Sunday, December 25, 2011

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Latke Love

On the first night of Chanukah my latke said to me,
Add sour cream and eat me…

plus homemade applesauce

the sizzling shiznit

the don...


the lighting...



The Best Latke Evah Recipe
Courtesy of Lee Bierman

8 potatoes
1 onion
salt
pepper
flour
egg

Grate 1 onion into a bowl. Peel potatoes, let soak in bowl of water to not turn brown. Grate potatoes, draining the water from the bowl. Take all the grated potatoes and rinse in a towel to drain as much water as possible. Mix grated onion and potatoes thoroughly to evenly distributed onions amongst potatoes. Add egg and a scoop or two of flour to bind the mixture and stir up. Add salt and pepper. Heat a pan covered in oil (about 1 inch on the bottom). When oil starts to bubble, with your hands make little round pancakes with the potato mixture and put in pan. Fry about 4 mins until the sides start to brown. Flip and fry 4 mins on other side until brown. On subsequent batches add more oil if needed. Serve with sour cream and apple sauce.

Applesauce
9 small apples
3/4th cup of water
Cinnamon stick
2 sugar packets

Peel/core apples  (save cores for yeast!). Place in pot apples, water, cinnamon, sugar. Bring mixture to a boil, then turn to simmer for 25 minutes. Remove cinnamon stick. Mash with a potato masher to get applesauce consistency.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Challah Daze

Challah ("hallah") is a beautiful decorative egg bread. I've always wanted to make it...never the opportunity...until a friend visiting and staying with us in Costa Rica suggested making some. Not only was it entertaining, I learned a little bit about the history and tradition of the bread. Challah is customarily eaten for shabbat (the day of rest in the jewish faith)...which begins after sunset...a way to begin Friday's evening meal.

We made 2 loaves. A long braided one and one shaped into a circle (although round challahs are most traditionally used for the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah...)



We used some of my homemade yeast made from fermented raisins. We started the dough on Thursday night. Kneaded it a second time the next morning. Shaped it, let it double (more like explode...read tips below in the recipe section)...then brushed it with egg and baked it. After 40 minutes in the oven, the bread smelled goooood. While the loaves rested and cooled, we popped out for a quick walk to watch the sunset on playa carmen...the intensity of the red orb cracked its rays over the blueness of the sky. We'd made it just as the sun sank quicksand into the horizon of the ocean.

We zipped back home anticipating a slice. A little prayer...

"Baruch atah Adonai, eloheinu melech ha'olam, hamotzi lechem min ha'aretz" ("Blessed are you, Adonai, Sovereign of the universe, who brings forth bread from the earth").

The bread came out pretty tasty. A hint of sweetness. And delightful french toast the next day with a little bit of red plum compote on top...the best way to start a Saturday.

Here are the photos and recipe below. A special hallah goes out to baking buddy, Lee.

Love, mb










knock knock. who's there. challah
crumtastic
challah french toast with plum compote
the color of the setting sun...the coat on my challah orb

Recipe - How to Make Challah Bread

1 1/4 c warm water
3 1/2 c flour
2 tsp active dry yeast
1/3 c sugar
1/4 vegetable oil
4-5 eggs
1 tsp salt
egg yolk (for brushing).

Mix yeast, water, 1/4 flour in a bowl. Stand 10 - 20 mins. Or for homemade yeast ( 1 / 2 c of the preferment / spoolish + 1/2 c water). Then mix in sugar, eggs, salt, a cup of flour one cup at a time. At this point, transfer to a flat surface...flour and stretch the dough. (Good bread stretching technique, jump to 1:30) Then cover and let rest overnight or until double.

Punch down for a second kneading. Divide into 3 pieces. Roll out to a 9 inch rope. Braid. (Watch the video. 1:20). Rest or allow it to proof on a greased cookie sheet until it doubles again. Brush with egg yoke. Preheat oven to 325 F and bake for 30- 40 mins until golden brown. Let it cool for 30 mins before serving.

Tips
-2 coats of egg yoke is best. One before final proofing and one before baking. After 20 mins in the oven, Lee didn't see any color on the bread. We took out the loaves and gave it another coating for good measure.
-The original recipe calls for 4 eggs...the color wasn't as yellow so I'd wanted it to be...so if I were to make the bread again, I'd add in another egg to get it a nice sunny color.
-On the final proof, after the braiding, we let it rest until it doubled inside the oven with the light on. We found this was not a good idea...especially for tropical humid weather. The bread ended up expanding way too much and the braids ended up disappearing! To save the bread, we reshaped and braided it a second time. Allowed it to rest 30 minutes. Egg washed and baked. But when it came out of the oven, the braid marks were really faint (as you can see in the photos below). Lesson learned, I would do the final proofing in the refrigerator to retain the braids. (Or in my more recent post, super challah #2, make the braids smaller! This is a secret I learned to retain the braids.)
-We inadvertently gave the dough a mini 3rd kneading when we had to rescue the braids...this gave it some good texture and elasticity...not entirely the texture like brioche which is the trademark of a good challah...so, I would definitely give it a good 5 min 3rd kneading to build up the texture and give it that ideal elasticity.
-Finally, line the bottom of the pan with some parchment or something non-stick. (2nd photo below).

pps peace and hallah baby!


 

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

Kitchen Siesta Sessions

vina del mar, chile
santa theresa, costa rica
santa teresa, costa rica
puerto vallarta, mexico

Sunday, December 04, 2011

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