Friday, February 6, 2009

English Muffins

What a delicious experiment! I'd thought about making English Muffins before, but always wimped out. This time, I just went for it armed with a clean empty tuna can and frying pan. Success!

The recipe is from More With Less, and while they are admittedly a bit fussy, there really wasn't anything terribly difficult. The dough is a yeast dough with egg. You let it rise a couple of times, roll, cut out, rest, and fry them up in a pan. That's it!



English Muffins

makes 18 muffins

Heat in a saucepan until very warm (130 degrees):
1 1/2 c. milk
1/4 c. butter or margarine

In large mixing bowl, combine:
2 T. sugar
1 t. salt
1 pkg. dry yeast
1 1/2 c. flour

With mixer at low speed, gradually beat liquid into dry ingredients. Increase speed and beat 2 minutes, or beat vigorously by hand.

Beat in:
1 egg
1 c. flour

With a spoon, stir in:
2 c. flour, or enough to make stiff dough

Turn dough onto lightly floured surface and knead just until well mixed, about 2 minutes. Shape dough into a ball and place in a greased bowl, turning once. Cover; let rise in a warm place until doubled, about 1 1/2 hours. Punch down.

Turn onto lightly floured surface; cover with bowl 15 minutes, and let dough rest. Meanwhile, place cornmeal in a pie plate. Roll dough about 3/8" thick. Cut into 3" circles; reroll scraps to make 18 circles in all. Dip both sides of each circle in corn meal; place circles on cookie sheets. Cover and let rise in warm place until doubled, about 45 minutes.

Brush large skillet with oil and heat. When pan is medium hot, put in 6 muffins, cook 8 minutes on each side or until brown. Repeat until all are cooked.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Norwegian Mountain Bread

I tried something a little different, from my beloved How to Be a Domestic Goddess again. This is Norwegian Mountain Bread. It's just okay, probably not something I'll make again anytime soon -- but it was a fun recipe.

This is a yeast bread loaded with wheat flour, rye flour, nuts, and seeds. And yet there is no kneading involved. After mixing the batter, it's put into a cold oven to rise as the oven warms.

The result is a very dense bread that makes a pretty good breakfast when topped with peanut butter and honey. Reminds me a little of the "Power Bagels" from Einsteins. If I do ever make it again, I think I'll try mixing in some dried fruit.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Better Bagels


I have a new favorite bagel recipe! I usually bake the recipe from Nigella's Domestic Goddess book, but this time I tried Martha Stewart's recipe (Baking Handbook) with great success.

The main differences were malt syrup in both the dough and the boiling water, and longer rising times. Definitely worth the extra effort. These were wonderfully chewy.

Maybe next time I'll try adding some sort of flavoring; although, I really liked the plain ones!

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Basic White Bread

So... I'm starting out simple for January with plain old white bread. I got a new Kitchenaid mixer for Christmas (yay! Thanks, honey!). I tried the Rapid Mix Cool Rise White Bread recipe from the enclosed booklet. My loaves turned out salty due to my misread of the ingredients, but I can tell that it's a nice recipe. Not sure I'll make it again though, because it calls for so much yeast.

http://www.bakespace.com/recipes/detail/KITCHEN-AID-RAPID-MIX-COOL-RISE-WHITE-BREAD/3842/

I think I'll stick with Nigella's basic white bread recipe (How to Be a Domestic Goddess) as my standard.

http://www.nigella.com/recipe/recipe_detail.aspx?rid=12139

What's your favorite white bread recipe?