Tag: whole bread ramsay

Whole Wheat Skillet Focaccia with Pine Nuts

If you have a fear of working with yeast, you’ve just found your ideal first project.  Consider it the training wheels of bread making, it really doesn’t get any easier than this.  There’s nothing fancy about it, just a good hearty, quick bread to go with soups, stews, or pastas, and there is almost no work involved.  I use my stand mixer, but since you don’t knead this dough, and it’s super soft, you can use a wooden spoon if you want to.

Normally I spread my focaccia dough out on a baking sheet in one big rectangle, but today I divided it into two skillets.  The nuts brown up in the oven, and if you aren’t familiar with toasted pine nuts, you’re in for a treat.  The only other flavor is the fruity extra virgin olive oil and sea salt.

The distinguishing characteristic of focaccia bread is its dimpled surface, made by dipping your fingers in olive oil and poking them all over the surface of the risen dough.  The oil pools in the dimples and bakes into the bread.  Whole wheat gives this particular focaccia a little more chewy whole grain texture.  It’s best eaten warm right from the oven.

Whole Wheat Skillet Focaccia with Pine Nuts

What You Will Need

  • 2 cups warm water (110F)
  • 2 tsp dry yeast
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • 2 cup whole wheat flour
  • olive oil
  • 1 cup pine nuts

Instructions

  1. Set oven to 400F
  2. Pour the warm water in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, or a regular bowl if you want to beat it yourself. Add the yeast, salt and two cups of all purpose flour. Mix until a sticky dough forms.
  3. Add the whole wheat flour and mix until the dough comes together. It will still be sticky.
  4. Cover with plastic wrap and set the dough in a warm place for 45 minutes.
  5. Coat two cast iron skillets liberally with olive oil, including the sides. Take half the dough and press out into each pan, nudging the dough with your fingers to fit the surface of the pan.
  6. Dip your fingers in olive oil and dot the entire surface with oil. Be generous.
  7. Sprinkle with pine nuts, and then with sea salt.
  8. Bake for about 20 minutes until risen and lightly browned. Watch carefully towards the end so the pine nuts don’t burn.
  9. Cut in the pan or lift out for cutting.

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http://theviewfromgreatisland.com/2013/11/whole-wheat-skillet-focaccia-with-pine-nuts.html

*Recipe from [The View from Great Island|http://theviewfromgreatisland.com] All images and content are copyright protected. If you want to use this recipe, please link back to this page.

Tips for success ~

  1. Your water must be between 110-115F or the yeast will not become active and the bread will not rise.  Use an instant read thermometer.
  2. Liberally oil your skillet before putting the dough in.  Don’t forget the sides.
  3. Don’t be shy with the olive oil.  Dip your fingers in the oil and then poke lots of little holes all over the dough and let the oil pool in the dimples.  The oil will give the finished bread lots of flavor.
  4. Make sure your oven is at temperature before baking.
  5. Watch carefully toward the end of baking to make sure the pine nuts don’t burn.  They can go from golden brown to burnt in a short time.

Enjoy the weekend!

Whole Grain Irish Soda Bread + Giveaway

Whole grain Irish soda bread with whole wheat flour and oats – and an amazing giveaway for a 3-piece set of Dansk cookware!

Almost everyone I know makes corned beef and cabbage for Saint Patrick’s day dinner, but how many of you also make Irish soda bread? It gets overlooked pretty often, but it’s one of my favorite Saint Patrick’s Day foods.

This year, I decided to try something a little different and cross my favorite soda bread (which is slightly sweet and loaded with raisins and caraway) with a traditional brown bread. The result was fantastic! Whole wheat flour gives the bread a nutty, toasty flavor and steel coat oats give it a great, rustic texture. Slathered with Irish butter and sprinkled with a touch of salt, it’s great with your meal or on it’s own for breakfast.

Irish soda bread is a quick bread – it uses baking soda instead of yeast, so you don’t need to wait for the dough to rise. It only takes a few seconds to mix up, and then about a half hour in the oven. It really couldn’t be easier!

The dough is also really forgiving. It’s pretty hard to mess up! You don’t even need a bread pan; I baked mine right in my cast iron skillet. You know what would really be perfect though? A round baker, like this one from Dansk. And lucky day – I’ve joined together with some other bloggers to give away a 3 piece set of Dansk cookware! Dansk pans are seriously beautiful, so you’ll definitely want to check out the widget at the end of this point and enter to win! (If you’re reading this in an email, you’ll have to click through to the full post to access the widget).

Whole Grain Irish Soda Bread

Author: Lauren Keating

Serves: 24

Ingredients

  • 3 cups Gold Medal® all purpose flour
  • 1½ cups Gold Medal® whole wheat flour
  • ½ cup steel cut oats
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 2½ teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1½ cups buttermilk
  • 2 eggs, beaten
  • 2 tablespoons butter, melted
  • 1 cup raisins

Preparation

  1. Heat oven to 425ºF. Grease the bottom of a 9 inch round baking pan or oven proof skillet.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, combine the flours, oats,, sugar, baking soda, and salt. Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients and add the buttermilk, eggs, and melted butter. Mix until just combined. Stir in the raisins.
  3. Form the dough into a boule and place on the greased pan. Use a serrated knife to cut an “x” into the top of the bread. Bake 30-40 minutes, or until golden brown and cooked throughout.

Nutrition Information

Calories: 147 Fat: 1.8 Carbohydrates: 28.9 Fiber: 1.9 Protein: 4.1

3.2.2298

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This giveaway is sponsored by the following bloggers and is in no way affiliated with Dansk cookware:

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