For my birthday, my mother bought me the brand-new King Arthur Flour Whole Grains Baking book. It's well timed. Their first book turned me on to bread baking, but after a few months, I moved toward whole grain breads almost exclusively, and the King Arthur Flour Baker's Companion is about 95% white flour recipes. I learned a lot from it, but I wasn't baking much from it. So, suffice to day, I was itching to knead something up out of this book as soon as possible.
I've made a few of the quickbreads. The Sailor Jack muffins, in particular -- an incredible cake-like concoction with raisins steeped in spices, molasses and brown sugar, along with whole wheat flour and oats, topped with a lemon sugar glaze -- are very, very tasty indeed. But I'd not tried a yeast bread until this weekend. The first recipe to catch my eye was Ciabatta Integrale, a ciabatta made with half whole wheat flour, olive oil and a bit of powdered milk. I love ciabatta -- nothing is better for a sandwich or simply a bit of oil and balsamic vinegar. But whole grains just don't do ciabatta. Those holes? Forget it. Or so I thought. This recipe isn't 100% whole grains, but it's half, and I'll take it, given the results. Here's one loaf all sliced up for sandwiches.
And here's the other loaf, which served as dinner bread with some stuffed acorn squash (stuffed with quinoa, maple syrup, raisins, almonds and cinnamon), fresh corn and a green salad composed of our morning trip to the farmers' market. Olive oil and balsamic vinegar are in the gravy boat, natch.
I was really impressed with the results, especially since the recipe said it's impossible to mix completely without a stand mixer. I don't own a stand mixer, so here's how I did it, thanks to a little help from Peter Reinhart's Bread Baker's Apprentice. Ingredients Pre-ferment 1 cup or 4 oz. whole wheat flour 1/2 cup or 4 oz cool water Pinch of instant yeast Dough All of the pre-ferment 1 1/4 cups or 5 oz. whole wheat flour 2 1/4 cups or 9.5 oz white bread flour 1 1/4 cups or 10 oz. cool water 1/4 cup or 1.75 oz olive oil 1/4 cup or 1 oz. nonfat dry milk 1.5 tsp salt 1/4 tsp instant yeast Yes, you read that right. This recipe makes two loaves of ciabatta with less than 3/8 tsp yeast. The night before mix together the pre-ferment. The next morning dump all the ingredients (including the pre-ferment, which should be spongy and full of bubbles) EXCEPT for the salt and additional yeast into a bowl, and mix it together with a large spoon or a dough whisk until it seems mostly hydrated. Cover and let it stand for 45 minutes to an hour.
After the autolyse (that's what you're doing when you soak), add the salt and yeast.
DON'T FORGET, OR YOU'LL REGRET IT. :-)
Get a small bowl of cool water, and dip your hands in it. Shake off most of the water (important, otherwise you'll end up overhydrating the dough and you'll have soup) and then, using your hand like a dough hook, impale the dough with all five fingers. Turn your wrist clockwise while you turn the bowl with your other hand counter clockwise. Continue to do this, occassionally changing direction and wetting your hands if the dough starts to stick, for about 10 minutes. The dough should pull away from the sides of the bowl, but it will stick to the bottom. Adjust the flour or water as necessary. Put the dough in a pre-greased bowl and cover it. Every hour or so, copiously flour your work surface, remove the dough, copiously flour the dough and give it a good stretch and fold, brushing off as much of the flour as you can before folding. By stretch-and-fold, I mean gently pat out the gas, stretch the dough to twice its length and then fold it in thirds like a letter. Give the dough a one-quarter turn, and then stretch-and-fold once more. Place it back in the bowl and re-cover it. Here's a good lesson on the technique. After about 3 hours and 2 or 3 folds (depending on how much strength the dough needs), remove the dough, and divide it into two. Gently stretch and pat each loaf into a 12 x 4 inch rectangle, and place them in a baker's couche (essentially, well-floured linen that you bunch up around the loaves so that they rise up instead of spreading out) or on parchment paper-lined baking sheets. Cover with greased plastic. It took mine about 4 hours for the final proof, but then my house is a chilly 62-64 degrees F. If your house is around 70-75 degrees, you may only have to wait two hours or so. In any case, preheat the oven to 500 degrees and put the loaves in the oven either on a preheated baking stone or a cold baking sheet when they're good and puffy. Steam the oven (I keep a cast iron skilet in the bottom of mine and usually toss about 1 cup of boiling water in it) and turn the oven down to 425. The loaves should take 20-25 minutes to cook and should register 205 degrees when done. With all that oil, the crust is not as crisp as I usually like ciabatta, but I find I do like the flavor it adds. Enjoy!
