Showing posts with label breakfast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label breakfast. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 November 2013

It just won't be complete without it


Those of you who know me, know that I love bread. Fresh white, still warm from the oven, with loads of real butter; crusty brown with cheese; stale, so that I can use it for bread-and-butter pudding; white or brown, toasted, with marmalade; eggs and soldiers. There is something comforting, homely and wholesome about bread. More so than anything else, in my (not so) humble opinion.

Breakfast, and dinner, just wouldn't be complete without it.

Throughout Europe, you can find festive loafs for all kinds of occasions. Pretzels (Germany) were traditionally eaten at New Year; the dough would contain lemon peel, cut into three even pieces and braided and then shaped into a pretzel shape and baked (no salt on top). Braid (Switzerland), traditionally eaten at breakfast on festive days; cut into two even pieces for a 4-part braid. Easter Bread (Finland), as the name suggests, eaten at Easter; the dough is made with condensed milk and contains dried fruit, citrus peel,
cardamom and almonds and is baked in an enamelled pan. Vasilopita (Greece), traditionally eaten on the first day of the year to celebrate St Basilius; a golden or silver coin is baked inside the dough (whoever finds it will have a year of good fortune). All Souls 'Braid' (Bavarian), eaten on All Hallow's Eve; the dough is cut into thirty-six pieces and shaped into a complex braid before being baked.


This is just a very, very, very small selection and if I were to look at the various 'plain' breads I could fill three posts with just the variations of breads within Germany, where every region has its own breads.

In Germany and the 'low countries' it is traditional to eat Stollen at Christmas and Easter. The bread is chock-full of dried fruits, candied peel, almond paste and wears a pretty coat of icing sugar and slightly browned almond slivers. (As breads go, you could go worse.)

The tradition of eating Stollen at Christmas dates back to the 1400s; it was created for the first time in 1427 at the Saxon Royal Court in Dresden and was made with flour, yeast, oil and water, the result was a 'bread' that was very hard and rather tasteless. In those days the Advent season was one of fasting and bakers were not allowed to use butter. That changed in 1490,
when Pope Innocent VIII allowed the Prince Elector Ernst, his family and household to use butter. If other people wanted to use butter, they could do so but had to pay an annual fee (this fee was used to build the Freiberg Minster. When Saxony became Protestant the ban on butter was lifted. Over the years the hard, tasteless 'bread' evolved into a lighter, sweeter cake with richer ingredients such as almond paste and dried fruits. But the traditional Stollen that is still baked in Dresden is not as light, airy and sweet as copies that are now made the world over.

It is best to bake the bread a couple of days in advance as the flavours will mature a bit and the bread will get slightly denser. Good (finger thick) slices, served with real butter and a slice of good cheese (optional). Grilling or toasting the bread works a treat as the sugar in the almond paste will start to caramelise.

And so, as promised in my blog on 27 October: Tradition, here is the recipe for this tasty bread.
Christmas Stollen

Ingredients:

  • 4 teaspoons dried yeast (20 gram) (you can use fresh yeast, you will need about 50 gram)
  • 350 millilitre warm milk (45ºC)
  • 2 large eggs
  • 150 gram icing sugar
  • 3 teaspoons salt
  • 150 gram unsalted butter, softened
  • 700 gram bread flour
  • 150 gram sultanas
  • 150 gram glacé cherries (quartered)
  • 150 gram raisins
  • 200 gram mixed candied citrus peel, chopped small
  • 400 gram almond paste
Decoration
  • icing sugar to dust
  • ½ teaspoon cinnamon, mixed in with the icing sugar (optional)
  • toasted almond slivers for garnish (optional)
Method:
  1. Add the yeast to the warm milk and leave until it becomes 'creamy', about 10 minutes (if you are using fresh yeast, crumble the yeast into the milk and leave until dissolved)
  2. In a separate bowl, mix the dried fruit, candied peel (recipe here) and glacé cherries
  3. In a large bowl, mix the yeast mixture with the eggs, icing sugar, salt, butter and three quarters of the flour and mix thoroughly
  4. In small quantities, start adding the rest of the flour and knead this into the dough
  5. As soon as the dough comes together into a ball and is releasing from the sides of the bowl, turn it out onto a lightly flour work surface and knead in the mixed dried fruits
    • Keep kneading until the dough is smooth and elastic, about 8 minutes
  6. Oil a large bowl, put the dough in the bowl and turn it around a couple of times to cover it in the oil, cover the bowl with a damp tea towel and leave the dough to prove, in a warm and draft-free space, until it has doubled in size, about 1 hour
    • Grease a baking sheet, ready for when the bread is shaped
  7. Take the dough out of the bowl onto a lightly work surface and beat it back, form the dough into a big square
  8. Form the almond paste (recipe here) into a roll and put this in the middle of the dough (see right)
  9. Fold one half of the dough over the almond paste and press the seam down (traditional, see below for photo)
  10. Place the loaf onto the baking sheet, cover with a damp tea towel and leave to rise until doubled in size, about 40 minutes
  11. Preheat the oven to 180ºC
  12. Put the baking sheet (with the loaf) into the oven and bake for 10 minutes
  13. Lower the temperature to 150ºC and bake for a further 30-40 minutes until the bread is a lovely dark golden colour
  14. As soon as the bread is out of the oven, brush with a little melted butter and sprinkle the toasted almond slivers over the (now) sticky bread
  15. Leave the bread to cool on a rack
  16. Sift the icing sugar (mix in the cinnamon, if using) over the cooled down bread
Variations:

