spot for 5 hours, folding the dough over itself four times in a clockwise motion every hour.

Once it smells sour and sticks together more than it sticks to your hands or the bowl, you’re ready to divide the dough into two balls. Roll with both hands, and cover them with a towel for 30 minutes.

By now the balls will have slightly flattened. Grab the four corners of each ball and fold towards the center to make a rectangle. Grab each of your newly made corners and fold them towards the center also. Now with the heel of your hands, roll the dough away from you so the top looks tight and the dough is cylindrical.

Proof each loaf in a flour-dusted bowl for 3 hours until they look puffy.

Preheat your oven to 250C with a large ceramic-lidded casserole inside. When ready, take out the casserole, plop one loaf inside, score the top with one stroke of a really sharp knife, cover with the preheated lid, and put back in the oven. Bake for 20 minutes, remove the lid, and bake for another 20 minutes.

For a first attempt, I'd say it turned out okay!
The bread is done when it is dark brown, crusty, and sounds hollow when you tap the bottom of it.

Let cool for at least an hour (if you can stand it) before cutting into it. This preserves the (hopefully) delicate structure you have created inside of soft bread and air bubbles. 

It doesn't really have the big air bubbles characteristic of sourdough breads, but it sure tasted good!
So all in all I was slightly disappointed in my first loaf. It rose which is a plus, but it didn't quite rise enough to get those big air bubbles inside like sourdough loaves should have. the crust was chewy and crispy which was great, but not quite dark enough. Next time I'm going to add a bit more leaven, let it bulk ferment and proof for a little longer, and bake it for longer as well.

Sorry I don't have any more photos, once we sliced into the loaf it was gone in two days! It toasted beautifully and held up really well underneath a pile of sauteed wild mushrooms and a poached egg. Weekend breakfast heaven!