I’ve got a little behind on posting my BBA challenges, so here goes two at once.
Flat bagels
Making bagels is a two day long process, and I was so determined to make them for breakfast that I got up a full hour earlier than usual, on a week day!
First you add water, flour and yeast to make a sponge and leave it for a couple of hours. This is all the water you will add to your bagels, so make sure you get it right. (As I didn’t and this made for some very flat bagels).
Add more flour and yeast to your sponge and mix, to form a solid dough. That should not be tacky. When you read this several times and pretend your dough isn’t tacky, when really it’s worse than that – it’s sticky. Give up. Don’t waste the other ingredients and your time, cause they are just not going to work.
I did try adding more and more flour during the kneading stage, but in the end I gave up and continued. Make rolls from your not tacky dough.
After some proofing time, shape each roll into a long snake and make bagels!
Proof the bagels again and when they float in water (normally after at least 20 minutes) then they are ready for the fridge.
It’s the next morning where the main problems appear with sticky dough. In that mine had soldered themselves to the baking sheet, and to get them off they stretched out, becoming huge and flat.
They tasted just fine. I think however I am going to try making these again, I love bagels and I would love to be able to make fresh batches whenever I want. (The bagels you buy in the UK are pretty rubbish, nothing like their amazing fresh American counterparts).
Poor Man’s Brioche
So there are three varieties of brioche in BBA Rich Man’s, Middle Class and Poor Man’s, the classification is based off the amount of butter that is involved. I guess back in the day in France only the super-rich could afford 16oz of butter for two loaves of brioche!
16oz! It made me sick to even think of creating this bread, I had read a number of accounts saying this bread was so rich that it wasn’t particularly pleasant. So I decided to give Rich Man’s a miss.
So then I was left with the decision of Middle Class (8 oz) or Poor Man’s (4 oz). As my other half isn’t such a fan of buttery things I decided to go for the one most appealing to him, the Poor Man’s. Plus the dough is easier to handle the less butter it contains so I was more likely to make a good loaf.
In the end The Other Half had none of the bread, but I did take a loaf down to my parents, who do like buttery tasting things – like a proper brioche. Proper brioche in my mind is a sweet bread, but Poor Man’s is more of a sandwich loaf, therefore it needed a lot of jam to balance the fairly savoury taste.
If I was going to make Poor Man’s again I would add more than the 2 tablespoons of sugar, to create more of a sweet taste. Admittedly all the brioche in the book have largely the same amount of sugar in them – so I wouldn’t say that Middle Class would necessarily be better for this.
On the plus side, the brioche loaves were the first that truly had the correct texture and density, and they looked just like the real thing. At first my mum thought I had bought a bread maker, which of course I haven’t – I made it all by hand!
So pleased overall with this loaf, as I got to show off my new cooking skills to my parents, who I think were suitably impressed!
Up next Challah bread, which is a braided Sabbath bread. (I am skipping Casatiello for now because of the amount butter and cheese in it are The Other Half’s two least favourite things).