  • You can change the taste of the bread by adjusting the quantities of dried fruit, candied peel and glacé cherries to your own taste
  • For a fruity burst, replace the raisins with 150 gram dried cranberries
  • You can add dried apple and/or pear, replacing the glacé cherries
  • For a slightly more 'adult' version, try soaking the dried fruit in either rum or brandy
    • Leave the fruit to soak as long as possible, preferably over night, but for a minimum of 1 hour
    • drain any leftover liquid off the fruit and add it to the milk in step 3
    • If you don't want to use alcohol for soaking the fruit, try using tea but do not use the leftover liquid in the dough
  • You can add 2 teaspoons of your favourite 'Christmas' spice(mix), such as cinnamon, to the flour
    • Mix even quantities of ground cinnamon, ground ginger and ground nutmeg and about half the used quantity of ground cloves and add two teaspoons of this mix to the flour (I usually make a larger quantity and use this to bake spiced Christmas cookies and spiced Christmas Wreaths)
    • If you want to use star anise, add two stars to a pan with 350 millilitre cold milk and slowly bring to a simmer, leave to cool to 45ºC. Remove the stars before you add the yeast (step 1)
  • You could use the Stollen as a centre piece on the table:
    • Once you have reached step 9, place the 'loaf' inside a greased 'turban' mold and follow the rest of the steps
      • After the bread has cooled down and has been dusted with the icing sugar, place on a large serving platter and place a candle in the centre of the bread
As they say in Germany:
Gutten Appetit

or, in English

Enjoy


Saturday, 12 October 2013

Breakfast, on the go, please...

Breakfast is supposed to be the most important meal of the day. We get it told from a very young age, we all know it and we all try to have something in the morning. Even if you only eat something at 10 am, after you have downed three espressos to 'get you going'. The most-heard reason for not having a 'sit-down' breakfast is time; 'It takes too long to make', 'I rather have half an hour longer in bed', 'Everything is just soo hectic in the morning'. Me? I need something 'proper' and will get up earlier than necessary to make sure I do. Usually that will just result in some toast with (ginger) preserve or cheese but it could just as easily be a full English, or eggs and soldiers, or porridge: it depends on what takes my fancy.

An entire industry has grown for those of us who do not have the time at home to eat breakfast. McDonald's and Subway, for instance, are very happy with our lack of time in the morning and have a range of products to 'help' us. But, I don't get it; it takes me anywhere from five minutes (toast) to maximum half an hour (full English) to make my breakfast. It would take me much more than that to get myself to either of the two places mentioned (and several others to boot), decide what I want to eat, order, wait for my order and then eat it. Forget about the fact that it has cost me an arm and a leg; it tastes like cardboard, soggy cardboard at that. It always looks so promising on telly and on the big billboards but what you receive is uninspired, flavourless, unhealthy, tough or spongy and has more 'work' done to it than Lolo Ferrari.

So, how about something to spice up your breakfast?

Quick Huevos Rancheros (or Ranch-style Eggs)



Cooking time: 20 minutes
Serves 2 to 4 (depending on your appetite)

Ingredients:

  • olive oil
  • 1/2 medium sized onion, chopped
  • 1 tin (400 gram) whole tomatoes
  • 2 or 3 fresh green chillies (more or less, to taste)
  • (chipotle) chili powder, adobo sauce, ground cumin (all optional)
  • 4 tortillas or wraps
  • butter
  • 4 eggs
  • 2 tablespoons fresh, chopped, coriander (optional)
  • grated cheddar (optional)
Method:

  1. Make the sauce first by softening the onions in a little olive oil in a large frying pan on medium heat. Once translucent, add the tomatoes and the juice the tomatoes are packed in. Break up the tomatoes with your fingers as you put them in the pan. Add chopped green chilies. Add additional chili to taste, either chipotle chili powder, adobo sauce, regular chili powder, or even ground cumin. Bring to a simmer, reduce heat to medium, and let simmer while you do the rest of the cooking, stirring occasionally. Reduce to low after it has been simmering for 10 minutes. Add salt to taste if needed. If the sauce is too acidic, add half a teaspoon of sugar.
  2. Prepare the tortillas/wraps. Heat the oven to a warm 50°C, place plates in the oven to warm up. Heat a teaspoon of olive oil in a large non-stick frying pan on medium high, coating the pan with the oil. One by one (or more if your pan is big enough) heat the tortillas/wraps in the pan, a minute or two on each side, until they are heated through, softened, and pockets of air bubble up inside of them. Then remove them and stack them on one of the warming plates in the oven to keep warm while you continue cooking the rest of the tortillas/wraps and the eggs.
  3. Fry the eggs. Using the same pan as was used for the tortillas/wraps, add a little butter to the pan, about two teaspoons for 4 eggs. Heat the pan on medium high heat. Crack 4 eggs into the pan and cook for 3 to 4 minutes for runny yolks, more for firmer eggs.
To serve, put a tortilla/wrap on a plate and spoon on some of the sauce, then a fried egg (or two). Top with more sauce, sprinkle with coriander and/or cheese if desired.

On the go? Place the tortilla/wrap on a piece of tin foil and put the filling on the tortilla/wrap as before but try to keep it more along the middle and fold it up, burrito-style. Wrap it up in the tin foil and off you go.

To make life easier (and the recipe even quicker), you could use a jar of your favourite salsa, gently warmed up in a small sauce pan.

Fancy a bit of a difference?
  • Try adding some re-fried beans, some soured cream or some finely sliced avocado (or a combination).
Or, if you fancy something 'meatier':
  • Try adding some crispy fried bacon; at the end of step 2: fry the bacon 'till crispy in the same frying pan you used for the tortillas/wraps and place in the oven to keep warm. Continue with step 3.
Enjoy, and do let me know how you get on.