Showing posts with label Bread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bread. Show all posts

Friday, 29 August 2025

The GTSB photos – Part 2

 

The bread on the baking sheet – see the dusting

of flour underneath


The loaf marked into quarters – the long

handle of a wooden spoon works beautifully


Ta dah – fresh from the oven



Sliced in half – looks good enough to eat


A quarter, ready with a pot of butter

it would be rude not to!


Personally I wouldn't mess with either of these breads – apart from the butter.

The ultimate in decadence and comfort food – I think you can combine the two!

The GTSB photos – Part 1

Here they are :


The dry ingredients


The jugs – Guinness and yogurt


The bowl of black treacle


Slowly add the Guinness to the treacle

to loosen


Add the yogurt to the Guinness

and treacle and whisk together


The dry combined with the wet ingredients

The GTSB Photos – Part 2 coming up ...


Friday, 22 August 2025

Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread … GTSB method

Here's the method and hints and tips.


Pre-heat your oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6. Grease a large baking tray or line with baking parchment. Put the flours, oats, salt and bicarbonate of soda in a mixing bowl and toss together. Add the butter and, using your fingertips, rub it into the dry ingredients until the mixture resembles coarse breadcrumbs. In a jug or second mixing bowl, stir together the Guinness, yogurt and treacle, until the treacle more or less dissolves – this will take a little while, but stir patiently and it will come together.

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and, with a spatula, wooden spoon or firm hand, bring everything together into a rough dough. Knead for a moment on a worktop, just until the dough has come together, then shape into a rough ball and put on the prepared baking tray. Dust the ball of dough liberally with flour, then use the handle of a wooden spoon to press a deep cross into the dough, ensuring you don't go all the way through the dough, so all 4 quarters are still connected. Bake for 50 minutes until golden, crispy and steaming.


This is the recipe taken directly from the magazine. I've a few suggestions that will make life easier.

It mentions “grease a large baking tray or line with baking parchment”. In all my bread making I've never greased or lined a baking tray. I sprinkle a non-stick baking tray with flour and “swirl” so it covers the tray. The bread doesn't stick – ever.

If you take your butter straight from the fridge as you begin, weigh and cut it into small cubes and place on a piece of cling film by the time you've weighed the remainder of your ingredients your butter will be soft enough to rub into the dry ingredients.

With regard to the “wet” ingredients you'll find life much easier if you begin by weighing the black treacle directly into a small mixing bowl. Weigh your Guinness and yogurt in separate jugs. Make sure your mixing bowl is set on a non slip mat – if you don't have one then use a dampened j cloth.

Gradually drizzle the Guinness into the treacle, stirring all the time and it will loosen, continue until combined. Use a small whisk when adding the yogurt to prevent it splitting. The process takes no time at all.

There's photos!

Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread - “GTSB”

Here's the second bread recipe and it's divine!

I have always had a weakness for good bread. There's nothing like home-made bread – the only problem is that it's a bit of a faff and it takes too long … unless you're making soda bread – no yeast and little or no kneading needed – what's not to love.

Not surprising then that this caught my attention. The recipe looks easy and this is genuine research – so many recipes are a let down mainly because they are inaccurate – you're drawn in by the clever photography and the Food Stylist.

It's a little more long winded but well worth the effort!

What follows is the exact recipe, then some hints and tips from me and finally a photo-guide.

Wholesome, rustic soda bread looks and tastes like something that hours of love and care have gone into. In reality, it's wonderfully simple and with no yeast or kneading required, a warm loaf can be out of the oven in about an hour”.


Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread


400g strong white bread flour

extra for dusting

100g strong wholemeal flour

50g jumbo oats

10g fine salt

1 tsp of bicarbonate of soda

40g unsalted butter, cubed

150g Guinness

175g natural yogurt

60g black treacle


You can see why I fancied this loaf!

Friday, 15 August 2025

Now for the photos!

If you want to keep it simple add a sprinkle of celery salt and/or garlic granules and a sprinkle of grated cheese – any cheese that melts will do!

