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Bread Spice (Brotgewürz) – The taste of real Austrian dark breads

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A lot of dark breads in Austria, Germany (particularly in the South), Switzerland and South Tyrol are made with Brotgewürz (bread spice). Bread spice is great for the taste of the bread and it’s also good for your digestive system.

Bread spice

The basic spices used are caraway seeds, anise, fennel and coriander seeds.

What you’ll need to make it (for a 1 kg bread loaf) –

  • 2½ tsp of caraway seeds
  • 2 tsp of fennel
  • 1 tsp of anise
  • ½ tsp of coriander seeds

You can also experiment with small quantities of allspice, fenugreek, sweet trefoil, celery seeds and cardamom – or just use one of these ingredients for your bread e.g. just caraway seeds or just coriander seeds. The taste of your bread will be very different depending on your bread spice choice.

Caraway seeds

Caraway seeds

Coriander seeds

Coriander seeds

Fennel seeds

Fennel seeds

Anise seeds

Anise seeds

How you’ll make it –

Put everything together into a coffee & spice grinder or just use a pestle and mortar to crack and crush the seeds.

The finer you crush or grind the spices, the subtler the taste.  You can use all of the spices whole.

Bread spice whole

Bread spice whole

How you’ll use it –

Simply add it to the dough ingredients. I usually use bread spice in dark breads made with 50 – 70% rye flour, 2 tablespoons of bread spice per kg of flour.

If you make larger quantities, keep the bread spice in an airtight container but it’s way better to make a fresh portion every time you need it!

Why not bake this delicious Austrian Hausbrot with your freshly assembled Brotgewürz :-) Enjoy!

The post Bread Spice (Brotgewürz) – The taste of real Austrian dark breads appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.


Salzstangerl – My favourite Austrian Kleingebäck (small breads)

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Kleingebäck or Kleinbrote are the German words and classifications for small breads weighing 250g or less. In Austria, Switzerland and Germany there is a huge variety of Kleingebäck – every region and, in fact, every bakery will have their own selection.

Kleinbrote are usually eaten for breakfast or as part of the Jause (Austrian German – a snack or small meal usually eaten mid-morning or in the early evening) and works equally well with sweet or savoury toppings. Salzstangerl are my personal favourite Kleingebäck.

Salzstangerl Ready to be Eaten

Salzstangerl

Making Salzstangerl at home is easier than you might think! Go and give it a try – you’ll love it :-)

What you’ll need to bake them (ingredients) – Bakes 12 Salzstangerl

  • 500g plain white flour / bread flour
  • 1 teaspoon of salt
  • ½ teaspoon of sugar
  • 1 tablespoon of dried, instant yeast
  • 250ml lukewarm milk
  • 50g melted butter
    (Note: If you would like a lighter end product replace the milk and butter with lukewarm water)
  • Coarse sea salt
  • Caraway seeds

 How you’ll bake them –

  1. Add 100ml of the lukewarm milk, sugar, yeast and 2 tablespoons of flour into a large bowl and mix together. Don’t add the salt or butter at this stage!
  2. Leave to rest in a warm place until the volume has doubled.
  3. Add the remaining ingredients to make the dough and leave to rest again.
  4. Preheat the oven to 200°C.
  5. Divide the dough into 12 equal parts.
  6. Use your palms to form a ball for each of the parts.
  7. Lightly dust a work surface with flour.
  8. Roll out each dough ball into a very flat oval shape.
  9. Hold onto the bottom part of the oval shape with your left hand while rolling the dough from the top part towards the bottom part. The more you squeeze the dough with your right hand while rolling, the longer the Salzstangerl will be.
  10. Put all the pieces onto baking paper onto a baking tray.
  11. Cover with a clean kitchen towel and leave to rest (and grow) in a warm place for 15 mins.
  12. Spray with water and sprinkle with sea salt and caraway seeds.
  13. Bake on the middle shelve of the oven for approximately 15-20 mins.
  14. Cool on a wire rack.
Salzstangerl Rolled Dough

Salzstangerl – Rolled, Rested and Ready to be Baked

Salt Caraway Seed Mix

Salt & Caraway Seed Mix to Sprinkle on Top

If you want to freeze the Stangerl, parbake them for 10 mins, fully cool them, then freeze. You can then take them out of the freezer whenever you feel like Salzstangerl, put a little water on top and finish baking them in a non-preheated oven.

You can also freeze fully baked Salzstangerl for up to a month.

The post Salzstangerl – My favourite Austrian Kleingebäck (small breads) appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

Hausbrot – Traditional Austrian Black Bread

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At home in Austria for the week, I’m keen to bake some traditional Austrian Schwarzbrot (black bread) with my family. My grandmother provides the recipe, my mum prepares the sourdough and gets the various ingredients ready and I do the ‘dough work’.

There are many different recipes for Hausbrot (‘bread of the house’) but all of them have the following ingredients in common –

  • A variety of flours whereby rye flour is always used but usually mixed with e.g. wheat or spelt flour
  • Sourdough
  • Yeast
  • Bread spices
Rye-heavy Hausbrot Closeup

Hausbrot (rye & wheat), nice even crumb and a hearty crust

Typically, proving baskets/bannetons (called Simperl or Gärkörbchen in German) made of cane or rattan are used to rest and prove the bread and mould its final shape. These bread baskets come in round or oval shapes and different sizes. Proving baskets can be used for soft and loose doughs and are great for giving your bread loaves uniform-ish shapes.

What you’ll need to bake it (ingredients) – 1 loaf

Sourdough

  • 25g rye sourdough starter
  • 250g wholemeal rye flour
  • 250g water

Sponge

  • 1g dried yeast
  • 150g wholemeal wheat flour
  • 150g water

Remaining dough ingredients

  • 150g plain wheat flour
  • 100g rye flour
  • 8g salt
  • 10g fresh yeast or 3g dried yeast
  • 1 tablespoon fennel seeds, lightly crushed with a pestle and mortar
  • 1 tablespoon bread spice (see above)

