Login

Forgot your password?
Font size: A- A+
Become a Member FREE

Join around 100,000 monthly visitors and 72,000 members: daily games, discussions, contribute articles, make new friendships, GrownUps-only offers & more...

Register Free Now!
Notices
WIN a Globus California Classics Tour for Two!
WIN a Globus California Classics Tour for Two!
This year you could be taking a $9400 trip for two to California
Soothe Worry & Tension
Soothe Worry & Tension
...while enhancing your libido (men and women)
Sports & Travel Survey
Sports & Travel Survey
Complete the survey and be in to win a $100 Westfield voucher
Let's Chat Over Lunch
Let's Chat Over Lunch
Have a Free Lunch with Metlifecare
Feel All-Bran New
Feel All-Bran New
New Ways to Get Fibre Into Your Day
Win a return journey across Cook Strait
Win a return journey across Cook Strait
See more of New Zealand with Bluebridge
See the Difference
See the Difference
Eyesight Advice from Visique Optometrists
2degrees Offer
2degrees Offer
Making the CDMA switchover easy
Optometry & Eyewear Survey
Optometry & Eyewear Survey
We'd like to find out a little more about your optometry & eyewear preferences
CDMA Phone Network close down 31 July
CDMA Phone Network close down 31 July
Move now & get $79 credit with every Prepaid mobile
Keep up to date with us
Keep up to date with us
Follow our updates, new comps and articles via Facebook and Twitter
List your Classified
List your Classified
House Sitters, Employment, For Sale, Property & Personals
Live Chat
Live Chat
With fellow GrownUps in our multi-room chat
Compare & Purchase Insurance products
Disclaimer: Grown Ups is not an Insurance Broker. We provide product information from recognised Insurance companies. We are not making recommendations and we accept no responsibility for decisions made as a result of using the information provided.'
R50 Sexual Health
R50 Sexual Health
Check out the new section available to everyone.
Recipes
Recipes
Find some delicious recipes by clicking here.
Guide to Retirement Living
Guide to Retirement Living
Get your own copy for free, here.
Columnists

Vote in our Polls

Are you carpeting or re-carpeting a property in the next 6 months?

Category sponsor

Gerald Bryan - Give Us This Day

 Read more from Gerald


 
"'A loaf of bread,' the Walrus said, ‘is what we chiefly need…'"; and I think Odobenus rosmarus had it right. I love bread. I am never so happy as when there is good bread at hand, whether to enjoy with some mature cheese or to wipe up the last traces of a beautiful sauce; to break into my soup or even to toss in a salad.

When I first came to New Zealand, you would walk to the local dairy and buy a still-warm barracouta wrapped in a piece of newsprint. I always tried to be the one to collect our bread, getting the delicious end crust for my trouble but I’m afraid I can’t work up any enthusiasm over much of the bread offered these days. The flabby, pappy, increasingly expensive sliced loaves with all their preservatives, extenders, improvers, conditioners and emulsifiers sold in plastic bags and branded Farmer’s Crust or some other meaningless tag, leave me cold, as do many of the quasi-European-style wannabes which they sell loose in supermarkets, “bread-type products” as one French baker calls them. True, there are many good artisanal bakers about and their breads are mostly excellent but always a little pricey for every day. So the only answer seems to be home baking.

The first time I ever made bread was a disaster. The loaf was like a brick and why, or more to the point how, people ate it is still a mystery to me. It put me off baking for quite a while until one of the chefs I was working with gave me the recipe below. It was easy and it worked! That was it, with my new-found confidence I tried other recipes, some worked and some didn’t but now, once a fortnight, I bake all the bread we need; some we use right away and the rest we freeze.

Often the reason for not baking is that bread takes so much time. Yes and no; true the dough has to have time to prove but that’s passive cooking time, time when you walk away and do other things. The expense is another thing that’s brought up; the basic recipe is just flour, yeast, water and salt and even if you want to try different flours or herbs or fresh yeast or eggs, it still remains cheap. And never mind if you don’t have a bread maker, the best bread is made without them. So give baking a go, I think you’ll be pleased you did.

Focaccia Bread


2 kg plain flour (I add 2 tsp gluten flour to this)
5 tsp dried yeast
1.5 litres warm water (blood temperature)
1.5 tbsp salt
Olive oil
Fresh rosemary leaves
Rock salt

In a large basin mix 200g of the flour, the yeast and the water.  Whisk then leave until yeast bubbles.

Add the remaining flour and the salt and knead lightly for about 5 minutes. (You made need to add water or flour to get a smooth soft texture) Turn into oiled bowl and leave, covered, in warm place until doubled in size.

Pre-heat the oven to 220 -240˚C.

Roll into shape on oiled baking tray(s). (I usually push this amount into two Swiss roll tins). Leave for half an hour then brush the top with olive oil and scatter with rosemary leaves. Using fingertips, push into the dough to give it its characteristic “dimples”. Sprinkle with rock salt.

Place in middle of oven and bake for about 20 -25 minutes until both top and bottom are golden.

This makes one very large loaf or two more manageable ones. Make smaller amounts in proportion. This keeps very well, can be frozen and makes wonderful toast when sliced or brush it with olive oil, grill it on the barbecue then rub with garlic…heaven!

If you are a seasoned baker or just want to try something more advanced, have a go at making the sourdough recipe from my cookbook of the week and try it with their Bacon, Egg and Bean Salad and it’s ‘offaly’ good toasted, under devilled kidneys.

Beyond Nose to Tail by Fergus Henderson and Justin Piers Gellatly
Published by Bloomsbury RRP $54.99
 

Published 30th Aug 2011

print

Advertisement

Advertisement

Article Information
Average Rating: 0
Explore This Topic

This article is part of the Gerald Bryan topic. Click here to read articles, join discussions and more on this topic. Below are the latest articles in this topic.

Discuss This
Contribute
Log in to post comments

 

Join GrownUps Free
By becoming a GrownUps member and part of the Community, you gain access to:
  • Enter Competitions
  • Go into regular prize draws
  • Play daily games
  • Join Discussion Groups
  • Find like-minded individuals and create lasting friendships
  • Receive special GrownUps offers and
  • Add you own articles of interest, recipes, pictures for fellow members to read and view.
All for FREE! So why not join now?

Register Now