The 97th Bake: Pigs in a blanket

As I approach the 100th bake I can’t quite believe how many I have done. I’ve learnt a lot and had a lot of fun, and stress!! but it’s been worth it. Still a wee way to go so I won’t start celebrating yet. This is a simple recipe but it’s really the same as eating sausages wrapped in bread with mustard, though (homemade bread, so even better!) I packed them into the chilly bin just before we headed off to the beach on holiday. We had pigs in a blanket with greek salad when we got there!!! It’s sometimes the simple things in life that are the best.
I recently received a letter from the child we sponsor in Tanzania and his answer to “the best thing about this year was…” “baba mena buzi” which means father bought a goat.

I made a mistake when I was making the dough, I added water instead of milk, so I made bread rolls out of this dough and made another dough with milk for the pigs!! So we got two for the price of one, yay, can’t beat homemade bread sprinkled with sesame seeds, hot with melted butter. mmmmm. To make the pretzel dough, I added

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The 92nd Bake: Moroccan Plait with Bessara Dip


Well Christmas is done for another year and New Years is behind us. It’s time to look freshly at the year ahead, take a deep breath and look forward to implementing those new year’s resolutions so resolutely made on New Year’s eve! Good luck. I find this time of year fun tbh, as it gives you a chance to feel excited about new things and the year ahead. This bake was fun, making bread always is, but it was also quite involved. The amount of delicious ingredients that went into it, made it worthwhile though including harissa paste, saffron, onions, feta and olives. Then of course I made the dip which went perfectly with this bread. Here is the recipe for all you budding chefs out there who want to give it a go as a New Year’s treat to yourself and family. http://www.pbs.org/food/recipes/moroccan-plaited-loaf-bessara-dip/

Read on if you want to see how I did it…

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The 91st Bake:Paul’s Ciabatta

I love Ciabatta but have never made it. I thought it would be a simple case of making bread, but his dough really was unique and different. It comes out so wet and gooey, it’s hard to believe it can turn into a loaf of crusty bread full of air holes! It’s New Year’s Eve, time to start thinking about New Year’s resolutions. And for me, it won’t be doing another baking challenge!!! With less than 30 recipes to go, I am starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel 🙂

Sir Andrew Motion an English poet and novelist who was Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom from 1999 to 2009 once said that what we very badly need to remember is that the things right under our noses are extraordinary, fascinating, irreplaceable, profound and just kind of marvelous.

Appreciating ourselves and our surroundings sounds like a fantastic way to bring in the new year. Trying something new is a good way to begin the new year too, like this ciabatta. So delicious to buy and eat but even funner to make, I have provided the link to the recipe below. I started by

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The 87th Bake: Paul’s Chocolate & Cherry Loaf

It made a huge loaf 

How decadent is this, and so Christmasy.  Speaking of Christmas, I was at my annual Christmas writer’s lunch and returned to my parked car to find a parking ticket flapping on the windscreen.  I figured maybe it’d be for $12, as I had been 5 minutes late, but on closer inspection saw that it was for a whopping $200!! – expensive five minutes!  After driving around the neighbourhood to try and find the parking meter attendant to contest it, I realized the offense was for “no evidence of inspection” which I discovered later meant, No Warrant of Fitness, of which funnily enough I do have, a current one, that is!! Go figure!    

Clearly the parking meter attendant was a bit trigger happy with their infringement notices.  I contested it of course.  It’s pending.

 The moral of the story is it’s Christmas time, we are all a bit frazzled, so let’s be nice to each other, please!  This of course has nothing to do with my Cherry and Chocolate Loaf except it is comfort food and a hot slice of this at least cheered me up.

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The 85th Bake: Paul’s Roquefort & Walnut-Filled Loaf

 

Poet Laureate Selina Tusitala Marsh with students

It’s been a while since I made bread and this showstopper looks like a doozy.  That means “something outstanding or unique of its kind” btw. Old language but effective.  I recently went to a fundraising event with Victor Rodger, the playwright and scriptwriter as guest speaker, with the aim of promoting and supporting the Writers in Schools programme run by the New Zealand Book Council.  The objective is to get New Zealanders to read more and to spread the joy of reading and writing.  “Telling our stories enriches all of our lives,”  and as Victor said after reading his story, “that’s a piece that really resonates with the youth and I love that it does.”  It’s such important work promoting reading and writing, with so many stories to tell and so many stories locked away in words in books.  Our youth need to know the benefit of this easily accessible art form, and not have it lost to technology, Instagram and Netflix.  My daughter is currently reading and enjoying “One Hundred Years of Solitude” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez.  A hard read but undeniably funny.  Classics will never go away, but books have to be picked up to be enjoyed and that is what this program promotes and tries to facilitate.  Just like bread, reading takes time, but the whole process is enjoyable and the end result is well worth the effort.  Here’s the link to the book council if you are interested in following their programmes or supporting their efforts to inspire students to develop a love of reading and storytelling. http://www.bookcouncil.org.nz 

