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Dan Lepard’s Garlic Breath … um Bread

16 April 2011 6 Comments

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April already?

Yes, and it is posting day for the Bread Baking Babes. This month we had fun with garlic and bread. You will have fun too if you chose to be a Bread Baking Buddy and try your baking skills on Dan Lepard’s Garlic Bread!

But be warned, be very warned!!

This bread is addictive and it is disappearing in no time!
It’s challenging too if you are not used to squishy dough. If you love baking breads like the Croc you will love this one too but even if you are afraid of Croc-like breads you really should give it a try – I bet you will not bee disappointed!

Natashya invited us into her kitchen and around her kitchen table this month and boy she chose this wonderful bread! I didn’t think I’d love it so much!!

And that’s what she told us:

The first rule of Fight Babe Club, is there are no rules of Babe Club.

The second thing I know.. recycling is awesome. So is garlic. Okay, that is two things. But I digress.

It is my turn to present a bread for April so I had to jump on my own bed. You know, until I got winded and had to have a nap with the pups.

After combing through my innumerable-yet-still-not-enough bread books, I found myself coming back to a bread proposed a couple of years ago by Tanna - Dan’s Garlic Bread. I haven’t forgot about this garlicky goodness, and I think it is time we bake that bad boy up!

Since we are Babes we were happy to oblige and play with the bad boy(s)!!

Dan Lepard's Garlic Bread

Doesn't that look just too gorgeous?

So if you wan to be a Bread Baking Buddy and earn the wonderful Badge our fellow Babe Lien created just visit Natashya’s blog for all the details!

Dan’s Garlic Bread

reprinted with permission from Dan Lepard
Exceptional Breads by Dan Lepard
Dan has reworked the recipe to include a longer rise, less yeast, and less sugar.
Step-by-Step photos here

for the pre-ferment
200ml water, at about 35C – 38C (95F – 101F)
1 tsp fast acting yeast
200g strong white bakers flour

for the dough
225ml water at 20C (68F)
325g strong white bakers flour
10g sea salt
75ml extra virgin olive oil

for the garlic filling
3 heads garlic, separated
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
50ml water
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
2 tablespoons caster sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1 spring fresh rosemary, leaves picked and chopped

 

for the pre-ferment

Dan Lepard's Garlic BreadDan Lepard's Garlic BreadDan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • To easily get the temperature of the water roughly correct measure 100ml of boiling water and add 200ml cold water, then measure the amount you need from this. Stir in the yeast then, when dissolved, stir in the flour until evenly combined.
  • Leave the mixture covered at about 20C – 22C (warmish room temperature) for 2 hours, stirring the ferment once after an hour to bring the yeast in contact with new starch to ferment.

 

for the garlic filling

Dan Lepard's Garlic BreadDan Lepard's Garlic BreadDan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Break the heads of garlic into cloves and place in a saucepan, cover with boiling water from the kettle and simmer for 3 – 4 minutes.
  • Then strain the garlic from the water, cover the cloves with cold water to cool then peel the slivery skin from the garlic. It’s surprising how few cloves you get after peeling so don’t be alarmed if “3 heads of garlic” sound like way too much.
  • Heat the olive oil in a frying pan then place the add the cloves to it and cook until they are lightly brown (not burnt) on the outside. If you burn the garlic the flavour is nasty and you will have to start again, or serve it to your friends with a straight face, so watch them carefully.
  • Measure the balsamic and the water then add this to the pan with the sugar, salt, pepper and rosemary. Simmer for 5 minutes until the liquid has reduced to a thick caramel.
  • Scrape into a bowl and leave to cool. The garlic cloves should be tender when pierced with a knife.

 

back to the dough:

Dan Lepard's Garlic BreadDan Lepard's Garlic BreadDan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • After 2 hours the pre-ferment should have doubled and look bubbly on the surface. Measure the water into a bowl and tip the pre-ferment into it. Break it up with your fingers until only small thread-like bits remain (this is the elastic gluten you can feel in your fingers)

Dan Lepard's Garlic BreadDan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Add the flour and salt then stir the mixture together with your hands. It will feel very sticky and elastic. Scrape any remaining dough from your hands, cover the bowl and leave for 10 minutes so that the flour has time to absorb moisture before being kneaded. Be sure to scrape around the bowl to make sure all of the flour is incorporated into the dough.
  • Pour 2 tbsp olive oil onto the surface of the dough and smooth it over the surface with your hands. Now rub a little oil on your hands and start to tuck your fingers down the side of the dough, then pull the dough upward stretching it out.
  • Rotate the bowl as you do this, so that all of the dough gets pulled and stretched. You’ll find that the dough starts to feel and look smoother. Leave the dough in a ball, cover and leave for 10 minutes.
  • Repeat the pulling and stretching of the dough, for no more than about 10 – 12 seconds. You may find that an oiling piece of dough breaks through the upper surface. This isn’t a bad thing, but it is a sing to stop working the dough. Cover the bowl again and leave for a further 10 minutes.

