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Tag Archives: bread

Spinach, leek and mushroom salad with homemade sandwich bread

04 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Zoli in bread, cheese, healthy, salad, sandwich loaf, Vegetarian

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bread, homemade bread, leeks, mushrooms, spinach salad, stilton, sun dried tomato, warm winter salad

salad with leeks and stilton

homemade sandwich bread

This is kind of a rich salad—a great side dish or meal on its own with some warm bread right out of the oven and a glass of white wine. I made it after reading a Food and Wine magazine tweet about warm spinach and bacon salad. To rival the super salty flavor of bacon I threw together several rich items such as leeks, stilton cheese and sun dried tomato and made a strong, tangy vinaigrette to complement it. Soft flavorful dark greens like spinach can take all this flavor and taste even better if they wilt a little under the warm mushrooms and leeks.

Ingredients for spinach salad
serves 2 as a side dish
1 small bunch of large spinach leaves, washed and rinsed thoroughly
1 small leek or half a large leek, sliced thickly and washed thoroughly
6-8 mushrooms, sliced
1 clove garlic, sliced thinly
1 sun dried tomato in olive oil
handful roasted marcona almonds, chopped
small chunk of stilton
olive oil

vinaigrette
2 tbs extra virgin olive oil
2 tbs red wine vinegar
1 tsp whole grain mustard
1/2 tsp of dried thyme or fresh thyme, chopped
few grinds of sea salt and fresh pepper

1. Make the vinaigrette by adding all the ingredients to a jar and shaking. Set aside.
2. Chop the washed spinach and spread on a platter. Spinach and leeks can have a lot of mud and sand so make sure they are very clean.
3. Chop the sun dried tomato into small pieces and scatter over the spinach.
4. Heat up olive oil in a small frying pan and add the sliced garlic. Cook for a few seconds and then add the sliced mushrooms. Turn the heat to medium high and cook the mushrooms to a golden brown. Scatter over the salad.
5. Heat up the fying pan again and flash fry the leeks till they take on a golden or dark brown color. Don’t over cook. About 1 minute. Add the leeks to the salad.
6. Sprinkle about half the vinaigrette over the salad, or to taste. This is a rare case where I like a lot of dressing!
7. Crumble the stilton over the salad and then sprinkle the nuts. Serve straightaway.

spinach and leek salad

spinach salad with leeks and mushrooms

This is a useful bread recipe to have in your arsenal. No need to think about a poolish or levain or days of rising. It’s not artisan bread, it’s just a great creamy, slightly sweet, soft sandwich bread. But NOTHING like a sliced loaf you’d buy in the supermarket. This is legions above those breads. All in all it takes about 3-4 hours. I make this a lot to have around the house for snacking, the kids’ lunchboxes and for sandwiches. Below are pics of a loaf I shaped and cooked on its own without a loaf tin, and another occasion when I baked it in a bread tin.

Baked without a loaf tin

Baked without a loaf tin


Baked in a loaf tin

Cooked in a loaf tin

This recipe is from The Fresh Loaf ‘Putting something more in your bread’

2 cups all-purpose enriched unbleached flour
1 cup bread flour
1 teaspoon yeast
1 teaspoon salt
1/8 cup sugar
1 cup warm milk
2 tablespoons melted butter
1/4 – 1/2 cup lukewarm filtered water

1) Add all the dry ingredients together—in a KitchenAid if you have one. If you are going to bake bread often I recommend buying instant yeast, rather than the little jars or packets of dried active yeast. I love my saf instant yeast! Keep it in the fridge, or keep half of it in the fridge and half in the freezer for freshness.
2) Add all the wet ingredients and mix into the dry. If using a Kitchen Aid, use the dough hook and mix on the first setting until it is a shaggy lump of bread dough. Or use a wooden spoon to mix all together.
3) Scrape it onto the counter and knead for ten minutes, adding just a little flour if necessary. As the dough is kneaded it will become less sticky. Once it is a smooth dough, put into an oiled bowl and cover tighly to rise for 90 minutes in a warm place.
4) Shape the dough into a loaf by folding the top and bottom, then folding the sides over each other. Place in a buttered loaf tin or on a baking tray. Cover and leave to rise another hour.
5) Bake for 35 to 40 minutes at 350. The bread should be a dark brown because of the caramelized sugar and sound hollow when you tap the bottom.

homemade sandwich loaf

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English Farmhouse Loaf

29 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by Zoli in bread, British, comfort food, English farmhouse loaf, the basics

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bread, bread dough, bread recipe, delia smith, english bread, farmhouse loaf, homemade bread

english farmhouse loaf
I can’t stop thinking about this Paleo diet movement. To me it’s a movement as so many friends have joined up and are trumpeting its benefits. I’m conflicted. On the one hand I love the idea of not eating anything processed at all but on the other hand, I just don’t want to eat meat. Oh. And, um, I eat a lot of bread. I am going to cut down on all this bread eating, really. Not give up; just some healthy moderation.

But for the times when you want it, need it and maybe even love it, here’s a spectacular recipe for a homemade loaf of bread. And even now, I hear my paleo friend’s voice say, “At first it’s hard, then bread begins to disgust you.”

On that note, The English Farmhouse Loaf!

This recipe comes from Delia Smith’s book How to Cook, Book One. I love that title. It truly is a ‘How to cook’ book. I mean, like, how-to-boil-an-egg. I’m terrible at poaching eggs and I know someday when I face this particular and intense fear of ineptly poaching an egg into a slobbery mess, this book will guide me true.

Delia’s bread recipe is called the ‘Plain and Simple White Bread’

english farmhouse loaf
Ingredients

700g bread flour (4 and 3/4 cups)
1 tbsp salt
1 tsp dried yeast
1 tsp sugar
15fl very warm water

Bread flour

bread dough rising

shaping the dough

shaping the dough
1. A great Delia bread trick is to warm up the flour in the oven on a very low setting before you even start. This makes a difference.
2. Add in the rest of the dry ingredients and mix.
3. Add in the warm water and mix with a wooden spoon.
4. Dump on a sparkling clean counter and knead the dough for a few minutes until it is smooth and shiny.
5. Lightly oil a bowl and put in the dough to rise. cover with a tea towel and keep in a warm place for about two hours. (One hour will work too, but the longer the better). I usually pick the oven. But turned off, naturally.
6. Preheat the oven to 450F or 230C.
7. After the dough has doubled in size, knock the air out and knead again for a couple of minutes. Shape into a bread loaf by folding one side in and the other side on top of it.
8. Butter and flour a loaf pan and place the shaped bread dough in, seam side down.
9. Bake in the oven about 40 or 45 minutes. The bread is ready when it is golden brown on top and it makes a hollow sound when you knock on the bottom.

I took a french-bread making course once and as soon as the instructor pulled our finished baguettes out of the massive industrial oven, he ordered us to eat them with a good slab of butter. “This is THE best time to eat bread,” he intoned, “Straight from the oven.”

So obvious, but so true!

fresh bread and butter

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