How you’ll make them –

24 hours before the bake

  1. Prepare the sourdough and preferment in two separate bowls and cover.

Baking day

  1. Combine 500g of the sourdough (the rest goes back into the fridge for your next bake), preferment, plain flour, rye flour, salt, yeast, seeds and spice to make a soft dough.
  2. Knead for approx. 5 minutes. The dough will be quite sticky due to the high rye flour content in this recipe, so I usually just use my dough scrapers to shift, flip and wield it around the work top. The dough will be sticky, but shouldn’t be runny – so if your dough turns out too wet, carefully add some more wheat flour until the dough is able to keeps its shape.
  3. Shape the dough into a round ball, lightly cover with flour and leave to rest on your work surface.
  4. Cover the dough with an upside-down plastic bowl (wet rims with water beforehand) until it has doubled in size (approximately 1 to 2 hours depending on the temperature of the room).
  5. Prepare the proving basket by dusting it with quite a bit flour. If you don’t have such bread baskets to hand, you can also use a bowl lined with a kitchen towel and flour. This technique will support the shape of the dough and avoid that the dough flattens when it expands.
  6. Knead the dough again briefly, shape a boule, flour the dough surface and place it in the basket.
  7. Leave to rest for another hour or so for its final prove. Again, this may take longer depending on your room temperature.
  8. ½ hour before baking, preheat the oven to 250°C.
  9. Line a baking tray with baking parchment and place in the oven for about 5 minutes before transferring (flipping) the dough from the proving basket onto the hot baking tray.
  10. Quickly spray the bread and tray with water. Make sure that as little heat as possible escapes from the oven during this process.
  11. Bake for 10 minutes at 250°C.
  12. Continue to bake for another 50 minutes at 200°C.
  13. Cool on a wire rack.
  14. Wait until the next day to cut and eat the bread.

The bread tastes amazing, particularly with casseroles such as Gulasch.

Hausbrot Austrian dark bread

The post Hausbrot – Traditional Austrian Black Bread appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

Vinschgerl – Rustic South Tyrolean Rye Flatbreads

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Vinschgerl are rustic palm-sized flatbreads which originate in South Tyrol. Blue fenugreek (Brotklee, Schabziger Klee, trigonella caerulea) adds a very distinctive, slightly spicy flavour to these delicious breads and the flat shape ensures that there is a lot of surface for the strong crust to form.

Vinschgerl - Rustic, aromatic flatbreads.

Vinschgerl – Rustic, aromatic flatbreads. Great to serve with a charcuterie plate!

Ingredients – Makes 12

  • 400g fine rye flour
  • 200g wholewheat flour
  • 15g of rye sourdough
  • 1½ tsp of salt
  • 1 package of dried yeast (7g)
  • 1 tbsp of honey
  • ½ tsp blue fenugreek
  • 350g water, lukewarm
  • 200g natural yoghurt (not straight from fridge)
  • 1 tsp fennel seeds, crushed with pestle and mortar
  • 1 tsp coriander seeds, crushed with pestle and mortar

How to bake them –

  1. Mix the wet ingredients (water, honey, yoghurt) in a small bowl.
  2. In a large bowl mix the flours, sourdough extract, yeast, salt, blue fenugreek and the crushed seeds together.
  3. Add the wet ingredients to form the dough (using your hands for this will be easiest). The dough should be quite soft and gooey due to the high rye content. Add some more water if necessary but don’t add any more flour.
  4. Leave to rise in a warm place for up to 6 hours. The dough will have a less sticky, ‘cleaner’ consistency after this long rest and you will be able to shape it into a rectangle (approx. 2 cm high) on a clean work surface. If it’s still too soft, just shape it into a rectangle with wettish hands.
  5. Take a knife to divide the dough into 12 smaller rectangular pieces.
  6. Put the pieces onto two separate pieces of baking parchment (6 each). Place two pieces each right next to each other – this is the traditional way of baking them.
  7. Carefully dust or rub the surface of the dough pieces with a little rye flour, then cover with a clean, dry kitchen towel. (This will make the delicious cracks in your Vinschgerl more visible.)
  8. Leave to rise in a warm place for another 1 – 2  hours.
  9. ½ hour before baking – preheat the oven to 220°C (Gas 6).
  10. Bake for 35 minutes.
  11. Cool on a wire rack.
A pair of Vinschgerl, baked in the traditional way.

A pair of Vinschgerl, baked in the traditional way.

The post Vinschgerl – Rustic South Tyrolean Rye Flatbreads appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

A Striezel (Hefezopf) Challah Bake-Off & Recipes

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My friend Mariel and I decided to have a friendly Challah versus Striezel bake-off this weekend.

Mariel's Challah with Poppy Seeds

Mariel’s Challah with Poppy Seeds

Challah (Hebrew for ‘loaf’) is a traditional leavened and plaited Jewish bread eaten on Sabbath and holidays. Striezel (in Austria) or Hefezopf (in Germany) is also a plaited yeast bread.

What makes them similar?

Both breads look very decorative with a rich and dense texture and a glossy finish. In both cases the dough is rolled into rope-shaped pieces which are braided and brushed with egg wash before baking to add a golden sheen.

What makes them different?

While Striezel is of a sweet brioche-like nature and usually covered in almond flakes or coarse sugar, challlah is less sweet and traditionally sprinkled with poppy or sesame seeds. Striezel is a great dessert bread; challah makes a perfect accompaniment to meat dishes.

Unlike the enriched dough used for Striezel, traditional challah is usually ‘parve’ i.e. it doesn’t contain dairy products (oil and water are used instead of butter and milk).

Below is my recipe for Striezel (Hefezopf). Mariel’s thoughts on our baking venture can be found here.

Part of my Monster Striezel

Part of my Monster Striezel – Make sure to divide the dough into 2 parts…

Sponge

  • 110g strong white flour
  • 200g milk, lukewarm
  • 10g dried yeast

Mix in a bowl, cover with cling film and leave to rest in a warm place for 30 minutes.

Dough

  • 100g caster sugar
  • 8g vanilla sugar
  • 80g butter at room temperature, cut into 1cm cubes
  • 20g oil
  • 100g milk, lukewarm
  • 7g salt
  • 2 eggs
  • 490g strong white flour
  • 1 tbsp chopped almonds
  • Zest of ½ lemon and ½ orange
  • Optional: 50g raisins soaked in 20g rum overnight


For the top

  • A little milk and 1 egg to brush
  • 3 tbsp flaked almonds


How to bake them (makes 2 Striezel) –

  1. Combine the sugar, vanilla sugar, butter and oil and use a hand mixer to combine until creamy.
  2. Add in all other dough ingredients including the sponge and combine with your hands until you have formed a rough dough.
  3. Knead for 5 minutes.
  4. Cover and leave to rest for approx. 1 hour. Alternatively, leave to slowly rise overnight in the fridge which will improve the flavour.
  5. Deflate the dough and turn it out onto a lightly floured work surface.
  6. Divide the dough into two equal parts and set one part aside while you braid your first Striezel.
  7. Divide this part of the dough into four equal parts and roll out into rope shapes (start in the centre and move your hands out in a rocking motion to lengthen the pieces of dough).
  8. Place the four strands vertically in front of you and pinch the ends together at one end.
  9. Starting on your left hand side number the positions of the dough strands as 1, 2, 3, 4.
    Please note that as you go through the braiding process, it is not important which strand was originally number 1, etc. The dough strands will not keep their number so as far as braiding goes, number 1 is always the left-most strand of dough.
  10. Cross strand 1 over strand 3. Cross strand 2 over strand 3. Cross strand 4 over strand 2. Repeat until you get to the end of the strands, then pinch all loose ends together. Try to keep the braiding as regular as possible to avoid ending up with a pear-shaped loaf that is fat on one end and narrow on the other.
  11. Repeat the braiding process with the second part of the dough.
  12. Place the braided loaves on a baking tray lined with baking paper.
  13. Cover and rest in a warm place for approx. 1 hour.
  14. Preheat the oven to 160°C (gas mark 3).
  15. Mix some milk with the egg.
  16. Brush the dough with the mixture and sprinkle the flaked almonds on top.
  17. Bake for approximately 25 – 30 minutes.
  18. Cool on a wire rack.
French Toast made from Challah

