If you were to invite me over to your house and
then leave me alone, to
chase after some child who is raiding some other child's couch full
of animals, for example, then I will eventually end up digging
through your cookbook collection. You're welcome to come over and dig
through mine as well. They're in the cabinets above the stove.
I borrowed Maud's copy of Avoca
Cafe Cookbook (more correctly the Irish version thereof, a
couple of weeks ago, because I wanted their baked lamb with cumin,
cardamom and coconut milk recipe, thinking it might be similar to a
dish I ate in an Indian restaurant years ago.
I cannot resist an interesting bread recipe,
so when I saw the lovely picture of round loaves of seeded bread on
page labeled “Multiseed brown bread with fruit” I knew I had to
try it. Now, as it turns out the picture had nothing to do with the
recipe, but I liked the ingredients in the recipe too, so I decided
to give it a shot.
The first four ingredients as printed are as
follows: plain flour, coarse brown flour, bran, wheatgerm. I read
this with my head cocked to one side like the RCA dog. Why would you
use half white flour and then add in bran and germ, the things that
are removed from the whole grain flour to make it white flour in the
first place. It seemed excessively complicated.
I can come up with a plausible (if not necessarily
correct) theory about almost anything if given enough time, so while
half of my brain was deciding to use white whole wheat flour for the
entire weight of wheat ingredients, the other half pondered the
weirdness of the recipe.
As I understand it, the reason that soda bread was
popular in Ireland is that the Irish climate made it difficult to
grown the high-gluten hard red wheat that makes good yeasted bread.
The softer (lower gluten) white wheat that grew well in Ireland was
ideal for quick breads like soda bread.
Here in the States, where we have Amber Waves of
Grain, whole wheat generally means hard red (higher gluten) flour
which makes quite nice loaves of yeasted bread when it's handled
properly. I don't know what the current state of wheat imports in
Ireland is, so I don't know if Irish whole wheat flour is higher
gluten like American whole wheat flour is, but that would explain the
difference. By using part white flour and then adding in brand and
germ the recipe may be trying to mimic softer white wheat.
Fortunately, most people with access to a supermarket can by-pass all
of that by purchasing a bag of white whole wheat flour. It's still
whole grain, it's just made from soft white wheat so it has a milder
flavor and bakes up more like white flour in quick breads and
cookies.
Here's what this bread is: hearty, slightly sweet, whole, delicious. Here's what it's not: sugary, complicated. I've made it twice already this week.
Here's what this bread is: hearty, slightly sweet, whole, delicious. Here's what it's not: sugary, complicated. I've made it twice already this week.
Multiseed Brown Bread with Fruit
adapted from Avoca Cafe Cookbook
adapted from Avoca Cafe Cookbook
Ingredients:
20 ounces white whole wheat flour
1 Tablespoon
baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 Tablespoon poppy seeds
2 Tablespoons sunflower seeds
1 Tablespoon flax seeds
2 Tablespoons pumpkin seeds
2 ounces raisins
2 ounces dried apricots, chopped.
1 Tablespoon molasses
2 1/2 cups milk
1 teaspoon salt
1 Tablespoon poppy seeds
2 Tablespoons sunflower seeds
1 Tablespoon flax seeds
2 Tablespoons pumpkin seeds
2 ounces raisins
2 ounces dried apricots, chopped.
1 Tablespoon molasses
2 1/2 cups milk
Method:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit
Butter and flour a loaf pan (or use baking spray,
my word, do I ever love baking spray)
Mix flour, baking powder, and salt together in a
large mixing bowl and whisk together for at least 30 seconds. Add
seeds, raisins and apricots. (I don't actually chop my apricots, I
cut them with kitchen shears, much easier.) Toss the dry ingredients
together to coat.
Drizzle molasses over the dry ingredients.
Pour milk into dry ingredients and stir until
flour is just moistened. This is a quick bread, overworking it is
bad.
Pour the batter into the loaf pan and bake for 1
hour or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
Remove from loaf pan immediately to a wire rack and allow to cool
thoroughly (or at least 10 minutes, if you can't possibly wait.)
Serve with butter, or jam, or margarine if you
must, but pronounce it margereen, the way Maud does, so it sounds
better. Avoca also suggests cream cheese and salmon, or bacon, which
sound lovely, too.
You know what it would be most perfect with? Irish butter, like Kerrygold, which is slightly salted. I don't think it needs anything else.
ReplyDeleteI should try making own butter sometime. I'm sure Kerrygold is the heavens' gift to bread, but it must have a heck a carbon footprint if I buy it here.
DeleteMaybe next week we could put the kids to work on the marble in the mason jar method.
I don't know what the wheat situation in Ireland is either, but I know in the UK, even the whole wheat (they call it wholemeal) flour is from soft wheat unless you get it from a specialty store that imports from the U.S. When I lived there it was also hard to get wheat gluten as a dough additive, too, though the local Tesco's carried 'strong bread flour' that was just plain white flour enriched with extra gluten.
ReplyDelete