Sunday, February 2, 2025

Recent Baking

King Arthur's 2025 Recipe of the Year
For the second weekend in a row I made King Arthur's 2025 recipe of the year, a big and bubbly Focaccia bread.  I made a Focaccia bread recipe a couple months ago from their Big Book Of Bread, and it was good but ultimately forgettable compared to this one (though I did only make it once).  This recipe is so good the bread was gone on the same day I made it last weekend.  The big bubbles and the moist crumb with all that olive oil baked in - oh so delicious!  Yesterday's bread would have been eaten up, too, but my wife wanted to see what it was like the next day so we somehow saved a bit overnight.  It's still very good today but just a tad drier, maybe better if I was to use it for a sandwich, but I wouldn't feel guilty just eating it plain and it only lasts a day again.  This is certainly one that I will continue to bake.

Pizza sauce and last week's Focaccia.
I also made pizza dough and pizza sauce last weekend, so we have that ready for meals during the week.  We've been wanting to try a pan pizza recently.  I tried with the dough I make now but it's obviously meant for a thinner crust and didn't turn out great.  So then I found KA's 2020 recipe of the year, a crispy cheesy pan pizza crust that sounds promising.  I may make that this afternoon as it can stay in the fridge up to 72 hours so we can have it for dinner Monday or Tuesday.

We still have a couple wheat baguettes in the freezer for now.  We've been using them for baguette pizzas, tuna melts, and garlic bread recently.  Next weekend will be time to make that new baguette recipe again, also from KA's BBoB.  It's been several weeks since I last made it so I look forward to that.

Also yesterday, I made a new (for me) hamburger/hot dog bun recipe.  This is one type of bread I've dragged my feet on a bit, but if I can get a good one down then we won't have to buy from the store anymore.  This recipe felt a little more ambitious for me, especially since it lacked a video or pictures to help the process, but I found it very manageable to make.  Still, adding flour "until the dough begins to pull away from the sides of the bowl" seemed subjective to me.  I was a bit unsure how much they meant.  Also, I flattened them a bit before baking as the recipe called for, but a bit too much it appeared as the buns came out of the oven flatter than I wanted.  Still, a promising recipe that I will try again soon with some modifications and hopefully improve my technique.  

Sometimes making a recipe for the first time doesn't come out perfect, but the experience will hopefully ensure a better result each consecutive time it's made.  I still enjoy the journey.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

All look dleicious!

I miss baking bread - but, no point making something you can't eat! GF breads just are not the same, not least because, without gluten, you never get the satisfaction of playing with the elasticity. That focaccia recipe is well-written, but it is long.

I love my old cook books - it fascinates me how, years ago, very few recipes had pictures (not even one to show what the finished item would look like - unless it was a pencil drawing), yet these days they all do, often of each stage, and frequently with videos. It does make baking (and cooking in general) easier for all - but still hardly anyone cooks from scratch these days.

- BW

Scoakat said...

I would agree, no sense baking something you can't eat!
I like the detail in KA's recipes, and the pictures and videos are a big help many times.

From Google:
"Until the dough begins to pull away from the sides of the bowl" means to knead bread dough in a mixer or by hand until it no longer sticks to the sides of the container and forms a somewhat smooth ball, indicating that it has developed enough gluten and is ready to be shaped and left to rise.

I wish I would have googled this earlier. In my mind there are different stages of pulling away from the sides of the bowl. This sounds like it should pull away cleanly. The recipe notes how the dough will be slack, which left me afraid of adding too much flour. Oh well, the buns will be better next time!