French Toast made from Challah

The post A Striezel (Hefezopf) Challah Bake-Off & Recipes appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

Tipsy Christmas Stollen Bread Recipe

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Christmas Stollen is a rich, sweet bread made with butter, milk, spices and rum-soaked dried fruit and nuts.

I’ve always wanted to be a Stollen lover; however, Stollen usually contains a few ingredients I’m not really a huge fan of such as candied orange & citrus peel and marzipan. Heaps of butter and sugar are normally used to preserve the bread for weeks (the typical proportions for traditional German Stollen according to the Dresdner Stollen Association are a minimum of 50% butter and 65% golden raisins when compared to flour weight).

So, I decided to piece together my own Stollen recipe with breadshebakes rules :-)

Stollen Slices

Freshly Baked Tipsy Stollen Slices

This is what I set out to achieve:

  • No candied orange, citrus peel or glacé cherries
  • Only high-quality organic dried fruit (yet not too much of it)
  • No marzipan roll in the middle of the Stollen – instead; homemade almond and pistachio paste mixed into the dough
  • Reduced fat and sugar content. A thick layer of butter and icing sugar is usually applied as topping but I’m opting for egg wash and almond flakes instead.
  • It’s a sweet treat and I don’t mind it being a little “merrier” than usual :-)

Ingredients for one Stollen (approx. 20 slices) – 

Note that all the ingredients should be at room temperature, so warm the milk slightly if it’s just out of the fridge.

For the fruit & nut soaker:

  • 100g organic sultanas
  • 100g dried organic cranberries
  • 100g blanched almonds, roughly chopped
  • 50g Stroh rum (80%)
  • Seeds from a vanilla pod

For the sourdough:

  • 25g wheat sourdough starter
  • 100g plain flour
  • 100g water

For the almond & pistachio paste:

  • 25g ground almonds
  • 25g ground pistachios
  • 25g caster sugar
  • 25g icing sugar
  • 50g water
  • ½ lemon grated zest and juice

For the dough:

  • 475g plain organic flour (German type 550)
  • 100g caster sugar
  • 8g dried yeast
  • 80g butter, softened
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 200ml milk
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ½ lemon grated zest
  • 1 pinch each of ground nutmeg, ground cloves, ground cinnamon, ground allspice
  • 3 cardamom pods

For the topping:

  • 1 egg
  • A handful of almond flakes

Here is how you’ll bake your Tipsy Christmas Stollen:

On the evening before baking –

  1. Mix the dried fruit and chopped almonds with the rum, cover with cling film and leave overnight. This hydrates everything slightly and ensures that the fruit and nuts do not soak up too much liquid from the dough.
    It’s really important to use good quality ingredients here as the flavours will really unfold in the baked Stollen and there is a remarkable difference in the taste.

    I’ve used organic dried fruit (organic medium currants and organic dried cranberries) and almonds from Real Foods which are just perfect. The currants add lovely bursts of intense flavour and are high in antioxidants and vitamins while the cranberries give the dough a delicious sweetness while being a great source of vitamin C and dietary fibre.

  2. Prepare the sourdough by mixing the above ingredients together and covering the bowl with cling film.

  3. Prepare the almond and pistachio paste, cover with cling film and keep in the fridge overnight. The paste should be nice and smooth, not too wet or dry.

 

Roughly Chopped Blanched Almonds

Roughly Chopped Blanched Almonds

Almond and pistachio paste

Almond and pistachio paste

On the day of baking –

  1. Crack the shell of the cardamom pods with a knife handle and remove the seeds. Give the seeds a quick grind with a pestle and mortar. Don’t use ground cardamom as it just doesn’t have the same fragrant, fresh flavour.

    I’ve used organic cardamom pods from Real Foods which are super aromatic and perfect for Stollen.

Cardamom pods and seeds

Cardamom pods and seeds

  1. Mix together the following ingredients to form a dough:
    Flour, 150g sourdough, caster sugar, yeast, milk, butter, egg, 120g homemade almond & pistachio paste

  2. Knead for 10 mins to develop a smooth and satiny dough. It’ll be a little sticky but that’s fine.

  3. Then work in the fruits, nuts, lemon zest and spices, distributing them as evenly as possible.

  4. Now leave the dough in a warm place, covered with a kitchen towel or clingfilm, until it has doubled in size (the time this takes can vary depending on the room temperature; approx. 1.5 hours).

  5. Knock the air out of the risen dough and knead for another minute or two.

  6. Shape the dough into an oval loaf (I’m not too bothered with the traditional fold).

  7. Place on a baking tray lined with baking paper and cover with a kitchen towel.

  8. Leave in a draught-free place for its second proof. Depending on the temperature in your kitchen, approximately 1 hour.
    Use your finger to make a small dent in the dough. If the dent remains, the bread is ready to bake. If it disappears, the dough needs some more time.

  9. Preheat the oven to 190°C (gas mark 5).
  10. Prepare some egg wash (combine an egg and a table spoon of water and whisk together).

  11. When the dough is ready, brush the stollen with the egg wash and sprinkle with almond flakes.

  12. Bake in the oven on the lowest shelf for 1 hour 15 mins. If it browns too quickly, protect the bread by covering the top with tin foil. I do this after 25 mins initial baking time.

  13. Use a cocktail stick or skewer to check if the dough has fully baked through as you would with a cake. The internal temperature of the loaf should be 85 – 87°C, my Thermapen is proving invaluable once more!

  14. Allow it to cool on the baking sheet for about 5 minutes before lifting it onto a wire rack to finish cooling.

Tipsy Christmas Stollen

Tipsy Christmas Stollen

Serve in relatively thick slices with strong coffee or tea and good quality butter. Lightly toast if you would like to heat it through.

