Saturday, April 23, 2016

Sourdough Waffles

Too much sourdough starter? A wonderful thing to do is share your starter. I've shared with a few people, so far, but you could also do something else. Sourdough waffles!!
They rock!!
This was my next endeavor after making the bread and the pancakes with my now very robust sourdough starter. This recipe is easy, flavorful and makes a lot of waffles.





Ingredients
The Sponge
1 cup (4 1/4 ounces) King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour
1 cup (4 ounces) King Arthur Whole Wheat Flour, Premium or White Whole Wheat
2 tablespoons sugar
2 cups (16 ounces) buttermilk(I've used kefir and also mixed milk with yogurt)
1 cup (8 ounces) sourdough starter*

The Batter
2 large eggs
1/4 cup (2 ounces) butter, melted (or vegetable oil)
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon vanilla

Instructions
The Sponge: Mix together the flours and sugar in a medium-sized ceramic mixing bowl. Stir in the buttermilk.  Add 1 cup (or 2, if you're doubling the recipe) of your refreshed sourdough starter and cover loosely with plastic wrap. Let sit at room temperature until you are ready to mix into your batter.

The Waffle Batter: Beat together the eggs, butter or oil, vanilla, salt and baking soda until light. Blend this mixture into the sponge, and see dramatic chemistry begin to happen.

Spray your waffle iron with a bit of vegetable oil pan spray. (This is probably necessary only for the first waffle.) Pour 1/2 to 1 cup batter onto the iron, depending on its size, close, and cook for approximately 2 minutes, or until it's as done as you like. Remove gently with a fork.

FYI, sourdough waffles are extraordinarily light, and their flavor has an edge (because of the period of fermentation) that puts them in another category from the more usual baking powder version. Traditionally they're served with butter and maple syrup, but their unique flavor combines well with things savory as well. 

I made more than we could eat, so I packaged them in twos and put them in the freezer. They're great to pop in the toaster on a morning that I want something fast.

Enjoy!

Maria

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Sourdough Pancakes

As you may know, I have been on a sourdough bread-kick as of late.
One byproduct, if you will, of sourdough bread-baking is excess sourdough starter. What to do? Pancakes!!



These pancakes came out so fluffy and flavorful!

Sourdough pancakes
Ingredients Nutrition
Servings 3 Yield 10 pancakes Units US
  • 1 cup sourdough starter
  • 1 cup flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 12 teaspoon  salt
  • 2 tablespoons melted butter (if using salted omit extra salt)
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 34 cup milk
Directions
  1. mix flour,baking soda and salt.
  2. add starter,butter.milk and the egg.
  3. Mix well - Some lumps are fine.
  4. let sit for a minute or two while heating your skillet. I use a cast iron skillet lightly oiled.
  5. when pan is hot drop by 1/8 c amounts
  6. cook until bubbles appear and then flip after about 45 seconds they are done.
  7. remove from pan and serve as you like with butter, syrup and fruit.
Enjoy!

Maria



Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Candied Pomello skins- Greek Spoon sweets

When I was a kid, my grandmother Efrosyne always had a pot of spoon sweets on the stove. She lived in a village called Bellapais, in a little Eden of a yard full of different fruit trees. Sometimes it was orange peel sweets, other times bitter orange, fragrant bergamot and, often, it was something we called "frappa." It resulted in a very satisfying preserve.
When I discovered the Pomello, I did what I always like to do with citrus fruit and I scratched the peel with my fingernail. I took one whiff of the aroma and thought, "frappa" this must be the "frappa" of my childhood. At 5.99 a fruit, even though it is a large fruit, sort of like an overgrown grapefruit, it was an expensive treat. Citrus maxima (or Citrus grandis) is a natural (non-hybrid) citrus fruit, with the appearance of a big grapefruit, native to South and Southeast Asia. I brought the Pomello home where we enjoyed the succulent, fragrant pink flesh.

The peel, though, was so nice, thick and aromatic that I thought it would be such a shame to chuck into the garbage.
So, of course I googled it and between what I remembered my grandmother doing and the online recipes I found, I ended up with a pot of candied Pomello skins.

Once it cooled in the refrigerator, I was pleasantly surprised to find that the flavor transported me to yiayia Efrosyne's house, where long ago I had enjoyed her "frappa" spoon sweets.

Pomello skin Greek Spoon Sweets
Lightly grate the zest from two large Pomellos. Score the skin into 8 long pieces from the navel of the fruit to the other. Remove the skins carefully and peel away the white inside pith of the peel.
Roll up each piece and with a needle and thread, thread all pieces through. This will keep the peel from braking apart.
Place peel strings into a saucepan and cover it with fresh water. Place on the stove at high heat and let it come to a boil. Boil for 3 minutes. Remove from heat and drain. Repeat this step, this time when it comes to a boil, boil for five  minutes. Then drain again and replace the water with fresh water. Again bring to a boil and this time boil for 3 minutes. Drain and set aside.

Syrup
2 cups of sugar
1 cup of water
lemon peel
1 tspn of lemon juice

In a medium saucepan mix the sugar and water and add the lemon peel. Bring to a boil and cook for 5 minutes. Add the Pomello peels and boil for another 5-7 minutes. Stir in lemon and remove from heat.
Store in sterilized glass jars in the refrigerator.