As for me, it’s back to the bread, which I have to say wasn’t uninspired by some of the food at this said event; devils on horseback (prunes with bacon on a toothpick!), and dates filled with blue cheese and wrapped in prosciutto, not to mention the ubiquitous and undeniably popular asparagus roll!!  Whoever came up with these classics was a genius.   My bake got underway with the purchase of copious quantities of blue cheese and walnuts, not a bad start as they are some of my favourite foods.  I measured out the white flour, the rye flour and

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The 78th Bake: Cinnamon & Raisin Jumble Loaf

I’m about to head off to the gym, but will quickly blog about this amazing bread.  It looked fascinating in the recipe book and just as amazing when it was baked.  It took a while, though not really as long as you’d expect, but it was the interesting and different way that the dough was assembled which gave it its Je ne sais quoi.  Last time I was at the gym I was sitting with the weights resting beside me between sets and a guy came past and said, “Don’t think about it, just do it.”  I liked that.  Sometimes, we do need to just do it.  As one of the teachers said during a prize-giving speech recently, “Feel the fear and do it anyway, let it motivate you to do better.”  Whether it be fear of the unknown, change, a challenge, a new opportunity, it does add spice to our lives and that guy was right, sometimes its best to not think about it, but just do it.  This bread was different and well worth just doing it!!  The bake required (more…)

The 75th Bake: The Perfect Soft White Sandwich Bread

Being a sunny long weekend was a good time to make bread.  I weighed out the flour, ground sea salt and yeast and put them in the mixing bowl fitted with a dough hook. I then added the luke warm milk, melted butter and golden syrup and mixed them together slowly.  I love that machine, so wonderful seeing the ingredients of bread combining so effortlessly.  A friend of mine this weekend undertook to be the first woman to sail the Coastal Classic solo.  She was more than 29 hours at the helm, sailing from Waitemata Harbour in Auckland to Russel.  Now that’s something.  Not effortless but a dream come true, and a challenge accomplished, her Dad being one of the founders of the race in 1982.  Fantastic to take your skills and use them to the best of your ability to achieve goals that you set for yourself.  Now that’s living! 🙂 (more…)

The 59th Bake: Fig & Toasted Hazelnut Wholemeal Bread

Making bread is so much fun and soooo therapeutic.  As Mary Berry once said to Paul Hollywood in a masterclass, “When you’re making bread it takes a lot of energy out of you and if you’re feeling a bit cross and angry it releases it.” Well, I don’t know about angry, but it certainly releases a lot of emotion in me, warm, fuzzy yum emotions.  There’s nothing more satisfying than mixing the dough, adding the delicious ingredients, getting the satisfaction of seeing it rise and then baking the loaf in the oven.  Should be like a daily mantra or prayer to keep us all satisfied and sane, although that would take a lot of time and be very fattening!  Speaking of Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood, the next Great British Bake off is about to start!!  How exciting,  Paul Hollywood posted a photo of the lucky contestants. 🙂  So baking this bread was easy and fun… (more…)

The 56th Bake: Hot Cross Bun Loaf

 

I went to a mother daughter breakfast at my daughter’s school. Lovely idea.  Lucy Lawless as a past pupil was the guest speaker.  She expounded about the merits of being yourself, “live brave but live authentically.”  I do like that message, and she emphasized the importance of following a career path that you love.  It got me thinking, how important it is to be exceptional in whatever you do, you owe it to yourself to shine, (more…)

The 47th Bake: Plaited Rich Saffron Loaf

It’s the school holidays and before we head away to stay with my Mum, I thought I’d whip up some bread.  Not sure if this is really a good idea, but I’m doing it.  This particular loaf is enriched with egg and flavoured with saffron.  I soaked a teaspoon of saffron in warm water for an hour before adding it to the bread mixture. (more…)