Stollen Slice Close Up

Stollen Slice with a nice crunchy crust!

If you are giving your Stollen away as a Christmas present or you would just like to treat yourself, here is a lovely Stollen cake tin to store your Stollen in.

Moose Stollen Cake Tin

Moose Stollen Cake Tin

The post Tipsy Christmas Stollen Bread Recipe appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

Flaxseed Bread Recipe

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Packed with great tasting flax seeds, this recipe is one of my current favourites.

Flaxseed bread

Flaxseed bread with a sesame seed crust

Thanks to the way the seeds are soaked, the bread will stay extra-moist for days after baking. It also tastes delicious when toasted as the heat will bring out the nutty flavour of the seeds. Give it a go – you’ll love it!

The mighty flaxseed…

There are two basic varieties of flax seeds: brown and yellow/golden. Nutritionally, they are very similar; both types are a great source of dietary fibre, antioxidants and a type of omega-3 fat.

Brown flaxseed

Brown flaxseed

Golden flaxseed

Golden flaxseed

It’s important to soak the seeds before baking (see another example of this technique in my Kamut flour bread recipe). If flax seeds are not soaked, they absorb moisture from the bread and dry it out quickly.

20% flaxseed bread

My recipe was inspired by the Flaxseed Bread in Jeffrey Hamelman’s book ‘Bread: A Baker’s Book of Techniques and Recipes‘ (an excellent reference book) and uses both sourdough and a small amount of dried yeast.

Flaxseed bread sliced

Spot the seeds!

Ingredients – for 1 loaf

  • 175g medium rye flour
  • 100g wholewheat flour
  • 175g strong white flour
  • 90g flax seeds
  • 350g water
  • 8g salt
  • 5g yeast

The day before baking (16 hours prior)

Prepare sourdough & cover –

  • 30g sourdough starter
  • 50g wholemeal rye flour
  • 50g wholemeal wheat flour
  • 100g water

Prepare flaxseed soaker & cover –

  • 90g flax seeds
  • 200g cold water

On the day of baking

  1. Combine all of the ingredients (200g of sourdough, 125g medium rye, 50g wholewheat, 175 strong white, 50g water, the soaker, salt and yeast) in a bowl.
  2. Knead for 10mins – have some extra water ready as you might need to wet your hands and the worktop a few times depending on the dough’s consistency. You should end up with a soft, slightly sticky dough.
  3. Shape the dough into a ball.
  4. Lightly dust a bowl and the dough and keep it covered in the bowl for 1 1/2 hours – it should have quite visibly risen by then.
  5. Give the dough a quick 1 minute knead, lightly flour again and place in a lightly floured proving basket.
  6. Cover and keep in a warm place for another hour.
  7. Turn the loaf out onto a baking tray lined with baking paper.
  8. Preheat the oven to 240°C.
  9. Bake for an initial 15 minutes, then lower the temperature to 220°C and bake for another 30 to 35 minutes.
  10. Cool on a wire rack.
  11. A tip by Hamelman: “For the best eating quality, cover the cooled loaf with baker’s linen and let stand at room temperature for at least several hours or up to 24 hours before slicing.”

Enjoy with this warming leek and potato soup!

Flaxseed bread ready for serving

Flaxseed bread ready for serving

The post Flaxseed Bread Recipe appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

Rye bread with sunflower seeds

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A new favourite! This rye bread is amazing – rye sourdough, malt and toasted, scalded sunflower seeds combine to give this bread its delicious flavour.

While sunflower seeds usually only have a very mild taste, toasting them evokes a wonderfully nutty flavour. Additionally, they are a great source of Vitamin E, copper, vitamin B1, magnesium and selenium.

Rye bread with sunflower seeds

Rye bread with sunflower seeds

The recipe is from the book “Rustikale Brote aus deutschen Landen” by Gerhard Kellner.

Rustikale Brote aus deutschen Landen

Rustikale Brote aus deutschen Landen

Rye bread with sunflower seeds close up

Rye bread with sunflower seeds close up

Ingredients

  • 16g rye sourdough
  • 392g dark rye flour
  • 166g wholewheat flour
  • 100g sunflower seeds plus more to sprinkle
  • 15g salt
  • 10g yeast
  • 1 tsp malt extract

3 tasks for the day before baking (approx. 16 hours before baking)

  • Sourdough
    In a bowl, combine 160g dark rye flour, 160g water and 16g rye soudough starter.
  • Sunflower seeds
    In a pan, dry-roast 100g sunflower seeds to unlock the nutty flavour, mix with 8g salt and pour over 100g boiling water.
  • Scalded rye flour
    In a bowl, combine 232g of dark rye flour, 7g of salt, then pour over 232g of hot water, combine and cover the bowl.

Baking the sunflower seed loaf

  1. Combine the sourdough, sunflower seeds and scalded rye flour from the day before with 166g wholewheat flour, 3g dried yeast and 1 tsp liquid malt extract.
  2. Knead for 15 minutes.
  3. Cover the dough with the bowl or, if the the dough is still in the bowl, cover it with cling film, and rest for 30 mins at room temperature.
  4. Prepare a bread baking tin (ideally approx. 23 cm x 11 cm x 9.5 cm, but a slightly larger tin like this will work as well) by brushing it with melted butter and scatter sunflower seeds into the tin (bottom and sides).
  5. Knead the dough once more before placing it into the tin, levelling it out and sprinkling more sunflower seeds on top.
  6. Cover with cling film or a damp kitchen towel.
  7. Proof at room temperature for approx. 3 hours, until the dough has visibly risen and almost reached the edge of the tin.
  8. 1/2 hour before baking, preheat the oven to 250°C.
  9. Place the tin on the 2nd rail from the bottom and bake for 15 mins at 250°C.
  10. Then reduce the temperature to 180°C and bake for a further 45 mins.
  11. Take the loaf out of the tin and cool on a wire rack
Rye bread with sunflower seeds on plate

Rye bread with sunflower seeds  

The post Rye bread with sunflower seeds appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.


Baking Traditional ‘Real’ German Pumpernickel Bread

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It’s hard to find a good recipe for traditional German Pumpernickel so I thought I would try and fill this gap! Here you’ll find a step-by-step guide to baking the real thing as well as some interesting Pumpernickel facts. Give it a go – you won’t be disappointed!

Pumpernickel Slice

Juicy slice of Pumpernickel

What is Real German Pumpernickel?

  • 100% rye bread (only whole rye grain and cracked rye is used for the dough, no milled flour – Pumpernickel has humble origins and for a long time it used to be peasant fare for people with no access to a proper mill)

  • Rich dark-brown colour, but no crust (it’s baked in fully covered baking tins)

  • A very heavy bread with a darkly sweet aroma and earthy in taste (rye has 7% natural fruit sugar, compared to wheat at 4%, which caramelises during the bake)

Pumpernickel Loaf

How to make traditional German Pumpernickel?

