Sunday, November 14, 2010

The Joy of Bread Baking

Orange Cinnamon Swirl Bread


There is something really special and therapeutic and almost prayerful about baking bread. There is a process of creating, of waiting, of anticipating, and rejoicing when a loaf is made. Yesterday, my friend J. and I set out to bake bread. She worked on an orange cinnamon swirl recipe that comes from The Bread Bible: 300 Favorite Recipes. This sweet bread had the hint and smell of orange that was faint, yet made this bread distinct.
Orange Cinnamon Swirl Bread (Side View)
I worked on a yeast pizza crust from the Joy of Cooking: 75th Anniversary Edition - 2006, and added my own flair to it with a few herbs.

Basic Pizza Dough (Improvised version with herbs)


Together we chatted and shared about our life stories, our journeys and what we are struggling with as we kneaded and prepared bread that we would share. As we waited for it to rise, the stories continued.

There is something special about creating food with a friend. The giving, the receiving, the making, the sharing, the enjoying. The finished bread and finished pizza was a prize for our hard labour as well as a joy added to our friendship, making yesterday a special day.

Best tasting pizza ever!

I love the simplicity of baking bread. I used to think that bread was complicated and yeast was finicky. But there is something to making one of the basic foods in life from scratch and something wholesome about not eating one of the main staples from a store.

Bread making, as I referred to in a different post, has a special meaning to me now. As I knead the bread, I remember my grandma. I remember her influence. I remember the joy that she brought into my life. I remember her praying with my grandpa each morning for all the people in their life. I remember the stories she told me of growing up and here adventures in the war. The kneading is healing to the pain and sorrow of losing someone I love dearly, but also extends beyond to the future of knowing that her legacy lives on. Her life was a blessing while she was here on earth. But will also continue to be a blessing. Today I was reminded of this as I enjoyed a piece of the orange cinnamon bread and the fruits of yesterday.
Forming the Dough

Friday, November 5, 2010

Cruising in the Caribbean



First and foremost, I have to congratulate blogger for making changes to their post editor - from now on pictures will be added and sized to hopefully be aligned properly. Kudos for them figuring out that it was quite the challenge before, especially with me being rather rusty in HTML codes.

Second, I would like to share my deep excitement that my blog is getting some worldwide attention! How fun is that? I think should start posting some of the original recipes and from now on I will create a link to the actual cookbook that I use. I will warn you that I have a growing collection - currently it is at about 30 books. I ran out of space for them - but - problem was recently solved when I designated a whole bookshelf to the cookbooks. Not only are they neatly displayed, but there is also an empty shelf (that needs to be filled).

A few friends and I gathered for one of my known cooking parties. A time when each person brings a few ingredients and we sit, chat, chop and cook together. Dinner is always served at least an hour after the planned time. But it is always a good night of sharing, laughter and friendship. There is something very intimate about a kitchen. As I am interested in phenomenology, I am interested in looking at what makes the experience of the kitchen different from, say, the living room. The kitchen is a special place to me and I daresay others, though, maybe their interest in cooking is not nearly close to mine or perhaps because I love cooking so much I am too biased to look at it neutrally. In any event, this was the first dinner party I've had in a long time.

Each dinner party has a theme. This night was the Caribbean. Trying to stick to fall vegetables in keeping with the season was probably the biggest challenge I faced in picking recipes. Every recipe looked amazing. But with my recent conviction to eat in season, I just could not justify picking out recipes that required the main ingredient to be imported from who knows where just because I have the luxury of being able to buy whatever I want. I made a mistake with okra (though while it is not "in season" according to my book, it has been on sale a lot lately, so I do not feel so guilty).
Peanut Chicken
Main course was peanut chicken - a very rich sauce with thyme, garlic, curry powder, lemon juice and various other ingredients to make it spicy to taste  (I think I toned down the spice since the last Caribbean meal that I made challenged my tolerance of spicy foods). And of course, it had peanut butter. 



The meal was complimented by a red and green pepper corn bread (using up the peppers that were required for the rest of the recipes!). It was so good and made the perfect bread addition to the meal.


