Ive been experimenting lately with some steaming methods and Im wonder what your go-to method is. So far I think I like the lava rock/cast iron pan method. what do you guys think?
Also what do you think about using a pressure cooker or clothing iron to spray steam into th oven, crazy and stupid or does this idea have potential worth investigating?
If it is not a round loaf I love the Baparoma Steamer Baker. Crusts are beautiful. For round, I like to use my cast iron fryer with a lid and don't steam other than what happens with the lid on. Terry
I've tried any number of combinations of pans, hot, cold, and frozen water but in my gas oven, they've all resulted in a nice cloud of steam that immediately comes out the top of the oven.
The only way I can get a decent crust is using Susan's magic bowl method. I've switched to a roasting pan to allow for a greater range of shapes, but otherwise it's the same.
The only thing I haven't yet tried is the homemade Steam Maker described above, but I've considered it more than once. I suspect it's only a matter of time before curiosity gets the better of my natural penuriousness and I buy a steamer and sacrifice a bowl...
edh
If you use the "magic bowl" method, do you still also bother with steaming? Isn't the evaporation from the dough while baking supposed to supply sufficient steam which is trapped by the bowl?
Do you preheat the oven or do you use the cold start method?
Do you have an electric or gas oven?
thanks..
Hi Subfuscpersona,
I don't bother to steam with the magic bowl; the moisture comes from the dough like you said. I have on occasion sprayed the loaf before covering it, but I can't say I saw any difference.
As far as preheating, I'm sort of betwixt and between. In the winter I have an insanely cold kitchen, so I tend to use a stone and preheat because I like warming up the kitchen! Most of the time though, I bake on a sheet, but still preheat for about 15 minutes first. I've been too chicken to try starting completely cold as I have a pretty wimpy oven and I'm afraid it will take to long to warm up, especially with a cold roasting pan covering the loaf.
My oven is the lowest end gas oven that Sears had for sale about 6 years ago.
edh
The "oven within an oven" concept. It works well, however you accomplish it.
Susan from San Diego
P.S. Thanks, Annie!
for me the only thing innovative about the now infamous no-knead recipe was the way in which the author used the bread's own moisture as a method for providing steam. That is essentially what is going on here , no?
I agree, isn't it fun!?!
Yes, I do use both parts of the roaster, but you could certainly use just the top on a stone or a baking sheet. The bottom is very heavy aluminum while the top is lighter-weight aluminum. I've baked two small boules or two batards in it; also a big "bicycle seat" (triangle loaf, below). On the other hand, I've probably most often used the Pyrex Visions DO that I also found at a thrift. Lowering a boule into the DO on a wide, rather long strip of parchment works just great. I have given up using my stone, as the roaster bottom or the oven tray work well, and I don't have to preheat as long (~20 minutes). The usual batch of dough here starts with 500g flour, and I end up making two boules. My fav part is the crust, and I get more crust with smaller loaves. Plus, I get to give one away and we eat the other, and then I can make more. Yahoo!
So sorry about your rhodies. I hate it when that happens.
Susan from San Diego
seems like I might try my clouche for a single loaf and skip the steam once, to see how that goes.
give me liberty and a 5lb bag of flour
Make sure you lay the oven door flat and cover the glass with a towel while you pour the water in the skillet. Dropping water on unprotected glass can shatter it.
theres a lot of great ideas here. thank you!
I was just working on composing a question about steaming when I found this thread - now I have several questions :)
I've recently decided to stop using my cast iron for steaming as I was finding that it was burning the seasoning off of my favorite skilet. Yesterday I spent a bunch of time scrubbing rust off of the outside of the skillet. I guess I neglect the outside of my cast iron in general, but I don't want to go through that again anytime soon. The inside was still ok, but the seasoning layer looked a bit thin and I could see some mineral scum left by the water boiling off. I scrubbed it lightly and cooked some bacon in it, now it looks ok.
I bought a shallow steel mixing bowl recently for the purpose of replacing my skillet as a steaming pan, but it (of course) doesn't retain nearly as much heat and so the water boils off very slowly. I guess I need to try starting with water boiled on the stove (probably a better idea anyway).
On to the questions...
I see people talking about using rocks to help retain heat. This seems like a good idea, but isn't there some risk of the rocks exploding? I know that's something I heard warnings about as a kid at camp - rocks thown into the fire sometimes explode because of the retained moisture expanding without a way to escape. Are there particular types of rocks that are more likely to be safe? Are there any rocks I should watch out for that might emit nasty stuff when heated (lead, mercury, etc)?
I got my first baking stone yesterday, a Fibrament. The directions that came with it included a six hour process to slowly bake off any moisture in the stone. With this in mind, do I need to take any special care in steaming my oven with the stone in there? Also, it strikes me that generating steam at the bottom of the oven below the stone is going to steam the bottom of the stone a lot more than it will the loaf that's sitting on top of the stone. This is especailly considering that the stone is kept very low in the oven and only lets air (steam) pass around the edges of the stone and the oven vents steam from the top. What are others who use baking stones doing? How is it working for you?