  • All you need is a rye sourdough starter, rye grains, cracked rye, salt, water and syrup.

  • No colouring agent such as caramel colour is added.

  • The characteristic dark colour is achieved through a very long baking period (about 14 hours in a low temperature of around 120°C) and caramelising fruit sugars.

  • In this process it’s important that the steam doesn’t escape – otherwise the bread will completely dehydrate during the long bake. The moisture can be retained by wrapping your baking tin with a few layers of tin foil. However, I invested in a Pullman Pan, a loaf tin with a lid that slides on top to keep the loaf entirely contained. I still wrap a layer of tin foil around to be doubly sure.
  • The bread should mature at least 24 hours before cutting to allow the crumb to fully develop (all-rye breads tend to otherwise gum up due to the high percentage of pentosans – read all about this and what makes rye different over here at Azélia’s Kitchen)

Is Pumpernickel healthy?

  • Yes, the starches of real Pumpernickel have undergone so much of a transformation that they are quite easily digested (source: “Bread” by Jeffrey Hamelman)

  • Whole-grain rye contains nearly 15% fibre

  • Pumpernickel also has a low glycemic index (less likely to increase in your blood sugar level)

Where to buy Pumpernickel ingredients?

  • Organic rye grains (also called rye berries or kernels) from health food stores like Real Foods

  • Organic cracked (or chopped) rye and rye flours directly from the mill e.g. Shipton Mill. While Shipton Mill produces coarse cracked rye, I like to mix this up with fine cracked rye by The Prior’s Flour

  • Both Real Foods and BakeryBits ship worldwide

 

Pumpernickel ingredients

Pumpernickel ingredients: fine and medium cracked rye and rye berries

 

Pumpernickel ingredients (for one loaf)

Preferment –

  • 50g rye sourdough starter, 350g cracked rye, 350g water

  • Combine in a bowl, cover and leave to ripen for 16 – 24 hours.

Scalded Rye Berry Soaker –

  • 200g rye berries, 200g boiling water

  • Pour the boiling water over the rye grains and leave overnight.

Cracked Rye Soaker –

  • 150g cracked rye, 150g water

  • Combine in a bowl, cover and leave overnight.

Additional dough ingredients –

  • 550g cracked rye

  • 150g water

  • 22g salt

  • 120g maple syrup (traditionally cane sugar syrup is used but I prefer maple syrup)

  • A little dark rye flour for dusting

How to make Pumpernickel bread

I’ve included example timings for a weekend bake – starting Saturday, completing the bake on Monday morning and enjoying Pumpernickel bread on Tuesday for breakfast…

Day 1 (Saturday noon/early afternoon)

  1. Prepare the preferment.

  2. Prepare the scalded rye.

  3. Prepare the rye soaker.

Day 2 (Sunday noon to Monday morning)

  • 12pm
    Add one litre of water to the scalded rye soaker, bring to a boil and simmer for approx. 1 hour until soft.

  • 1pm
    Strain the rye and discard any remaining water.
    In a bowl combine 700g of sourdough, the cooked rye berries, the cracked rye soaker, the 550g extra cracked rye and mix well.
    Add the water, salt, maple syrup and mix until the dough comes together well. The dough should not be wet, but slightly sticky. It should peel off the side of the bowl easily.

  • 1.30pm
    Sprinkle a little flour on top, cover and leave to rest for 30 minutes.
    Butter a large loaf tin and dust with rye flour.
    Place the dough into the baking tins.

  • 2pm
    Leave to prove for 3 hours.

  • 4.30pm
    Preheat the oven to 150°C.

  • 5pm
    Brush the top of the dough with a little water.
    Fully wrap the baking tin with two tight-fitting layers of tin foil to avoid the dough drying out during the long baking process.
    Place the wrapped tin at the bottom shelf of the oven and bake for approximately 14 hours (best done overnight).

  • 6pm
    Turn down the temperature to 120°C.

  • 7am
    After baking, turn off the oven and leave the baking tin in the cooling oven for another hour.

  • 8am
    Take the loaf out of the baking tin and wrap in a kitchen towel, baking paper or tin foil for another 24 hours.

Day 3 (Tuesday morning)

  • Cut into thin slices and enjoy with butter and jam or smoked fish for a hearty breakfast!

Pumpernickel

The post Baking Traditional ‘Real’ German Pumpernickel Bread appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

German Sunflower Seed Bread Recipe

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This is a delicious loaf of bread, infused with the earthy flavour of dry-roasted sunflower seeds and inspired by Gerhard Kellner’s “Rustikale Brote aus deutschen Landen“. A great way to use sunflower seeds in bread baking!

German sunflower seed bread

German sunflower seed bread with Scottish smoked salmon

On the day before baking

Prepare the sourdough

  • 90 cracked rye
  • 100g wholemeal rye flour
  • 290g water
  • 30g rye sourdough starter

Combine all ingredients in a bowl, mix thoroughly, cover and keep at room temperature for 16 to 18 hours.

Prepare the sunflower seed soaker

  • 100g sunflower seeds
  • 100g water

Dry-roast the sunflower seeds in a frying pan, then finely chop the seeds in a food processor. In a bowl, combine the chopped seeds with the water and cover for 16 to 18 hours.

On the day of baking

  • 580g sourdough
  • Sunflower seed soaker
  • 165g wholemeal rye flour
  • 135g wholemeal wheat flour
  • 70g white strong bread flour
  • 200g water
  • 13g salt
  • 3g yeast
  1. Combine all ingredients and knead for 10 minutes.
  2. Place the dough into a bowl and cover with cling film.
  3. Keep at room temperature for 30 minutes.
  4. Grease a 30 cm loaf tin.
  5. Put the dough in the baking tin and lightly flour the top.
  6. Depending on the temperature in the room, the proofing process will take between one and three hours.
  7. Preheat the oven to 250°C.
  8. Bake for 15 mins at 250°C, then reduce the heat to 180°C and bake for a further 40 minutes.
  9. Cool bread on a wire rack.

Delicious with smoked salmon and salads, enjoy!

A shout-out at this point also to Roland and Romana, loyal readers of TheBreadSheBakes  – thanks for your support!

German sunflower seed bread with salmon

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Beer bread recipes: How to bake with beer

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Thanks to Flavoury, the Edinburgh-based craft beer club, for the delivery of my first box of eight craft brews. The Flavourly box contains beers from independent producers across the UK, a great way for beer lovers to discover new tastes and flavours. The box of beers comes with a welcome message, a map to ‘meet the brewers’, a detailed introduction to the brewers and a selection of gourmet snacks.

