Tag Archive for 'castiron'

Pot Bread

Last week, the New York Times made a bold claim. It had nothing to do with Iraq, the election, or our rights slowly being chipped away at by our hateful government, it was about bread. Specifically, it was about one New York baker’s claim that the traditional 12 steps of baking can do with one less step.

From The Bread Baker’s Apprentice, by Peter Reinhart, here are the traditional 12 steps of bread baking.

1. Mise en place: Set up your workspace. Measure your stuff, put them in cute little bowls, fix your hair, smooth down wrinkles in your apron, smile for the camera.

2. Mixing: Kneading. If by hand, typically 300 kneads, if by machine, a few minutes. This builds the gluten strands that are soooo important to bread. (Nudge, nudge, this is the step that sassy New Yorker wants to kill.)

3. Primary Fermentation: The first big chunk of waiting time. The yeast does it’s thing, making little yeast gasses, making the bread rise. Remember the gluten strands from step two? They’re holding all the gas in.

4. Punching Down (Degassing): Knock out the majority of the gas. We’re not eating a cream puff here, we’re eating bread.

5. Dividing: Chunk up the dough into whatever portions you’re going to be serving.

6. Rounding: Not sure why this is a step. Seriously, it should be 5a. It’s basically just making the shape you want.

7. Benching: Resting the dough, so the gluten is destressed. Maybe have a beer. (all cooking needs at least one beer step.)

8. Shaping: Sure. Shape it.

9. Proofing (Secondary Fermentation): A second, final rise. Your gluten is strong, your gas is degassed, let’s let the little yeasty boogers puff up your bread some more.

10. Baking: Duh.

11. Cooling: Duh.

12. Storing and Eating: Seriously, there is no step 12.

As hilarious as I am about the 12 steps, that book is really great. You should buy it.

However, we digress. What did the NYTimes do last week? They suggested a bread baking technique that requires no kneading! What? Impossible! How would that work? In those twelve steps, kneading is by far the most hands on time you spend with the dough. If you fidget with your dough for a half hour, kneading is about twenty minutes. The article sounded too good to be true, so we tried it out.

Our example of no-knead bread, from the NYTimes recipe

Our example of no-knead bread, from the NYTimes recipe


The Recipe

The article says that they want to get this recipe out, so I’m going to cut and paste it. If you’re reading this, and you work for the New York Times, a) awesome, thanks for reading b) if I’m doing something wrong, please let me know.

Recipe: No-Knead Bread

Published: November 8, 2006

Adapted from Jim Lahey, Sullivan Street Bakery
Time: About 1½ hours plus 14 to 20 hours’ rising
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3 cups all-purpose or bread flour, more for dusting
¼ teaspoon instant yeast
1¼ teaspoons salt
Cornmeal or wheat bran as needed.

1. In a large bowl combine flour, yeast and salt. Add 1 5/8 cups water, and
stir until blended; dough will be shaggy and sticky. Cover bowl with plastic
wrap. Let dough rest at least 12 hours, preferably about 18, at warm room
temperature, about 70 degrees.

2. Dough is ready when its surface is dotted with bubbles. Lightly flour a work
surface and place dough on it; sprinkle it with a little more flour and fold it
over on itself once or twice. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and let rest about
15 minutes.

3. Using just enough flour to keep dough from sticking to work surface or
to your fingers, gently and quickly shape dough into a ball. Generously coat
a cotton towel (not terry cloth) with flour, wheat bran or cornmeal; put dough
seam side down on towel and dust with more flour, bran or cornmeal. Cover
with another cotton towel and let rise for about 2 hours. When it is ready,
dough will be more than double in size and will not readily spring back when
poked with a finger.

4. At least a half-hour before dough is ready, heat oven to 450 degrees.
Put a 6- to 8-quart heavy covered pot (cast iron, enamel, Pyrex or ceramic)
in oven as it heats. When dough is ready, carefully remove pot from oven.
Slide your hand under towel and turn dough over into pot, seam side up;
it may look like a mess, but that is O.K. Shake pan once or twice if dough is
unevenly distributed; it will straighten out as it bakes. Cover with lid and
bake 30 minutes, then remove lid and bake another 15 to 30 minutes, until
loaf is beautifully browned. Cool on a rack.

Yield: One 1½-pound loaf.

