Widdershins:

(sometimes withershins, widershins or widderschynnes) means to take a course opposite that of the sun, going counterclock-wise, lefthandwise, or to circle an object, by always keeping it on the left. It also means "in a direction opposite to the usual," which is how I choose to take it in using it as the title of this blog. We're all in the same world finding our own way.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Lavender Rosemary French Bread by Danny


Since Larkin, Rachel and Jacob all requested I share my secrets, I thought I would post the recipe to my blog. This is a recipe I modded off of a fairly simple French bread recipe I found online. I've made it enough times that I rarely measure my ingredients very accurately. I'll update this post with pictures when I'm done.

Ingredients:
1 packet yeast (or a good spoon-sized scoop)
a generous pinch of sugar
1 1/2 cup warm water

~4 cups all-purpose flour
1 Tbsp butter or vegan butter substitute
~1 Tbsp fresh/dried rosemary
~1 Tbsp fresh/dried lavender
~1/2 cup vegetable or olive oil
extra flour for hands/work surface/whatever you use as a rolling pin

1/4 cup oats or cornmeal
coarse sea salt
1 cup water

Utensils:
large mixing bowl
measuring cups/spoons
rolling pin
baking sheet
sharp knife
pastry brush (though you can use your fingers)
small oven-safe bowl
bread knife
Directions:
  •  Prep the yeast by mixing it with sugar and warm water in a large mixing bowl until dissolved and let sit for 10-20 minutes
  • Once yeast is prepped, add butter, flour, rosemary, lavender. Mix until it starts to clump into a ball. Let rest for about ten minutes.
  • Lightly flour your hands and the work surface.
  • Dump the dough onto the work surface and knead for about ten minutes. If the dough sticks to your hands too much, heavily flour your hands. 
    • It should be fairly sticky for the first few minutes but as you knead it will eventually become a nice ball that sticks to your hand when you touch it but doesn't leave any dough on your hands. Add pinches of flour to your hands, the dough or the work surface as necessary if it's too sticky.
    • If the dough is too hard and looks dry instead of kind of elastic, add water 1/2 a teaspoon at a time as you knead until it reaches an appropriate consistency
  • Set the dough aside. Wash and dry your large mixing bowl (or use a different mixing bowl, I just like fewer dishes). Add the oil to the bowl and roll your ball of dough around in it. Let rise in bowl, covered, in a warm place until doubled (about two hours).
  • Go do something else. Read a book, watch an episode of some television show, do homework, write a blog post explaining to people how to make bread, make juggling balls, just leave the bread alone while it's rising.
  • Spread oats or cornmeal out on the baking sheet
  • Check your bread, is it risen? Good. Punch it down and cut it in half, trying to leave as much of the oil in the bowl as you can (you might want it for later).
  • On a lightly floured surface roll out half of the dough into a good sized rectangle, about the length of your baking sheet.
  • Tightly roll the rectangle of dough into a solid tube. It should start to look like a loaf of bread. If the ends are little messy or the edge kind of unfolds, just dip a fingertip in that cup of water, wet it and then squish it together until the dough holds.
  • Place the loaf on the baking sheet and repeat with other half of the dough.
  • There are a couple different ways you can do this next step. For this recipe I like to use the sharp knife to cut a line a good half inch deep the length of the loaf, but you can also cut three or four diagonal slashes or cut Xs. Get creative!
  • Let the bread rise for about an hour.  Preheat the oven to 400*F 
  • Go do something else. Read a book, finish that episode of some television show you started earlier, do homework, write a blog post explaining to people how to make bread, just try to leave the bread alone while it's rising.
  • Using the pastry brush or fingertips, lightly brush the loaves with water (or some of that leftover oil) until they have just enough of a coating that you can sprinkle the sea salt over them and it will stick.
  • Lightly sprinkle sea salt over the loaves.
  • Dump half the cup of water in the bottom of your preheated oven (careful of steam!), place the rest in a small, oven-safe bowl on the lowest rack. The steam you're creating here helps give the bread a nice crust and means you won't have to brush it with egg or anything.
  • Bake the loaves for about 40 minutes on middle rack.
  • Remove from oven when crust is a nice golden brown.
  • Let cool (or don't, but don't say I didn't warn you it can burn), slice, serve, and enjoy!
Sorry if the directions were a bit much, but I was trying to be more detailed than most recipes I see online. You can easily modify this recipe. Leaving out the lavender, rosemary and sea salt gives you a plain french bread. You can also form your loaves differently. One time I cut the dough into six balls and made them that way instead of standard loaves. 

1 comment:

Rachel said...

Thank you!!! I'm def going to try this soon!