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Friday, May 14, 2010

Cinnamon Rolls

Okay, I have no picture because we ate the rolls too fast.

This was my second time around with the rolls (I cheated and made them for Christmas morning, before the Merry Bakers began) and they were super delicious. Reinhardt is right: these buns are the only homemade cinnamon rolls I've ever had or made that approximate the gooey sugar bombs you can buy at Cinnabon. But they're so much better--yeastier, more velvety, with a subtle citrus flavor--and eating one isn't a precursor to coronary arrest. If you drizzle them with a generous amount of the fondant and eat them warm with the last dregs of your coffee: heaven.

My only warning is that I don't think making smaller rolls (12-14, rather than 8-10) is the best choice in terms of roll shape. The first time around I made big mama rolls and they were so gorgeous, sweet golden high-rises that had to be shared. This time I made them as an accompaniment to Mother's Day brunch, and figured that personal rolls would provide a snappier meal finish. The fact that each person got his own roll was a hit (especially with my 10-year old brother) but I didn't care for the flatter, square shape of the buns. I probably just needed to cut the rolls a bit thicker, but next time I'm sticking to the big guns.

Friday, May 7, 2010

The Holiest Bread


Do you see that woman over there, doing the booty-shaking dance of baking triumph?

That's not me.

But I'm next to her, doing the slightly more subdued ciabatta cha-cha.

You see, this whole baking project has been (still is, will forever be), for me, about ciabatta. The giant silky holes in the golden crust that breaks into shards when you cut a slice. The slightly sour taste of the chewy, soft bread. The way olive oil pools through the crumb, leaving tiny, shiny puddles on your plate. I love ciabatta, like PeeWee Herman want to marry it love it. And until last weekend, it seemed an impossible goal for the home baker who lacks bread ovens and, quite frankly, a great deal of skill.

But that skill is growing, thanks to Reinhardt, and ciabatta is well within my reach, if not yet in my grasp.


I'm happy with the bread you see here. Toasted it's lovely, and it made an amazing addition to meals of pasta with chicken sausage and squash, warm lentil salad with pork fennel sausage and homemade croutons, goat cheese and tomato, and just plain almond butter. And I practically peed in my pants when I saw those holes! (I didn't believe they would materialize. They seem way too magical to be the result of simple dough folding.)

But in the end the loaves taste too bland to me, despite the careful fermentation process. Next time I'm going to substitute some whole wheat or rye flour for the white to increase the flavor punch. I also want to work on my stretch-and-fold maneuvering to get even bigger holes, and I definitely need some shaping practice.


I laughed as I pulled the finished loaves from the oven: they've definitely got some rockabilly pompadour action up top.



Still, this is the first recipe to get me really and truly excited, which is saying a lot given that my heart does happy dance every time I pull a fresh bread out of the oven. I can't wait to try this again, next time with mushrooms.

And then cheese.

And then caramelized onions. Mmmm.