Here's to you yiayia!

Enjoy!

Maria

Saturday, April 9, 2016

The Good Bread

I have been thinking about making a sourdough bread for a long time. Years actually! But I have always been intimidated by the whole process of making a starter, feeding it(really, what does that mean?), baking with it and maintaining it.


 Why sourdough you might ask?


The flavor for one. I love strong flavors that remind me of the foods of my childhood in Cyprus. Sour yogurt, bitter greens, fruity olive oil, tangy olives, gamy meats. I never realized where those preferences came from until I began to contemplate food in this blog. I'm not forgetting my American childhood either, with the complex flavors and textures of 1960's pizza from the Upper West Side, crunchy french fries and fried onions atop a juicy hamburger.
Another reason I'm fascinated with sourdough is this whole concept of wild yeast flying around in the environment and being captured by the chemistry of flour and water mixed in a jar and left to rest on the counter. What could be better than a naturally occurring fermentation process, rather than an industrialized, forced one?
Our gut is a sensitive organ that lets us know when it's not happy. The naturally fermented sourdough is a beneficial food that makes a gut sing! In addition, as I discovered, sourdough bread doesn't mold easily, if ever. Left on the counter for a week, the flavor deepens, it may get a little dry but it never goes bad.

Yet, there are so many variables that made sourdough bread-making seem impossible to master.
Stelios has been baking his whole-wheat yeast bread for years and that made trying the sourdough superfluous. Did we really need any more bread in the house? Especially when his broke the charts whenever anyone tasted it?
In the past couple of weeks, Stelios has run out of "baking bread" steam. Maybe it's the memoir he's been working on that's taken all of his time and energy? Yet, maybe there is a time when you don't feel like baking for a while, even if your father was a baker.
So, I believe that with this shift in the bread-making universe of our household, space was made for a new bread-making adventure.
I finally got myself in the right mind-frame to dare to try a sourdough. How did I achieve that? I simply told myself that it was only flour and water and if it didn't work out, it would be no big deal. There it is, and the fear of failure went out the window and in came the excitement of a new culinary experience.
First I had to create the sourdough starter. Then, I had to find a simple to follow sourdough bread recipe.
Above are some of those results:

Sourdough starter
Day 1 - In a wide-mouth glass jar/container with a lid, mix 4 oz. flour with 4 oz water. Cover loosely with the lid and set aside on the counter. You want a jar large enough that the starter will not overflow.
Day 2 - Add 4 oz flour and 4 oz water. Mix well, cover loosely and set aside on the counter.
Day 3 -5. Repeat above. By day 2 you should begin to see bubbles forming in your starter.

By Day 5 you should have a nice bubbly starter that smells kind of sweetly sour.

Once your starter is established it's time to bake.

The Day before I want to bake I "feed my starter" in the morning and leave it on the counter.
Feeding: measure out 4 ounces of flour, 4 ounces of water and 4 ounces of starter. Mix in a jar with enough room for your starter to double in volume, cover loosely and leave on the counter. That evening around 10pm, I mix my bread dough.


Sourdough Bread Recipe:
1 cup starter
3 1/2 cups cool water
1 tablespoon sea salt
3/4 cup whole wheat flour
6 -7 cups unbleached all purpose flour
All purpose plain flour to dust the work surface.
You will need a large basket, draped with a clean tea towel.
I baked my bread in a 31/2 quart dutch oven.

Day 1
Combine the starter, water and salt in a large bowl. Stir until the mixture is blended and the starter dissolves in the water.

Begin by adding the whole wheat flour and mixing well. Add the first 5 cups of white flour, one cup at a time, mixing well either with your hands or a sturdy spatula.
Continue mixing the dough until it is thick and spongy. Add from the remaining 1-2 cups of flour only enough to form a soft and slightly tacky dough. You don't have to add all of it. I  only added 6 cups total last time I baked.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and leave it on the counter to rise overnight.

Day 2
The next morning, line an 11 inch basket or bowl with parchment paper.

 With a wet spatula or wet hands, turn the dough onto a floured work surface.
Shape the dough into a round ball. Don't punch it down, you want to leave the air in it. Place it, seam side down, into the basket. Pinch the seam together with your fingers. Cover the basket loosely with a damp towel and let it rise slowly at room temperature for about 4-6 hours. If it has risen over the rim of the basket and it is very loose and jiggly it has over-proofed. Do not slash it if that has happened.

Slash a crisscross over the top with a sharp knife or a razor.

Place a five quart covered dutch oven in the oven and preheat to 475 degrees. Remove the dutch oven from the oven, open the lid and picking up the dough by the sides of the parchment paper, place it into the cavity. Caution: use oven proof gloves whenever you handle the hot Dutch oven, or the hot bread.

Cover the dutch oven and place the bread back in the oven. Bake for 35 minutes. Remove the cover, lower heat to 460 and continue to bake for another 20-25 minutes.

The bread is ready when it is nicely browned on top and it sounds hollow when tapped in the back.
Remove from dutch oven and let cool completely before you cut into it. Yes, I know you can't wait but if do your bread, like one of mine, might be ruined.

Cut into it and enjoy!

Maria