After one year and 104 recipes, I finished the Brooks Bakes Bread Project on March 27, 2012. You can still find me baking and cooking at my new blog, Tangled Up In Food.

Archives: 11 September 2011

Dark Herb Bread
September 11, 2011

by stacy
Published on: September 11, 2011
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“This makes a loaf quite firm in texture, with a delicious herby, peppery flavor that lasts.”
-James Beard, Beard on Bread

Since I had some rosemary left over from making Pizza Caccia Nanza, I wanted to use it up to make Dark Herb Bread.  The only problem was finding the rye meal the recipe required.  I found some online, but with a hefty $8 shipping fee.  Instead, I bought some rye flakes from the co-op and ground them in the food processor.  Presto, rye meal in about 10 seconds, for only 71 cents.

Here are the ingredients (my improvised rye meal is in the bowl, which is unfortunately the same beige color as the meal):

Dark Herb Bread Ingredients

After my experience kneading a stick of butter into my bread dough to make Currant Bread, it was a relief to make a more straightforward loaf.  Due to the whole-wheat flour and rye meal, the dough was a bit stiffer than a typical white-flour dough; however, it still kneaded up well.

After an hour of rising time, I kneaded the dough again and shaped it into two loaves to fit into my 8 x 4 bread pans.  I let those rise for about 45 minutes, and then poked holes into the top of the loaf to insert slivers of garlic, just like I did for Pizza Caccia Nanza (however, unlike in Pizza Caccia Nanza, for Dark Herb Bread I chopped up the rosemary and mixed it into the dough).

Dark Herb Bread After Second Rising

After 20 minutes at 400 degrees, followed by another 20 minutes at 350 degrees, my bread was done.

Dark Herb Bread

Dark Herb Bread is delicious–the hearty texture is nicely complemented by the flavors of garlic and rosemary.  It should make some delicious sandwiches for a Sunday evening picnic.

Currant Bread
September 11, 2011

by stacy
Published on: September 11, 2011
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“[Currant Bread], which I used to eat very often as a child, is a rich, flavorful, extremely pleasant loaf that keeps well and toasts magnificently.”
-James Beard, Beard on Bread

This week I made a trip to the Linden Hills Co-op to pick up ingredients for some upcoming recipes.  I hadn’t had any luck finding currants at my local grocery store, but the co-op had them in abundance.  Given my hatred of raisins, I was disappointed to discover that a currant is nothing more that a dwarf raisin.  But since I had to make currant bread, I decided to get it over with this past Friday.

Here are the ingredients:

Currant Bread Ingredients

After my experience with Prune Bread, I have decided that sherry is disgusting and contaminates everything it comes into contact with.  Instead, I marinated the currants in bourbon (Beard recommends using sherry, rum, or Cognac; if you can use any of those liquors, I figured bourbon would be fine).

Also note the two sticks of butter; those will come into play later.

The technique used for Currant Bread was unusual.  I started by mixing the the milk, some sugar, yeast, half of the butter, salt, and flour together to form a dough.  Then, I kneaded the dough and let it rise for about 45 minutes.  At that point, I punched it down and was instructed to knead in the rest of the sugar and butter along with all of the currants.  Huh?  It wasn’t clear to me exactly how I was supposed to knead in 1/2 cup of sugar, a stick of butter, and 1 1/2 cups of currants.  The answer?  With great difficulty.  Mike assisted by laughing and taking pictures as my bread dough degenerated into a gloppy mass of butter studded with currants.  There may have been some profanity involved.

Currant Bread Dough

At this point, with my hands glistening with butter, I abandoned any hope of the Currant Bread being edible.  I slopped it into two 8 x 4 loaf pans, let it rise another 45 minutes (surprisingly, it actually did rise–I figured all of the butter would weigh it down too much), and put it in the oven at 400 degrees.

Currant Bread After Second Rising

After putting the bread in the oven, I decided that it would be a good idea to fall asleep on our bedroom floor.  Luckily, Mike saved the day (and redeemed himself after making fun of my kneading attempts) by pulling the bread out of the oven before it burned.

Currant Bread

So what was the verdict?  Currant Bread did turn out better than I thought it would.  It has a surprising light texture for the amount of butter used, reminiscent of Portuguese Sweet Bread.  Yes, the currants do taste like raisins, but the bourbon gives them an interesting flavor.  And Beard was right–it does toast magnificently.

Currant Bread

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About the Baker
I'm a paralegal living and working in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area. Besides baking, blogging, and eating bread, I love knitting and enjoying the Minnesota outdoors. My husband, Mike, is the Brooks Bakes Bread website developer, bread photographer, and chief taste tester.
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