Dan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Astrid: this is the part where I left the recipe instructions and let the dough rest in the fridge overnight. I took it out in the morning and let it come back to room temperature before I followed the original instructions again…
  • This time oil a piece of the worksurface about 30 cm in diameter. Oil your hands, pick the dough out of the bowl, place it on the oiled surface and knead it gently for 10 – 15 seconds. Return the dough to the bowl, cover and leave for 30 minutes.
  • Uncover the dough, oil the worksurface once more and flip the dough out onto it.

Dan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Stretch the dough out into a rectangle, then fold the right hand side in by a third.
  • Then fold the in by thirds again so that your left with a square dough parcel. Place this back in the bowl, cover and leave for 30 minutes.

Dan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Lightly oil the worksurface again and stretch the dough out to cover an area roughly 30cm x 20cm. Dot the garlic over the 2/3rds of the surface and then fold the bare piece of dough over a third of the garlic-covered dough.

Dan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Then roll this fold of dough over so that the remaining garlic-covered piece is covered by dough. Then fold this piece of dough in by a third…then in by a third again. Finally place the folded dough back in the bowl, cover and leave for 30 minutes.
  • Wipe the oil off the worksurface and lightly dust it with flour. Pin the dough out again as above and fold it in by thirds each way. Replace it in the bowl, cover and leave for a further 30 minutes.

Dan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Pin the dough out again fold it in by thirds each way again as shown. Leave the dough for 10 minutes while you prepare the tray the bread will rise on.

Dan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Cover a large dinner tray with a tea-towel. Lightly dust it with white flour, then cut the dough into thirds with a serrated knife.
  • Place the dough cut side upward on the tray then pinch the fabric between each so that they stay separated.
  • Cover and leave for 45 minutes while you heat the oven to 200C (same for fan assisted)/390F/gas mark 5-6. I put a large unglazed terracotta tile in the oven and shovel the dough directly onto it with the back of a small cookie tray. It gives a much better finish and perhaps the bread is slightly crisper, but the bread will still be good placed on a tray just before baking. I also put a small tray of water in the bottom of the oven so that the heat is a little moist, which will help the bread to rise and colour.

Dan Lepard's Garlic BreadDan Lepard's Garlic Bread

  • Lightly dust the back of a cookie tray (if you have a stone in the oven) or the surface of a baking tray with semolina or flour. Carefully pick the dough up off the cloth, scooping it in from end to end with your finger then quickly lift it clear of the cloth and onto the tray.
  • Either shovel the dough onto the hot stone, or place the baking tray in the oven, shut the door quickly and bake for 20 – 30 minutes until the loaves are a good rich golden brown.

Astrid: I really loved this bread and ate one right away while the other two were baking in the oven and/or colling down on the cooling rack. I think the really are best eaten still warm with a glass of red wine and some nice cheese. Nothing else needed.

*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***

Don’t forget to visit my fellow Bread Baking Babes to see their adventures with this lovely bread:

Bake My Day – Karen | blog from OUR kitchen – Elizabeth | Canela and Comino – Gretchen (Babe on Hiatus) | Cookie Baker Lynn – Lynn | Feeding my enthusiasms – Pat | Grain Doe – Gorel | I Like To Cook – Sara | Living in the Kitchen with Puppies – Natashya | Living on bread and water – Monique (Babe on Hiatus) | Lucullian Delights – Ilva | My Kitchen In Half Cups – Tanna | Notitie Van Lien – Lien | The Sour Dough – Breadchick Mary | Thyme For Cooking – Katie (Babe on Hiatus) | Wild Yeast – Susan
Thinking of you with Love: Glenna (Alumni Babe) | Sher (Angel Babe)

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6 Comments »

  • Elizabeth said:

    Ha. I’m TERRIFIED of the croc but had no fear with this dough. I didn’t find it ridiculously wet at all (except when it stuck fast to the floured tea towel)

    I see you were clever and used parchment paper rather than a floured tea towel with the shaped bread. Your bread looks wonderful, of course.

    It sure is good, isn’t it?
    Elizabeth´s last [type] ..Garlic Bread – with lots and lots of garlic BBB April 2011

  • Astrid (author) said:

    Elizabeth, if you CAN do this one you surely can DO the Croc!!! Srsly!

    yes I used the parchment paper rather than the floured tea towel ’cause I was so afraid it would stick to the towel… when I made the no knead bread I forgot all about it and it STUCK!

    I love it (the bread)!

  • Elle said:

    Gorgeous bread Astrid…and a lovely set of photos to go with the recipe. Now I know what it should look like should I make it again. It really was delicious!

  • Susan/Wild Yeast said:

    What a great crumb! Making me hungry all over again.
    Susan/Wild Yeast´s last [type] ..Did I Or Didn’t I

  • Baking Soda said:

    Now this is one wet dough! Squishy is the word of the day! Somehow mine was a bit easier to work with. Love your report with the pictures! Great tutorial.
    Such a great bread, drooling on my keyboard seeing your pics!

  • hobby baker said:

    Great photos, love your slices! I got to break in my baker’s couche for this one and fortunately it did it’s job without sticking. Yay!
    hobby baker´s last [type] ..BBB Gets Garlicky – Dans Garlic Bread

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