The beers are thoughtfully selected and you can choose from boxes of light, dark or mixed beers. My mixed beer selection included a golden ale, amber ale, brown ale, black IPA and wheat beer from producers based all over the UK, from Cornwall to St. Andrews.

My interest in beer is not so much in drinking it but in baking with it. The connection between beer production and bread is long-standing as bakers used to get their yeast from the beer fermentation process. Brewer’s yeast was developed in the 15th century and was used for the production of bread until the 19th century.

Compared to water, the amazing variety of beer flavours provides bakers with an interesting alternative liquid ingredient for bread dough. Beer – and especially craft beers and real ales – are of course a much less economic way of adding liquid into your bread and one could argue that they are better used for drinking than baking. However, there are some very interesting breads to be achieved with beer and here are two of my beer bread experiments.

Dan Lepard Barm Wheat Bread

Dan Lepard’s Barm Wheat Bread

German-style dark beer bread

This pure sourdough bread makes a compact, strong, dark bread with a thick crust which goes very well with ham, cold cuts of meat, cheeses and perhaps a beer!

Some of the water that goes into this bread is replaced with dark beer. The bread’s flavour varies dramatically dependent on the beer used, it can taste malty or hoppy. I’ve also baked this bread replacing all water with dark beer, but for me, the taste was too strong.

Dark beer bread

German-style dark beer bread

Day 1: Sourdough 

  • 115g  dark rye flour
  • 115g white spelt or wheat flour
  • 230g water
  • 30g starter

Combine all the ingredients in a medium bowl, mix well and cover with a lid. Keep at room temperature to ferment for 16 – 24 hours.

Flavourly Stewart's Brewing Black IPA

Flavourly Stewart’s Brewing Black IPA

Day 1: Barley soaker

  • 100g barley grains
  • 100g water
  • 75g ale

Simmer the barley grains in the water until the liquid has boiled off. Combine the grains with the beer in a small bowl, cover and keep at room temperature for 16 – 24 hours to soak.

Day 2: Final dough

  • 320g white spelt or wheat flour
  • 240g dark rye flour
  • 330g dark beer (I used the Black IPA from Stewart Brewing here, it’s a bottle-conditioned real ale i.e. live yeasts are in the bottle.)
  • 12g salt
  1. Combine the sourdough, barley soaker and final dough ingredients and knead for 10 – 15 minutes.
  2. Place the dough in a large bowl and cover with a lid. Keep for approximately 3 – 5 hours until visibly risen. Depending on the temperature in your room, this process could take longer if colder.
  3. Turn out the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Shape into a round and place into a well floured proofing basket.
  4. Proof for a further 3 – 5 hours until well risen and fully proofed. Again, the length of the proofing process can vary widely depending on the temperature in your room.
  5. Preheat your oven to 250°C.
  6. Turn out the dough onto a baking tray lined with baking paper.
  7. Bake at 250°C for 10 minutes then at 210°C for a further 40 minutes.
  8. Cool on a wire rack.

English ale barm wheat bread

I discovered this method of beer bread making in Dan Lepard’s book The Handmade Loaf.

The original method of making yeast bread in Britain was a by-product of ale-making. When traditional ale is made, a yeasty froth appears on top of the fermenting liquid. This used to be scooped off, washed and added to bread dough in order to leaven it.

The leavening yeast used to be called ‘barm’ and is different to leavening bread with a sourdough. Barm bread is sweeter than sourdough leavened bread as is lacks the sourness created by the acidification typical of lactobacillus.

Dan Lepard Barm Wheat Bread

Dan Lepard Barm Wheat Bread

Day 1: Making barm

Barm is a fermenting brewing liquor, the liquid yeast sediment left over from making beer. According to Dan Lepard, you can make a barm sponge by heating bottle-conditioned ale (250g) to 70°C and whisking in wheat flour (50g). Dan Lepard explains that this is a perfect replication of the complex barm of old. The barm (a shiny, smooth paste) smells amazing. Dan Lepard adds leaven to the bread whereas I have not used this in the beer and flour barm – in order not to mix together two different yeast cultures. I left the mixture to ferment for 24 hours.

Day 2: Final Dough

In a large bowl, mix the barm with water (250g), wheat flour (500g) and salt (7g). Knead for a minimum of 10 minutes until you have a smooth, elastic dough. Place the dough back in the bowl, cover with a lid and leave to rise for a few hours until significantly expanded in size. Punch down the dough and shape into a boule. Work with flour to prevent the dough from sticking, but make sure you only use flour on the outside of the dough, without working it in. Place the dough seam-side-up into a floured proofing basket. Cover with a polythene bag and keep at room temperature for its second proof until fully risen and fully proved. Preheat the oven to 220°C, turn out the loaf onto a baking tray lined with baking paper and bake for approximately 50 minutes. Cool on a wire rack.

The beer I used here was Rose Wheat Beer from a brewery called Ticketybrew. A real ale (with live yeasts) is needed for this process, so look for a bottle-conditioned ale when you attempt this recipe.

Rose Wheat Beer

Rose Wheat Beer



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Chocolate & Cherry Swirls Recipe #BreadBakers

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Dark chocolate and sour cherry is one of my favourite flavour combinations. You will know how well they work together if you have ever tasted a good Black Forest Gateau! When the Bread Bakers Facebook group opted for the topic ‘cacao’ this month, I wanted to bring these flavours to life in a swirl bread and decided to adapt a stunning Ploetzblog recipe for chocolate & sour cherry swirls. The recipe was inspired by the blooming cherry trees in North Rhine-Westphalia and I can’t wait for this year’s blossoms to perform their annual show!

Chocolate cherry swirls
Chocolate & sour cherry swirls

There is a good bit of time and effort involved in making these swirl breads, but they are exquisite and light so well worth the effort. I truly love how the flavours of cacao, dark chocolate and sour cherries come together in these swirling beauties.