Have a look :


I sprinkled mine with extra semolina and

Nigella seeds


More sprinkles – this time grated cheese


For extra zhuzh serve with bowls of extra virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar for dunking – a glug of each – a glug = 2 tablespoons.

Make sure you've got serviettes!

Perfect for tearing and sharing … how about another bread idea?

You'll need bread!

Every summer party or just a smaller get together for that matter, needs good bread!

I've chosen two recipes both of which are delicious, it's purely a matter of choice.

This recipe is not difficult. All you have to think about is are you around the house in a morning or an afternoon, to be able to complete the stages, none of which are long winded, it's perfect to slot in around the chores you know you've got to tackle so why not get home-made bread as a bonus!

Here goes :

You can choose whether you use the salt, oil and sesame seeds as a topping or roll in semolina and sprinkle with Nigella seeds before baking.


Pide


one sachet of easy-blend yeast – 7g

pinch of salt

700g plain white flour

plus extra

1 egg, beaten

100ml olive oil

400ml lukewarm water

30g sesame seeds and coarse sea salt

2 tbsp semolina

or extra semolina and Nigella seeds to sprinkle


Put the flour into a large bowl and make a well in the centre. Pour in the yeast and the olive oil reserving a little to brush over the bread prior to proving, add the water.

Mix until the dough forms into a firm ball, leaving the sides of the bowl. Cover with a clean damp cloth and leave to rise in a warm place until doubled in size. 1 – 1½ hours.

Lightly flour two baking sheets.

Knock down the dough - divide into two, shape each into a round ball and then roll each in 1 tbsp of semolina . Roll out and shape into two ovals and place on the baking sheets. Brush with beaten egg, sprinkle with sea salt, the reserved oil and sesame seeds. Alternatively you can sprinkle with additional semolina and Nigella seeds. Leave to prove for 30 minutes in a warm place.

Pre-heat your oven 210c/190fan/Gas 7.

Make dimples all over the surface of the bread – use your index finger vertically into the bread and you'll achieve the same size.

Bake in a hot oven for 15-20 minutes until golden brown and when the base is tapped the bread sounds hollow.

From the recipe given you'll get two pide – 30x20cms or 12x8” in old money.


You don't have to be an accomplished bread maker – it's easy. There are variations on the theme of pide in Asia, the Middle East and Eastern Europe. In Turkey there are pide street food shops called “pideci”.

You can top pide with your favourite ingredients – feta, mozzarella, cheese with leek and potato – break an egg in the middle and bake with the bread.

The choice is yours!

Now for the photos ...

Saturday, 29 June 2024

GTSB – the photo-guide

Here goes!


The dry ingredients


The jugs – Guinness and yogurt


The bowl of black treacle


Slowly add the Guinness to the treacle

to loosen


Add the yogurt to the Guinness

and treacle and whisk together


The dry combined with the wet ingredients


The bread on the baking sheet – see the dusting

of flour underneath


The loaf marked into quarters – the long

handle of a wooden spoon works beautifully


Ta dah – fresh from the oven


Sliced in half – looks good enough to eat


A quarter, ready with a pot of butter it would be rude not to!


Personally I wouldn't mess with either of these breads – apart from the butter! I would add a good strong cheddar or maybe a Lancashire cheese with some chutney – but really it's entirely up to you!

You could serve warmed with a goulash or a chilli if you preferred the bread with a hot dish.

Very rustic and the ultimate in comfort food!



Saturday, 22 June 2024

Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread … GTSB method

Here's the method and hints and tips.


Pre-heat your oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6. Grease a large baking tray or line with baking parchment. Put the flours, oats, salt and bicarbonate of soda in a mixing bowl and toss together. Add the butter and, using your fingertips, rub it into the dry ingredients until the mixture resembles coarse breadcrumbs. In a jug or second mixing bowl, stir together the Guinness, yogurt and treacle, until the treacle more or less dissolves – this will take a little while, but stir patiently and it will come together.

