Sadly I forgot to take pictures last night at my fermented barley celebration for lag b'omer.
But even without the pictures, I'll try to communicate to you how awesome the food was.
So the reason for the party was Lag B'Omer, a celebration day in the otherwise somewhat reflective and sober Omer Counting period. The Omer are sheathes of barley that a Jew in times past would bring to the temple to count the days between passover and the wheat harvest at Shavuot.
In my house we chose to celebrate by fermenting barley. People brought beers and I made sour dough barley pancakes. We also had a camp fire in this little BBQ outside in the backyard and got some makings for s'mores.
I refreshed the starter the night before and then mixed that with half bread flour and half local barley flour from Four Star Farms that had been coming in our farm share this winter. I also added in some cooked barley and wheat berries from said farm share that I blended up. That fermented for about 10 hours. Right before cooking them I added in some oil, maple syrup, salt, and baking soda. The baking soda helped neutralize some of the sour intensity and gave it extra levening in the meantime.
The pancakes turned out chewy on the inside and crispy on the outside, with a good balance of sweet, salty, and sour. They needed to cool a little bit before exhibiting a good texture, I think for the same reason why bread gets less gooey after it's been out of the oven for a while. Overall they were a huge success and I got many requests to make them again and have a brunch this summer. I'm psyched. Yom sour dough Pancake!
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Sour Dough Pretzels
Ok, so tomorrow there is a brew-off at my school and I have signed up to make pretzels. But when I found out there was already a girl making them, I figured, why not try sour dough? So I've taken the traditional sour dough recipe but changed it a bit:
- 1 1/2 cups warm (110 to 115 degrees F) water
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt
- 1 package active dry yeast
- 22 ounces all-purpose flour, approximately 4 1/2 cups (I used bread flour. They came out great)
- 2 ounces unsalted butter, melted
- Vegetable oil, for pan
- 10 cups water
- 2/3 cup baking soda
- 1 large egg yolk beaten with 1 tablespoon water
- Pretzel salt (Coarse kosher)
First of all, I basically doubled the recipe (however, I'm not so exact with flour and water...) and I used 3 cups of sour dough starter (like a bagel recipe would require). To take this into account, I used 6 total oz of butter and 5 t kosher sea salt. Actually, now that I'm looking back at the directions, I should probably have only done 5 oz butter. Oh well... a little extra fat won't hurt. I also left the dough a little wetter than a "firm dough" would be (which is what is called for with pretzels) because so far in my experience sough dough likes to be much wetter.
The directions say to boil the pretzels in a baking soda solution and upon further searches I found out that pretzels are traditionally boiled in a lye solution. But why? Being interested in chemistry, I searched the internet, the place with all the answers. It took a while, but I finally found a line from these people who call themselves evil mad scientists (http://www.evilmadscientist.com/index.php?topic=food) that mentioned it helps the pretzels evenly brown. After further inquiries using google scholar, I found a book about snack food processing that will probably have the answer. I've ordered it through iLLiad.
First step was shaping the pretzels. pretty straightforward as long as there's enough flour surrounding my sticky dough :) Plus, we realized that the thinner the dough the better for a more distinct pretzel shape. We let the pretzels rise for like 2 hours in our kitchen.
And then we got to boil. First I boiled the water and then added the baking soda. The baking soda made such a cool bubble burst when I added it. I guess that was just the dissolving energy? When we added the pretzels and began the process of cooking, the kitchen instantly started smelling of pretzels. Like the ones you get from the frozen package and then bake in the toaster oven... only better.
Bloggins Musings
I've been thinking about blogging for a long time. I do a lot of fun things in my home that should possibly be documented. I'll get out the digital camera, attach pictures, write some stuff. We'll see if I keep up.
Possible topics include:
baking chemistry
soap making
garden activities
food adventures
sewing projects
spinning
Let's see if this happens.
Possible topics include:
baking chemistry
soap making
garden activities
food adventures
sewing projects
spinning
Let's see if this happens.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)