Chocolate & Cherry Swirls Recipe

Ingredients

Sponge

  • 35g strong white wheat flour
  • 50g whole milk
  • 1 pinch dried yeast

Water roux

  • 15g strong white wheat flour
  • 75g water

Chocolate dough

  • 1 egg white
  • 20g strong white wheat flour
  • 80g water
  • 20g cacao
  • 50g sugar
  • 10g butter
  • 15g good quality dark chocolate

Cherry dough

  • 1 egg white
  • 20g wheat starch
  • 100g sour cherries from a jar (de-stoned)
  • 80g cherry juice (from the jar)
  • 35g sugar
  • 40g strong white wheat flour
  • 10g butter

Main dough

  • 250g strong white wheat flour
  • 25g whole milk
  • 3g dried yeast
  • 75g cream
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 40g sugar
  • 3g salt

Jam glaze

  • 1 tsp apricot jam
  • 1/2 lemon, juice
  • 2 tsp water
Chocolate sour cherry swirl roll
Chocolate & sour cherry swirl breads

How to make chocolate & sour cherry swirl breads

Day 1

  1. Make the sponge by combining the sponge ingredients in a small bowl. cover and put into the fridge to rest for 16-18 hours.
  2. Prepare the water roux by combining the flour and water in a small saucepan. Mix well then heat up on a medium heat, stirring all the time until it has thickened. Place in the fridge overnight .
  3. Prepare the chocolate dough. Combine the egg white and flour in a small bowl, stirring until there are no lumps. Combine the water, cacao and sugar in a medium saucepan and bring to the boil on a low heat, stirring while you do so. Add the egg white and flour mixture and stir until the mixture thickens. Then, on a low heat, add the butter and chocolate and stir until viscid (continue until the mixture has thickened; it should no longer be liquid but still spreadable; if the mixture is not thick enough it will be difficult to contain within the main dough later). Prepare a piece of cling film, spread the mixture to a square of 20 x 20 cm. Cover with another piece of cling film and store in a cool place.
  4. Prepare the cherry dough. Combine the egg white and starch in a small bowl, mix until there are no further lumps. Squash the cherries with a fork, then combine with the juice, sugar and flour in a small saucepan. Heat up on a low heat, then add the egg white and flour mixture. Finally, add the butter and stir continuously to the same consistency as the chocolate dough. Spread on cling film in the same way, cover and store in a cool place.

Day 2

  1. Prepare the main dough by combining the sponge, water roux and all main dough ingredients except the sugar and salt. Knead for 10 minutes.
  2. Add the sugar and salt and knead for a further 5 minutes.
  3. Shape into a ball, place in a bowl, cover and leave to rest for 1 hour at room temperature.
  4. Deflate the dough and roll out to 25 x 40 cm. You can follow visual instructions here.
  5. Place the chocolate and cherry dough plates on top of each other onto the centre of the dough.
  6. Flap the right and left dough corners over the two plates.
  7. Now roll out the dough to a 1 cm thick rectangle.
  8. Fold like a letter (fold the left third of the dough to the middle then the right third over the folded dough).
  9. Repeat the rolling and folding two more times.
  10. Roll out the dough to 30 x  30 cm.
  11. Roll from one side into a Swiss roll shape.
  12. Cut off 2 cm thick slices and place each slice on baking paper (to fit your baking tray).
  13. Decorate with cherries.
  14. Cover and leave to proof for 90 mins.
  15. Preheat the oven to 180°C.
  16. Bake for 20 mintues.
  17. In the meantime, prepare the glaze by combining the jam, lemon juice and water in a small saucepan. Heat up until it has a gooey consistency. Sieve.
  18. Cool the freshly baked swirls on a wire rack and brush with the glaze while still warm.

Invite your friends around so you can have them all while they’re fresh!

Breads with Cocoa, Cacao or Carob in any form

BreadBakers

Breads with Cocoa, Cacao or Carob in any form

#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. Follow our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated each month on this home page.

We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.

If you are a food blogger and would like to join us, just send Stacy an email with your blog URL to foodlustpeoplelove@gmail.com.

The post Chocolate & Cherry Swirls Recipe #BreadBakers appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

Zwieback crackers recipe

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I love crispbreads and tend to make a batch every few weeks. Usually, I bake savoury crispbreads, but I’ve been wanting to make an old childhood favourite of mine, Zwieback crackers, a lightly sweetened crispbread. My mum didn’t bake this herself, but bought an industrial version called Feldbacher Zwieback. It was generally on the menu when I wasn’t feeling well as it’s easy to digest, a kind of sick kids treat. Here is my recipe for baking Zwieback crackers at home.

Zwieback
Zwieback

What does Zwieback mean?

The name Zwieback translates as “twice-bake” and is a result of the baking process whereby the bread is baked twice. Once as a loaf, and the second time in slices.

Zwieback Crackers Recipe

Zwieback is easy to make at home. The ingredients include wheat or spelt flour, water, yeast, butter, salt, honey or cane sugar. After the first bake, the ‘Einback’ (“one-bake”), the bread is allowed to cool, then cut into slices. The second bake toasts the slices. This is were the flavour develops and the Zwieback cracker gets its typical aroma and brittle structure. While standard bread has a moisture content of about 45%, Zwieback will have 3 to 5%.

Zwieback Einback First Bake
Zwieback – First Stage: Einback (First Bake)

Zwieback ingredients

  • 500g flour
  • 265g milk
  • 7g dried yeast
  • 50g butter
  • 30g sugar
  • 5g vanilla sugar
  • 1 pinch of salt

How to make Zwieback

  1. Combine all ingredients in a large bowl and form a dough.
  2. Knead for 10 minutes on your work surface to produce a smooth and elastic dough.
  3. Place the dough back into the bowl, cover with a lid and leave to rest at room temperature for about 60 minutes until significantly increased in size.
  4. Punch down the dough and knead for a few seconds.
  5. Shape into a tight log (this will ensure a fine crumb structure) and place in a baking tin (no need to oil or butter the form) – I used a large form at 12.2 x 8.6 x 31 cm.
  6. Cover the tin with a clean kitchen towel or wrap in a polythene bag and rest for another hour in the tin.
  7. Bake in a preheated oven at 180°C for approximately 60 minutes.
  8. Take the loaf out of the tin and cool on a wire rack.
  9. Rest for 24 hours.
  10. Cut the loaf into 7mm slices.
  11. Lay them out on a baking tray and bake at 100°C for approximately one hour until golden brown.

Store in an airtight container to ensure the Zwieback remains dry and crisp. Keeps well for weeks!

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Grünkern bread recipe (green spelt grain)

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Browsing the local delights of the Naturladen (organic shop) in my home town in Austria, I picked up a bag of Grünkern. The greenish grains looked pretty unique on the shelf! Grünkern are unripe spelt kernels harvested predominantly in Southern Germany. Although mainly used for soups and vegetarian burgers, I wanted to incorporate some of this unique grain in a sourdough Grünkern bread.

Grünkern sourdough
Grünkern sourdough

What is Grünkern?

Grünkern (German for ‘green kernel’) is spelt that has been harvested when half ripe (usually end of July) and then dried. Historically, harvesting spelt so early and before reaching full ripeness was a reaction to periods of adverse weather, which destroyed crops and resulted in poor harvests. It was a way to prevent crop failure.

