I was craving banana bread immediately after reading Dabrownman’s banana bread post so I came up with my own version.
Parmesan Crusted Banana Bread Roll with Honey Goat Cheese Filling
For the bread:
30g 54.5% Barley flour
25g 45.5% Buckwheat flour
200g 363.6% Mashed ananas
60g 109% Egg
1/2 tsp -% Baking powder
1/2 tsp -% Vanilla
1/4 tsp -% Cinnamon
1/8 tsp -% Nutmeg
1/8 tsp -% Salt
20g 36.4% Freshly grated parmesan
For the filling:
100g 181.8% Soft goat cheese
50g 90.9% Greek yogurt (I strained fat free homemade yogurt)
20g 36.4% Honey
2g 3.6% Powdered blue pea flower
5g 9.1% Hot water
Preheat the oven at 180°C/356°F. Combine all bread ingredients except for the Parmesan. Pour into a parchment lined 20cm×20cm square pan. Sprinkle the Parmesan over the batter surface. Bake for 15 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the bread comes out clean.
Roll the bread into a log when it is still hot, with the Parmesan crusted side facing out. Let the bread cool completely, around 1 hour.
Meanwhile, make the filling. Mix the hot water with the blue pea flower powder, then stir in the remaining ingredients. Keep refrigerated until needed.
When the bread is cooled, spread the filling onto it and slice into thick slices to serve.
I swear the Parmesan crust is not a crazy thought. Its saltiness elevated the bread and contributed to depth of flavours. It was a bit tricky to roll up the bread but don’t stress over it. It would taste moist and delicious regardless of how it looks.
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After seeing Ian baking loafs after loafs of sourdough with beer, I decided it was time for me to try it out for myself.
Onion, Potato, Cheese and Beer: Sourdough that Screams Ian
Dough flour (all freshly milled):
90g 30% Whole red wheat flour
90g 30% Whole white wheat flour
60g 20% Whole rye flour
60g 20% Pearl barley flour
For scalded barley dough:
60g 20% Pearl barley flour from dough flour
60g 20% Hot water
For leaven:
8g 2.7% Starter
36g 12% Bran sifted out from dough flour except barley flour
36g 12% Beer
For blue cheese mashed potatoes:
60g 20% Hot mashed ppotatoes
30g 10% Blue cheese (I used blue stilton)
For dough:
204g 68% Dough flour excluding bran for leaven and barley flour
194g 64.7% Beer
80g 26.7% Leaven
9g 3% Vital wheat gluten
5g 1.7% Salt
3g 1% Dark barley malt powder
Add-ins:
5g 1.7% Dehydrated onions
90g 30% Blue cheese mashed potatoes
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244g 80.3% Whole grain
294g 96.7% Total hydration (excluding mashed potatoes)
Mix together the hot water and barley flour and hot water. Set aside until needed.
Sift out the coarse bran from the dough flour, reserve 36g for leaven. Soak the rest, if any, in equal amount of water taken from dough ingredients.
Combine all leaven ingredients and let sit until doubled, around 5 hours.
Melt the cheese into the hot potatoes. Rehydrate the onions by covering it with a little water. Keep refrigerated until needed.
Roughly combine all dough ingredients except for the salt, leaven, and soaked bran, autolyse for 30 minutes. Knead in the reserved ingredients and the scalded barley dough and ferment for 15 minutes. Fold in the add-ins then ferment for 3 hours longer.
Preshape the dough then let it rest for 15 minutes. Shape the dough and put in into a banneton. Retard for 11 hours.
Preheat the oven at 230°C/446°F. Remove the dough from the fridge to warm up at room temperature for 20 minutes.
Score the dough and bake at 230°C/446°F with steam for 15 minutes then without steam for 25 minutes more or until the internal temperature reaches a minimum of 208°F. Let cool for at least 2 hours before slicing.
I’m not sure why the dough tended to spread instead of rise. It didn’t feel over-hydrated or over-proofed. It might be caused by the mashed potatoes, beer, barley flour or all of them. Any ideas?
Fortunately, this bread tastes really nice. The beer added some pleasant aroma to it, which goes very well with the blue cheese, rye and barley. The crumb is soft and moist thanks to the scalded flour and mashed potatoes. Thanks Ian for the inspiration!
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Pressure cooked pacific saury rice with green beans
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We love to incorporate cheese in our desserts and one of our most love is a cheese ice cream with chunks of a cheddar-like cheese! I'm craving for it now but It's also one of our most incomprehensible food pairings for westerners. Cheese and sweets really go well together.
I can almost taste your second bread. I think I have to try beer in bread too.
Is that butter on the green beans? And can you share the recipe for the saury rice? Thanks!
Westerners use cheese in desserts too but it's usually the sweet and tangy kind like ricotta, mascarpone and cream cheese. I've not had cheese ice-cream before. It sounds heavenly! My favourite cheese-incorporated dessert is Japanese style cheese Baumkuchen.
I seldom use fats as a finishing touch as it adds calories and makes the dish greasy without contributing much flavour. It was shio koji on the beans.
The saury rice was a random dish I threw together so there wasn't a "true" recipe actually. Anyway, this is how I made it:
One Pot Japanese Saury and Rice
For the saury:
3 Tails of medium saury, cleaned and cut in half crosswise
1 tbsp Light soy sauce
2 tbsp Mirin
1 tsp Grated ginger
For the rice:
200g Japanese brown rice (or any short grain rice)
400g Water (350g if white rice)
1/2 tsp Dashi stock powder
10g Dried hijiki seaweed
1 Small carrot, finely sliced
Marinate the saury for 30 minutes or up to overnight. Rehydrate the hijiki seaweed in enough water. Dry fry the carrots and the hijiki seaweed in the pressure cooker until most of the water evaporates. Remove them from the pot.
Pour in the brown rice and water. Dissolve the dashi stock powder into the mixture. Layer the carrots hijiki mixture over the top, followed by the saury (discard the marinade).
Pressure cook for 15 minutes then allow the pressure to release naturally. Enjoy!
The flavor is promising.
These both look and sound amazing. Could be a number of reasons why you didn't get as much rise on the beer bread. How wet was the dough before bulk retardation? Did you develop the gluten enough? DId you let the dough go too long before shaping and baking?
The potatoes are 81% water so you need to make sure to adjust for that in your calculations as well. It looks like you had an extremely hydrated dough which is why it probably was a little flat, but it looks nice and moist and tasty! That dinner plate looks real good too!
Glad I could inspire you.
Happy Baking!
Ian
but it did look weaker than usual. I suspect the rye and barley reduced gluten development, and the potatoes exacerbated the problem. It might be wise to use less gluten-free/low grains when mashed potatoes are included. I like the texture potatoes give to bread so there'll be another go soon!
Thanks for the comment and inspiration!