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Thanks, Floyd. Sure, I'd love to have it highlighted!
Sometime in the next couple of weeks, I plan to write up a fairly long review of the Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book. I've made a ton of different loaves by now, so I've got a good idea of its strengths (many) and weaknesses (few).
By the way, Floyd. I can't seem to make line breaks work. I've tried entering HTML code, but the code itself shows up in the post. Last night, I did several carriage returns, and that finally worked, but it's not working this morning. I'd like to have a line break before and after the DON'T FORGET part (I forgot last night to include the autolyse step).
Any hints? Thanks.
Thanks Floyd! That did the trick -- I'd never noticed that link before.
Good luck with the recipe!
--
Jeff
It looks delicious! I thought also it's not possible to get such big wholes with whole wheat flour. I will try this one soon.
1x umrühren bitte - http://kochtopf.twoday.net
I saw a mention of the KIng Arthur Whole Grain Bkaing book and had a look for it in my local book shop. It does not appear to have arrived yet.
I bake almost exclusively with whole grain and always looking for somethingnew to bake. That includes cakes & pastries. Does the book cover these items?
Regards,
Martin Prior
www.bakerette-cafe.com
Yes, in fact, yeasted breads are probably only 1/10 of the book. There's pancakes, waffles, muffins, quickbreads, cakes, pies, cookies -- lots and lots of stuff.
Most of their recipes, however, aren't 100% whole grain, though they're all at least half whole grain. Nevertheless, so far, I think it's an excellent book, with lots of neat ideas.
wow Jmonkey
The bread looks wonderfulm but I am even more interested in your Stuffed squash recipe!
Would you mind sharing it?
We are Huuuuuge fans of Quinoa in our house :) I am always looking for new ways to use that beautiful grain :)
thegreenbaker
Sorry that I missed your request for the recipe. In any case, if you're still interested, here's where I got the recipe.
I make just a couple of changes. Sour cherries are pretty pricy, so I replace them with either raisins or dried cranberries. I also add 1/4 cup of chopped almonds. As for the squash itself, though carnival is prettier, acorn is tastier -- at least, it is to me.
WoW jmonkey.
Its harvest time here in the southern hemisphere and I just bought some small pumpkins and squashes for Monday night and was thinking of making my own stuffing!
I must say coincidences abound............ or maybe not <i>just</i> coincidences ;)
Thanks a bundle!
thegreenbaker
Jmonkey,
I've been looking at doin a loaf of ciabatta for a while, but it looks a little diificult. I have a stand mixer so that's not a problem. I'd really like to see something different come out of my oven, like ciabatta! I have the bb by Rose Levy and she does a good job of explaing herself. Do you thing the bba has a better recipe for a greenhorn to follow? This will be my first time trying a ciabatta.
Chuppy
Maggie
KAF's book is copyrighted and, therefore, recipes should not be posted. If you do a search on here for Sailor Jack, you will find numerous threads dealing with Sailor Jack!
They sound delicious once I get ingredients together I m going to try those!!
The Ciabatta Integrale recipe lists what I assume are measuements for two and one loaves (or maybe four and two?) side by side. So in the preferment it says 1 cup or 4 oz. whole wheat flour, but then it lists 1/2 cup or 4 oz. cold water. 1/2 cup and 4 oz. water are exactly the same. Now, starting out trying to make the smaller batch, I mixed things up and somehow ended up wth 1 cup water and 1/2 cup flour. Realizing my mistake I then tried to correct it by adding flour to total 2 cups flour to one cup water. Now in my limited experience with bread baking, preferments seem to lean toward a roughly 50/50 ratio of flour to water. And I realized that the original recipe was probably meant to say 1 cup or 4 oz. cold water, not 1/2 cup or 2 oz. cold water. So I increased the water to bring it all to a grand total of two cups flour to two cups water and hopefully roughly two pinches yeast. However, it still leaves the possibility that that is not what the recipe was meant to say. So can someone tell me if it should have 1 cup or 4 oz. cold water, or 1/2 cup or 2 oz. cold water? Help is greatly appreciated.
fem
This has been my every day bread(for a few days). Made with a starter of half whole wheat, half rye.