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and, with a spatula, wooden spoon or firm hand, bring everything together into a rough dough. Knead for a moment on a worktop, just until the dough has come together, then shape into a rough ball and put on the prepared baking tray. Dust the ball of dough liberally with flour, then use the handle of a wooden spoon to press a deep cross into the dough, ensuring you don't go all the way through the dough, so all 4 quarters are still connected. Bake for 50 minutes until golden, crispy and steaming.


This is the recipe taken directly from the magazine. I've a few suggestions that will make life easier.

It mentions “grease a large baking tray or line with baking parchment”. In all my bread making I've never greased or lined a baking tray. I sprinkle a non-stick baking tray with flour and “swirl” so it covers the tray. The bread doesn't stick – ever.

If you take your butter straight from the fridge as you begin, weigh and cut it into small cubes and place on a piece of cling film by the time you've weighed the remainder of your ingredients your butter will be soft enough to rub into the dry ingredients.

With regard to the “wet” ingredients you'll find life much easier if you begin by weighing the black treacle directly into a small mixing bowl. Weigh your Guinness and yogurt in separate jugs. Make sure your mixing bowl is set on a non slip mat – if you don't have one then use a dampened j cloth.

Gradually drizzle the Guinness into the treacle, stirring all the time and it will loosen, continue until combined. Use a small whisk when adding the yogurt to prevent it splitting. The process takes no time at all.

There's photos!



Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread - “GTSB”

Here's the second bread recipe and it's divine!

I have always had a weakness for good bread. There's nothing like home-made bread – the only problem is that it's a bit of a faff and it takes too long … unless you're making soda bread – no yeast and little or no kneading needed – what's not to love.

Not surprising then that this caught my attention. The recipe looks easy and this is genuine research – so many recipes are a let down mainly because they are inaccurate – you're drawn in by the clever photography and the Food Stylist.

What follows is the exact recipe, then some hints and tips from me and finally a photo-guide.

Wholesome, rustic soda bread looks and tastes like something that hours of love and care have gone into. In reality, it's wonderfully simple and with no yeast or kneading required, a warm loaf can be out of the oven in about an hour”.


Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread


400g strong white bread flour

extra for dusting

100g strong wholemeal flour

50g jumbo oats

10g fine salt

1 tsp of bicarbonate of soda

40g unsalted butter, cubed

150g Guinness

175g natural yogurt

60g black treacle


You can see why I fancied this loaf!

Saturday, 15 June 2024

Beautiful Beer Bread – hints and tips

Before you have a go at baking the bread here's the helpful stuff that the recipe doesn't mention.

I used mature cheddar cheese in the mix and unsalted butter, melted, to brush the crust.

The beauty of this recipe is that you don't handle the bread mix and so no need to knead – sorry, couldn't resist. Use a round bladed knife to bring it together.

Use a 2lb loaf tin 9x5½x3” (in old money) – 900g approximately 23x13x7cms (in new money). Grease and line the loaf tin, even if it is non-stick. You could use a cake or loaf liner – if you do then spray the liner with Fry Light sunflower oil. It takes away all the heavy duty washing up of your loaf tin.

Turn the loaf tin around after 20 minutes to make sure you get an even crust.

Let the loaf cool.

Most people are addicted to chocolate and all things sweet – give me a thick slice of good bread spread with quality butter and a lump of cheese any day.

The loaf is quite dense, cheesy with a slightly sweet background. It might sound strange but it's excellent. I thought the Soda Bread loaf was the easiest and quickest I'd ever made – this loaf is quicker still.

Just in case you've forgotten the raising agents are the yeast in the beer and in the self-raising flour.

Now for the Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread!


Beautiful Beer Bread

The following two breads have one thing in common – they do not use yeast in the traditional way as the raising agent, so no faffing around waiting. They are also delicious and moreish!

This recipe uses beer and self-raising flour as the raising agents.


Beer Bread

Serves 6-8


100g cheddar cheese

375g self-raising flour

3 tbsp caster sugar

330ml ale, such as India Pale Ale

20g butter, melted (optional)


You will need a 2lb loaf tin – makes one 2lb loaf


Preheat the oven to 160fan/180c/Gas 4.