Grünkern
Grünkern

The grains are harvested when the starch isn’t fully developed and the kernels are still soft and juicy at about 50% moisture content. Grains are dried over a beechwood fire or in hot air dryers – right down to a moisture content of 13%. Once dried, the outer husk is removed. Have a look at gruenkern.de for more information around the harvesting process, then and now.

The dried kernels smell aromatic and a little bit like fresh hay. The aroma remains uniquely pleasant and hearty when cooked with water, so it became a tradition to harvest a portion of the spelt as Grünkern. Grünkern doesn’t tend to be made into a flour; instead it is available as whole grains or chopped grains.

If this sounds similar to another grain, called Freekeh, then you are right. Freekeh is also harvested green, then roasted. The difference? Freekeh is made from green unripe durum wheat and dates back to the ancient regions of Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria while Grünkern is made from spelt and is still mainly produced in certain parts of Germany.

How Grünkern was made

Where to buy Grünkern in the UK?

I’ve only seen Grünkern on Amazon in the UK.

Grünkern bread recipe

This recipe uses Grünkern as whole kernels which are integrated into a wholemeal spelt sourdough loaf. Adding black treacle enhances the flavours, but you can easily leave out the treacle if you would like a purer version of spelt bread and a purer Grünkern flavour.

Grünkern bread
Grünkern bread

Ingredients

For the sourdough

For the Grünkern soaker

  • 175g Grünkern
  • 350g water

For the main dough

  • 220g spelt flour
  • 50g water
  • 14g salt
  • 1 tbsp malt extract

How to bake Grünkern bread

Day 1

  • Prepare the sourdough by combining your spelt starter with the spelt flour and water. Mix well in a bowl, cover with a lid and leave to stand at room temperature for 16 – 24 hours.
  • Combine Grünkern and water in a pan, cover and leave to soak overnight.

Day 2

  • Drain the Grünkern and bring to a boil in a pan with 350g water. Simmer over a low heat for about 15 minutes. Drain any remaining water.
  • In a large bowl, combine 440g of the sourdough (the remaining 25g go back into the fridge for your next bake) with the main dough ingredients.
  • Form a dough and knead for 10 minutes.
  • Add the Grünkern to the dough and knead until evenly distributed.
  • Place the dough back into the bowl, cover and leave to rest for 1 hour at room temperature.
  • Prepare a baking tin (23 x 11 x 9.5 cm) by lightly oiling it. I use a silicone brush to do that.
  • Place the dough into the tin and prove for 2 – 4 hours depending on the temperature in your room. The dough should rise visibly, filling the tin to the top.
  • Preheat the oven to 250°C.
  • Place the baking tin on the second layer from bottom up and bake for 15 minutes, then bake for a further 25 minutes at 180°C and a final 10 minutes outside the tin at 180°C.
  • Cool on a wire rack.
Grünkern spelt bread
Grünkern spelt bread

The post Grünkern bread recipe (green spelt grain) appeared first on TheBreadSheBakes.

Dampfnudeln recipe (with steamed apples) #BreadBakers

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Dampfnudeln are a regular Friday lunchtime dish in my grandmother’s kitchen. Bread buns are placed on a bed of apples and steamed on the hub for about 30 minutes. They are incredibly light and delicious and I wanted to share the Dampfnudeln recipe here on the occasion of this month’s #BreadBakers theme ‘Steamed Buns’.

Dampfnudeln
Dampfnudeln

The Austrian/German delicacy also featured in the Great British Bake Off 2016 as a technical challenge.

Dampfnudeln in pan
Dampfnudeln in the steamy pan

Dampfnudeln Recipe

My granny’s recipe, based on Dampfnudel variation from the Innviertel in Austria and I think this version of the recipe is also popular in neighbouring Bavaria. The Dampfnudeln are steamed on a bed of lightly spiced apples. This recipe provides 6 portions.

Dampfnudeln steamed buns
Dampfnudeln resting and waiting to be ‘revealed’ 🙂
Dampf Noodles
Check out that airy crumb!
Dampfnudeln with apples
Dampfnudeln with buttery apples

Ingredients

For the dough

  • 500g strong white wheat flour
  • 7g dried yeast
  • 250g milk, tepid
  • 50g unsalted butter, melted
  • 50g sugar (I use brown sugar)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • Zest of half a lemon

For the apple base

  • 850g apples, peeled and chopped into 1/2 cm slices
  • 50g butter
  • 2 tbsp sugar
  • 6 tbsp milk

How to make Dampfnudeln

  1. Combine all dough ingredients in a large bowl.
  2. Knead dough until smooth and elastic.
  3. Place back into the bowl, cover and leave to rest for 45 minutest at room temperature.
  4. Punch down the dough and divide into 12 equal pieces.
  5. Shape the pieces into buns and place onto a pre-floured surface.
  6. Cover with a clean kitchen towel and leave to proof for about an hour. The buns should grow significantly in size during that time.
  7. Prepare the apples while you are waiting.
  8. Once the dough buns are ready, melt the butter in a large (circa 30 cm in diameter) non-stick frying pan (you need a tight fitting lid for it too) on a low heat.
  9. Evenly distribute the apple pieces in the pan and sprinkle the sugar on top, then add the milk.
  10. Carefully place the dough buns on the apple base and cover the pan with the lid. Don’t take the lid off again (or even slightly lift it) until the buns are fully done as they otherwise deflate.
  11. Turn up the heat to medium to bring the liquid in the pan to boil.
  12. After 15 minutes, turn down the heat to the lowest level and steam for another 15 – 20 minutes.
  13. Leave to rest for a few minutes once the heat is off before you take the lid off.
  14. Serve immediately.

If you like this Austrian steamed bread recipe, check out this plum preserve filled steamed bread recipe for Germknödel and here are also my fellow #BreadBakers’ recipes.

BreadBakers
#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. You can see all our of lovely bread by following our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated after each event on the #BreadBakers home page. We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.

The post Dampfnudeln recipe (with steamed apples) #BreadBakers appeared first on The Bread She Bakes.


Sourdough Stollen Recipe

Flaxseed bread recipe with whole wheat

Rye bread with sunflower seeds

Authentic German Pumpernickel Bread Recipe

German Sunflower Seed Bread Recipe

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  This German sunflower seed bread recipe makes a delicious loaf of rye-based bread which is infused with the earthy flavour of dry-roasted sunflower seeds. The recipe is inspired by Gerhard Kellner’s “Rustikale Brote aus deutschen Landen“. A great way to use sunflower seeds in bread baking! German sunflower seed bread recipe On the day before baking …

The post German Sunflower Seed Bread Recipe appeared first on The Bread She Bakes.

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