Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Our Daily Bread

There's something very satisfying, very basic, about making bread.  Perhaps it is the tactile nature of the exercise (all that kneading is so therapeutic), or perhaps it is the fact that bread is something that civilized societies have been eating for so many hundreds of years that it makes me feel some sort of connection to those who have come before.  To those women who used to gather at the town oven to do their daily baking or something.

So I've been doing it on and off for quite some time.  Often I just make something out of Deborah Madison's Vegetarian Cooking For Everyone, which has fabulous yeast bread recipes.  But when I decide to get serious, it is generally with something from Nancy Silverton's Breads From The La Brea Bakery.  The book is full of breads to be made with a natural sourdough starter, which per her directions can be developed over the course of two weeks using organic grapes and many pounds of flour.  There is much adding of flour and discarding of starter along the way.  A total pain, but I do recall my mom undertaking the whole thing back when I was in high school and I believe my family has been relying on the original starter ever since.

But frankly, as wonderful as those Silverton breads are (they come perilously close to being as good as my beloved Acme breads) they really are just too much work to be made on a regular basis.  They are almost always a multi-day affair with lots of very vigorous kneading necessary, and I end up with flour in every nook and cranny of my kitchen.  So I gave up on the whole bread baking thing for a while. 

But as it turns out the Silverton way is not the only one.  Dan Lepard has written the most illuminating book called The Handmade Loaf.  He also favors the natural sourdough starter, but instead of weeks, his takes days.  Instead of organic grapes (which are actually surprisingly hard to find) all you need are some raisins and instead of throwing away quarts are starter you throw away none.  

My very active starter (there were more than a few occasions when I left it out, covered, and it busted through the seal onto my kitchen counter):

And even better, the man has essentially eliminated the kneading!  You stir ingredients together, leave them to ferment for a little while, mix again for ten seconds, leave to ferment, and repeat, repeat and bake, et voila, lovely loaf of bread.  Sort of like Mark Bittman's no-knead bread, but with infinite variations.  It was so easy, that I went a little crazy with the bread baking this weekend.

White levain bread:

Just prior to the oven:


A milk loaf (which I used to make David Lebovitz's wonderful orange almond bread pudding out of his book Room For Dessert):

Rye berry bread (this is delicious, so healthy...with all of those whole grains I just feel so...cleansed):

And rye barley bread (barley flour is a prime example of one of those weird things I can find at Integral Yoga):

All delicious.  So now my formerly very organized freezer is stuffed to bursting with bread.  So I'm set for several months.  Bring on the natural disaster.

8 comments:

Joyce said...

Yum... I enjoy homemade bread. Growing up my grandma made a couple of fresh loaves of bread a day. I have only tackled it once, but your post has inspired me to give it a try again.
Enjoy!

Laura said...

You really have got to check out this book. His processes could not be less work if he tried.

Unknown said...

Ooh good, cause I tried to make starter with organic grapes and I think I picked up bad bacteria ... the air in Newcastle was not conducive to bread. Maybe it was all that beer yeast floating around. I'm still stealing some of mom's starter when I get my place.

pve design said...

Great minds think alike, funny how we were both thinking of bread today and good food.

Amy said...

Mmm delicious post!! I completely agree about the calming effect of making bread. There really is nothing that compares to engaging in something so basic and simple. Whenever I'm stressed I reach for my baking recipes, and I really think that the process alleviates more than the product itself!

Anonymous said...

Good. On your sayso, I ordered the book. I am so over Nancy Silverton and the idea that making bread has to be so much work.

Anonymous said...

Interesting, I need to try that book. I, too, go through phases where I make a lot of bread...and then give up a little bit because it's so time consuming! I do have a sourdough starter sitting in my fridge feeling neglected (I call her "startie")...

Laura said...

Megan - I have several "starties"...I'm glad someone else horrifies guests by having moldering flour and water in their fridge!

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