We did vary up the recipe a little bit. We used 8 ounces of organic non-bleached bread flour, four ounces of whole wheat flour, and four ounces of rye flour. (If you’re serious about baking, get yourself a baking scale. The better baking books nowadays give measurements in ounces, not cups. To convert backwards recipes like the above, just say a cup is 4 ounces. Flour volume is really dependent on how packed your flour is. 4 ounces is a gross simplification, so try your best to find recipes with the proper measurements. Volume measurements always assume sifted flour. If you measure by weight, you’re much less likely to use too much or too little flour.) Note the part in the article that says, “this dough is sticky.” Is it ever! After 18 hours, it barely rose, and was like a thick oatmeal. I was convinced that it wouldn’t work.

We finished up the final steps (flouring, second rise), and then dumped it in a very hot steel pot. We don’t have a cast iron or enameled dutch oven, but we do have a stainless steel one. We weren’t sure if it would work, but necessity is the mother of invention, right? I was really worried when the dough hit the steel and sizzled. At that point, I was sure we were a) going to have a loaf of not-bread, and b) going to have a huge clean up mess with our fancy steel dutch oven.

Boy was I wrong.

After a half hour, I took the lid off the dutch oven for the final crust hardening period. It smelled great, and looked like real bread. I was flabbergasted. We finished the bake off, let the bread cool for a while, and were delighted to find a really respectable nice loaf. It didn’t rise nearly as much as I would have liked, but it was bread, and it did taste great. The crumb was nice and even, and the crust was fantastic.

So, death to kneading?

Absolutely not. This was a good article. It can’t hurt to play around with the steps of baking to see what happens, but nothing beats a traditional loaf with proper kneading time. As a species, we’ve been kneading bread for thousands of years, just because you’re the New York Times doesn’t mean you can kick down a good old fashioned knead and expect everyone to change. Kneading bread by hand is something you should do at least once, preferably a thousand times. It’s work, it requires forearm strength, and it feels good. Drink a beer while you’re doing it. It won’t hurt the bread.

The one thing from this recipe that I’ll try again though is baking in a dutch oven. That worked like a champ. The crust on this bread was fantastic. Since this is also the winter of soups, we’re talking about buying a Le Creuset dutch oven for our soups and bread baking. Part of what worked so well for the NYTimes recipe was the amount of water in the dough. The steam inside the dutch oven was what helped the crust to form. I’m not sure what will happen with a traditional loaf inside the hot pot. We’ll just have to try it out and see. Bread is an adventure!

Take Care of Your Cast Iron Skillet

Our cast iron, after a year's worth of use.

Our cast iron, after a year


Two articles ago we recommended cooking a steak on a cast iron skillet and promised an article on caring for your skillet. So here it is, now that you’ve got a big hunk of iron in your kitchen, how do you take care of it?

Seasoning

The first thing you’ll need to do is season the skillet. Lots of cast iron skillets come “pre-seasoned”. Don’t believe them. Sure, they’re sort of seasoned, but there’s still work to be done. Take a big hunk of shortening and smear it over every inch of the cooking area of the pan. Put it in a very hot oven for a while. The fat will melt (and smoke a little bit). As the pan heats up, teeny tiny pores in the metal will open up and suck up the melted fat. When the pan cools, the pores close up, retaining the fat. The next time you heat the skillet up (like when you’re cooking) the fat is released a little bit at a time, creating a non-stick surface.

After about twenty minutes or so at 400 degrees, take the skillet out and let it cool. When it’s cool enough, clean it out with paper towels. Don’t use any water. No water? Yeah, kind of freaky, stand by.

Cleaning

Modern America is so wrapped up in aluminum and stainless steel that we forget that iron rusts. It totally rusts. Your skillet may very well rust. Mine is a little rusty on the bottom. It’s going to happen, so just get it in your head now. The only area of the skillet that you absolutely can’t have rust on is the cooking area. We all know that water makes rust, and that water cleans skillets, so how do you clean the skillet without water? Here comes the exciting part…SALT. You pour some kosher salt in it and scrub with paper towels.

Whoah. No soap? Somewhere, your Mom is clucking her tongue. She wants you to use soap. So does your Grandma. You know who doesn’t? Your GREAT Grandma. She’s not so wrapped up in purell and anti-bacteria hoo hah that she understands that you don’t need to use soap and water to get an iron skillet clean. We like our pan to be greasy. It’s a good thing. You’re going to get that thing so hot when you cook that it’ll kill all bacteria. Go to Billy Goat’s or one of the dozens of Chicago taco joints and ask them how they clean their giant griddles. I guarantee you they don’t use soap and water. I’d be willing to bet they don’t even use water. They just scrape off the crusty’s and keep it really hot. Your cast iron skillet is the next door neighbor to one of those big iron griddles. Trust Billy Goat’s.

