Author Notes
I love good bread. But with all the great bread bakeries we have in Seattle, I was never really motivated to make my own. Until now.
Awhile back, my friend Jenifer brought an amazing loaf of kabocha raisin bread to a party. It was something I couldn’t get out of my mind. I begged her for a lesson, and last week, we traded a cooking class. (I taught her how to make a Shanghainese dish.)
In return, she showed me how to make good bread. I took extensive notes to share with you. The only thing you need for this recipe before you start is some sort of biga or poolish. Instead of using roasted kabocha squash and raisins, I made a pumpkin rosemary loaf because I wanted a savory loaf at home for sandwiches or for making grilled cheese. —thecookbookchronicles
Test Kitchen Notes
This recipe makes a great moist bread with a lot of structure and bite. The hard crust is crisp and toasty. The bread has a mild pumpkin flavor with a hint of rosemary. It's a little out of the ordinary, but still something that you could use everyday to make sandwiches or dunk in soup. Using a biga gives the bread a well-developed flavor and, if you regularly bake bread, you can follow thecookbookchronicles's advice and keep it alive to use later. The recipes calls for Italian 00 flour which is ground finer than American flours. The durum wheat used to make 00 flour results in gluten strands that are hard, but less elastic than our red wheat flours. If you can't find 00 flour, substitute all-purpose flour (I did). The texture is a little chewier, but the bread still has the strong gluten that gives it structure. Both my loaves got large bubbles under the crust, so next time I would slash the loaves right before they go in the oven. - Stephanie —The Editors
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Ingredients
- the Biga
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3 1/2 cups
bread flour
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2 cups
water at room temperature
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1/2 teaspoon
instant dry yeast
- Pumpkin Rosemary Bread
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1 1/2 cups
biga (made from recipe above)
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1 1/2 cups
canned pumpkin
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3/4 cup
water at room temperature
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1 tablespoon
fresh yeast, or 2 1/2 tsp instant dry yeast
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1 tablespoon
molasses
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2 3/4 cups
Italian 00 flour
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2 cups
bread flour
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2 1/2 teaspoons
kosher salt
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1
sprig fresh rosemary, stem discarded and leaves chopped finely
Directions
- the Biga
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Whisk all the ingredients together and allow it to stand for at room temperature for about 6 hours. The biga will start to ferment and get gassy/bubbly. (Alternatively, you can allow your biga to ferment at room temperature for up to 24 hours.) Reserve 1 1/2 cups biga for the following bread recipe. The remaining biga can be stored in your fridge, covered. You can keep it alive by discarding some of the biga every 2-3 days, and feeding the remaining portion with a little water and bread flour (about equal amounts) and giving it a vigorous stir.
- Pumpkin Rosemary Bread
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In a large mixing bowl, mix together the biga and the pumpkin on low speed. In a small bowl, whisk together the warm water and the yeast. Add the yeast mixture to the pumpkin mixture, and then the sorghum molasses. Mix until thoroughly combined. The consistency will be quite runny.
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In a large bowl, combine the 00 flour and the bread flour. Add about 3 1/2 cups of flour, to the bowl, continuing to mix with the dough hook on medium-low speed. Slowly, add the remaining flour bit by bit, until the dough comes off the sides and bottom of the mixing bowl, and climbs up the hook. (You might not need all this flour–just continue to add until the dough is no longer sticky to the touch, and comes completely clean from the sides and bottom of the bowl.) This process will take about five minutes. Stop the mixer and scrape down the dough from the hook periodically.
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The dough at this point should be quite stiff. Continue letting it knead for another three minutes, stopping the mixer and scraping the dough off the hook periodically.
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With the mixer still kneading, add the salt and the chopped rosemary. When the salt and rosemary look evenly incorporated, scrape the dough off the hook one last time, and allow the dough to rest in the bowl for 20 minutes. Meanwhile, pour 2 tbsp of olive oil into a large bowl. When the dough has rested for 20 minutes, turn the dough out into the bowl, and flip the dough over so it is well-oiled on all surfaces. Cover the bowl with a towel and allow the dough to rest for an hour.
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After 1 hour, cut the dough in half. (You should be able to see tiny bubbles just starting to form.) Working with half the dough, stretch it lightly with your fingers–you can hold it up on one side in the air and just let gravity stretch the dough for you. Fold the dough in half. Flatten and shape the dough into a rough rectangular shape, then roll it up like a cinnamon roll. Tuck the ends of the dough neatly underneath and use your fingers to pinch the seam close. Your dough should now resemble a fat baguette.
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Generously flour a baking sheet with 1/3 cup of flour. Transfer the log of dough on top of the flour, then sprinkle some of the flour over the entire surface of the dough. (Repeat the stretch, fold, and roll with the 2nd half of the dough, and transfer it to the baking sheet. Sprinkle with flour on all sides.)
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Space the loaves so they have room to rise. Cover with a towel, and allow the dough to rise for 2-3 hours. At this point, the dough should be nicely puffed but not quite doubled in size. Spritz the tops lightly with water.
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Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. Place a pan of water on the bottom rack. (If using baking stone, let it warm up in the oven.)
Bake the bread directly on the baking sheet for about 50 minutes, (Or if using, transfer the dough to a baking stone.) After 50 minutes, the crust should be browned and crisp. When you pick up the loaf, give it a light thump on the bottom. It should should hollow.
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Allow the bread to cool before slicing and tasting.
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