Bean Salad
As a side dish we had a very good peppery bean salad with quite the dressing - cumin, ketchup, white wine vinegar. It had 3 different types of beans (kidney, chickpeas and black beans). The black beans gave it a different texture and then the vegetables were crunchy. This is definitely a keep recipe and I will try to post it as it would be good to make for lunch or anything.
Okra Fried Rice
The Okra Fried Rice was something that I had never tasted anything like it before. I have had okra once but never cooked it myself. I really enjoyed the different flavours and the colourfulness of this dish.
Creamed Sweet Potato/Yam
Then we had creamed sweet potato with a bit of yam in it. Or perhaps a bit of sweet potato in the yam. or perhaps all yam. or perhaps all sweet potato. We discovered the impossibility of us being able to determine which is which without knowing what plant they actually grew from. The stores use yam and sweet potatoes differently. They both come in oodles of varieties so they are easily confused. Sweet potatoes can be cream or orange fleshed. Yams can also be cream or orange fleshed. Mind you, the white fleshed (what i considered sweet potato) definitely had a very distinct flavour. But who knew you had to be an expert in botany to be able to pick out the right ingredient for recipes?

Barbadian Sweet Coconut Bread
The dessert was actually made for the next day. We were too stuffed to try to eat dessert. This is a Barbadian Sweet Coconut Bread. In Barbados, it is often served at Christmas time. It had a whole pile of flour, lots of coconut, hardly any sugar and very little liquid. It barely rose and was quite dense to hold. But the bread, while heavy, was moist inside and incredibly sweet. Definitely another keeper.

Recipes can be found in this great book! I love the pictures, the recipes so far are easy and delicious. The book also explains the beliefs, culture and types of food for the various countries.


Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Hallowe'en and Harvest Cupcakes

I hosted a cupcake decorating introduction workshop with a few of my friends. The theme of the day was Hallowe'en Cupcakes. Together we made owls, aliens, monsters, mummies, centipedes and other creepy crawlies, frankensteins. Fun times.

Then made cupcakes for my fellow students for coffee hour - in celebration of the fall harvest, I made a field of corn, pumpkins, squash, tomatoes, egg plants, zucchini.

This is my first video that I'm posting here on Chef de Cuisine so I hope that it works. I need to figure out a better way to display my pictures as sometimes they get scattered.

C'Mon, Let's Roll!


Squash Cloverleaf Buns
I am enjoying my new project of bread baking in honour and memory of my grandmother. There is something satisfying, relaxing and wholesome about kneading some dough, letting it rise and having it baked in the oven. Fresh bread smells and tastes better as the steam rises above a freshly cut piece. With my book of 300 recipes, I am quite pleased with a project that will carry me all my days. I'm trying not to buy bread at all. I made an amazing wild rice and molasses bread. The rice added a nutty flavour to the bread as well as a heartiness that plain old white and whole wheat breads lack. I have been enjoying breadbaking so much that I have started to pun at every opportunity (much to A's dismay who has gotten quite the rise out of my jokes). Alas, in a world gone a-rye, is a pun every now and then so bad? Sometimes life is just down and out crumb-y and a little pun now and then makes one laugh (or groan). Come now - it's all about the flour power!


Wild Rice Molasses Bread


Then this week for Bible study snack, I made a special snack :) Last week L. brought a homebaked and decorated cake with a Hallowe'en theme (L. has been dubbed the Queen of Desserts in our Bible study group) and the week before J. brought amazing cheesecake. To say the least, if I continued the trend of sweet snacks, I had a tough act to follow. So alas, I decided to do something completely different and I baked Squash Cloverleaf Buns (recipe from The Bread Bible: 300 Favorite Recipes)

These are actually made with squash. Yes, a yeast bread made with squash! The design is called "cloverleaf" which is made of 3 round balls of dough, stuck into a muffin tin. the three pieces remain distinct, yet one (I feel a theological reflection coming on....)



Right now I kneed in my need to grieve and remember. But perhaps out of this kneading, a bread baker will arise in me.