When possible, just wipe it clean with paper towels. If you get some stuck on crap, scrub it off with some dry kosher salt. I’ve been doing this for over a year now. I cook eggs, bacon, sausage, corn bread, pancakes, steak, all kinds of stuff in this skillet and I’ve never gotten sick. Water has never been used to clean it, ever. It works, and it keeps a nice seasoned cooking surface.

What not to Cook

Technically, you can cook just about anything in your skillet. It’s a straight up fry pan. However, for the first couple of weeks avoid acidic stuff, like tomatoes. They’ll eat through your weak seasoning and get at the iron. Hold off on that kind of stuff until you have a really solid seasoning.

Get to it

Cast iron is more of a committment than a regular frying pan. Once you learn to season and clean it, you’re done. Don’t worry too much about it. Seasoning is a lifelong journey of fidgeting with your iron. You’ll start to covet your skillet. You’ll show it off to friends. You’ll brag about never using soap and water to clean it. Cast iron, in my humble opinion, is the winter equivalent of a Weber grill. Both need some TLC from time to time, both have little cooking cults that adore them, and both are totally misunderstood by an average consumer. Quit being an average consumer, start taking care of a piece of cooking history. Your Great Grandmother would be proud.

To get started, pick up one of these Lodge Logic cast iron skillets.

How to Cook a Steak

steak on the grill

steak on the grill

Camri and I like red meat, but it’s not a big part of our diet. We like a steak every couple of weeks though. Buying a steak at a restaurant is pretty expensive, especially if you want a really good cut of meat. Most steaks come out really well on the grill. Put a little bit of oil and seasoning on a sub-one -inch piece of beef, cook it for a few minutes over medium high heat on a grill, and you’re good to go. It gets trickier when you want to cook a thick restaurant style filet mignon. A $30 restaurant steak can be had at home for less than $8 per steak. We promise. We’ve done it. After a lot of experimenting, and some guidance from Cooks Illustrated, this is the formula that works best for us:

  1. Pre heat your oven to 450 degrees. Your oven? Yeah, your oven. Don’t fret. It’ll all be clear in a minute.
  2. Heat up a non-teflon pan on your stove top. It absolutely, positively, has to be a non-teflon, sticky metal pan. If possible, it would be great if it’s the sort of pan you can put in an oven without the handle melting off. We got a really nice set of cookware as a wedding present, which included this All-Clad skillet. We’ve used it a bunch of times, and have been really happy with it, until we discovered the joy of cooking with cast iron. Now we use this Lodge Logic cast iron skillet for all our steak cooking needs. It’s also great for eggs, bacon, sausage, corn bread…just about anything. It rules. We’ll write about it soon. Anyway, get your skillet really hot.
  3. Season your meat. Make it really simple, a little olive oil on both sides, then some pepper and salt. Not hard. Don’t overthink it.
  4. When your skillet is really really hot, drop the meat into it. Once it hits, it’s going to sizzle an awful lot. You’ll be scared. You’ll want to move the meat around. Don’t touch it. You have to let the crust form. Don’t move. Don’t. Let it sizzle for two minutes, then flip it over. If possible, grab it by both sides with tongs and pull it straight up. Don’t get a spatula in there to break that yummy crust. Let it sizzle for another two minutes on the other side (four minutes total).
  5. Turn off your burner. Plug a Polder thermometer into your meat. Not just any meat thermometer, get one with a digital readout and a long cord that lets you put your meat in the oven, or on the grill, and monitor the temperature from afar. They’re usually around $30. We’ve had ours for over five years. If you have a oven-worthy skillet, take the whole contraption off the burner and pop it into the oven. Set your thermometer to beep at 145 degrees (medium rare). If you’re not into a little blood, then check out this USDA meat temperature chart. Keep in mind, the meat will continue to cook when you take it out of the oven, so set your alarm five degrees lower than your target temperature.
  6. Drink a beer.
  7. When the temperature is right, take the skillet out of the oven, take the meat off the skillet (leave the thermometer in for now, if you pull it out lots of juices will leak out.) and let the meat rest on a warm plate with foil over top of it. Don’t eat it yet. Let the meat rest for at least five minutes.
  8. While you’re waiting, you can ad a half stick of butter, some rough chopped garlic, some shallots, and a little more olive oil to your hot skillet, and work it over with a metal spatula. Scrape up all those fun little black bits and swirl it around with the melting butter. It’s better than A-1.
  9. Once the meat is rested, plate it up, pour some sauce over the top of each steak, and enjoy. Although there’s a small investment up front ($25 cast iron, $30 thermometer) you make the money back after just two steaks. Plus, you can use both of those things for lots of other stuff.