Russ
I use a large pyrex pan that I heat up while the oven gets to heat. There's a thin layer of water in it just for protection. When the temp is up, I put in the loaf and half fill the pan with boiling water. I give a small tug to the pan to get an extra burst of steam. Then I close the oven until the bread is done.
Works for me. The ice idea is interesting.
give me liberty and a 5lb bag of flour
in using the cast iron, does the ice or water damage the surface at all or the seasoning in this use? Or should I get another one for this purpose?
give me liberty and a 5lb bag of flour
When I was baking in the 350-450 deg.F range the seasoning on the cast iron wasn't much affected, but when I went over 450 deg.F and started using more water the seasoning burned off and the pan started to rust.
To address this problem, and also the above mentioned point of damaging a good cast iron surface, I kept my eyes open at garage sales for a used cast iron frying pan. My budget was up to $2.00 but my spouse as usual was sharper eye'd and a better bargainer so I ended up with one for 50 cents. It gets rusty; I ignore the rust until it starts staining the cupboard. Then I scrub the rust off with SOS and go for another 6 months with no worries.
sPh
My (gas) oven is just a couple months old, is very well insulated, and I've found that a cup of hot water in the broiler pan I kept from my old stove works well. I do use a stone, preheat (the oven does this automatically and won't show the temp until the preheat is over) and always place a towel over the glass window on the oven door so I won't have to replace it should I get sloppy in my pouring technique!
I don't add any more water or mist after that first cup of water goes in. I agree with Doug that using ice just lowers the oven temp, as the ice must first be melted then converted into steam. I tried ice once and watched it turn into water when what I really wanted was instant steam. That experience, plus reading Peter Reinhart's caution against using ice, made me a convert to a cup of hot water.
Guess I'll stick with boiled water and perhaps changes the vessel.
give me liberty and a 5lb bag of flour
[QUOTE=Susan on April 2, 2008]The "oven within an oven" concept. It works well, however you accomplish it.[/QUOTE]
What is the equipment in your photo (above)? Please be detailed and include size (length, width, height of cover) and (if possible) where you purchased it.
Do you make any adjustments to your recipe re. oven temp, preheating time, etc. when using this method.
Many thanks...SF
It is simply an old, used roaster I bought at a thrift store, and that happens to fit in my oven. The maker is Wear-Ever, the bottom (No. 918) is heavy aluminum, the top (No. 818) is lighter-weight aluminum. Inside dimensions are 15 x 10.5 inches, overall height is 5.5 inches. I usually preheat the oven (with the roaster inside) for about 20 minutes at 480F and drop the temperature to 450F after the bread is in the oven. The roaster sits not on the lowest rack in my oven, but the next one up. Carefully remove the top after 15-20 minutes, and you will find a beautifully risen loaf all ready to be browned. About 10 minutes before the end of baking, I slightly open the oven door to let out the steam that's accumulated.
SF, whatever equipment you can find that will accommodate your loaves and stand up to the heat will work. The "magic bowl," a roaster, a clay baker, a dutch oven all do the same thing: keep the moisture that's escaping from the loaf close to the dough, enabling it to rise without the crust hardening too quickly.
Thanks for asking, and I hope you find something that works for you.
Susan from San Diego
The ovens in the sourdough bakeries that supplied San Francisio - North Beach bistros in times past were built from fire brick and were gas fired. A supply of water was piped through a control valve into the oven emptying into a cast iron basin. The oven, once up to heat, was then charged with the bread loaves until full. The oven door was closed and the water valve was cracked open and steam vapor would fill the oven. The valve was then closed after about 7 minutes or so.
The closest that I've come to this without building my own custom oven is to place an old cast iron frying pan in the bottom shelf of the cold oven before preheat. Once the bread is placed on the baking shelf a couple of handfulls of ice are thrown into the pan and the oven door closed. Taking the time to poor water into a hot pan isn't recommended from a safety point of view as the blast of steam from the water hitting the pan is fairly explosive while the ice cube method greatly reduces this risk and will maintain steam emission for several minutes. The heat lost while the oven door is open is another consideration with the ice cube toss method a clear winner. I impede the vent on my oven with a cotton hand towel during the steam phase removing it after 5 or 6 minutes. The fry pan will rust as high temperature water vapor is very corrosive. I have a supply of ground pistachio nut shells that I use with a little water to scour the surface till clean and polished. Of course you could leave it in this condition if this is all you're going to use for. I would not use good enameled cast iron pan for this.
Bonne Cuisson,
Wild-Yeast
Mike, you beat me to it. I was mulling over the idea of buying this cheap alternative everytime i visited IKEA, but declined due to the size and shape limitations. But this clay still will surely do the job for 1 loaf. post some pictures please!
khalid