Grate the cheddar cheese into a mixing bowl. Sift in the flour and the sugar, then mix well. Then, slowly pour in the beer, mixing as you go, until the mixture comes together to form a wet dough.

Pour the dough mixture into a greased loaf tin and bake in the middle of the oven for 45-50 minutes, or until the bread is risen and golden brown. To check if the bread is cooked all the way through, tap the bottom with your knuckles – it should sound hollow. During the remaining 4-5 minutes of cooking you can brush the crust of the bread with the melted butter, if preferred.


after adding the beer


ready for the oven


before the melted butter


fingers itching – leave to cool


just add butter to sample – worth the wait!


You might want to have a glance at the Hints and Tips coming next before you have a go …

Saturday, 18 November 2023

A comfort blanket ...

 ...for an Autumn day! It's chilly outside so what could be more inviting for lunch than home-made bread or dumplings to go with your bowl of soup – so comforting, so simple.

First up the bread and I make no apology for repeating this recipe – I use it again and again!


Soda bread


170g self raising wholemeal flour

170g plain flour

½ tsp salt

½ tsp bicarbonate of soda

290ml buttermilk


an optional sprinkle of semolina – try a sprinkle of semolina

to flour your baking sheet and after you've added your “x”

on top of the loaf


Pre heat your oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6.

Tip the flours, salt and bicarb into a large bowl and mix.

Make a well in the centre, pour in 290ml of buttermilk and mix quickly with a large fork until you have a soft dough formed. You may need an extra drop if your dough is too stiff but take care it should not be too wet or sticky.

Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead briefly.

Form the dough into a round and flatten slightly. Place on a lightly floured baking sheet.

Slice an “x” on the top of the loaf and bake for 30 minutes – the base should sound hollow when tapped.


Just to confuse the issue I've found buttermilk in different weights. A low fat version weighing 284ml and a full fat version weighing 300ml – a tip – if you can only source the 284ml rinse out the pot with a drop of milk.

Here it is :



Now for the dumplings!

Saturday, 15 July 2023

A “BLT” with a difference

If, on the other hand, you didn't want to go to the expense of buying submarine rolls you could go the whole hog and make your own bread!

I've chosen soda bread – it's delicious, it's easy to make and it's very much in the cheap and cheerful category.


Soda bread


170g self raising wholemeal flour

170g plain flour

½ tsp salt

½ tsp bicarbonate of soda

290ml buttermilk


an optional sprinkle of semolina – try a sprinkle of semolina

to flour your baking sheet and after you've added your “x”

on top of the loaf


Pre heat your oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6.

Tip the flours, salt and bicarb into a large bowl and mix.

Make a well in the centre, pour in 290ml of buttermilk and mix quickly with a large fork until you have a soft dough formed. You may need an extra drop if your dough is too stiff but take care it should not be too wet or sticky.

Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead briefly.

Form the dough into a round and flatten slightly. Place on a lightly floured baking sheet.

Slice an “x” on the top of the loaf and bake for 30 minutes – the base should sound hollow when tapped.


Just to confuse the issue I've found buttermilk in different weights. A low fat version weighing 284ml and a full fat version weighing 300ml – a tip – if you can only source the 284ml rinse out the pot with a drop of milk.

Here it is :


Slice the bread thinly – ideally you want three to four slices per “BLT” - you should easily get two from a loaf.

Have a look at “The “sub” assembly” and “You will need … and the extras” for inspiration on fillings and assemble. Use a bamboo skewer through the top of your “BLT” to secure until you're ready to devour.

Completely home-made!

Friday, 19 May 2023

The bread photos

If you want to keep it simple add a sprinkle of celery salt and/or garlic granules and a sprinkle of grated cheese – any cheese that melts will do!

Have a look :


I sprinkled mine with extra semolina and

Nigella seeds


More sprinkles – this time grated cheese


For extra zhuzh serve with bowls of extra virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar for dunking – a glug of each – a glug = 2 tablespoons.

Make sure you've got serviettes!

Perfect for tearing and sharing … how about with a perfect paté?

You'll need bread!

This is not difficult. All you have to think about is are you around the house in a morning or an afternoon, to be able to complete the stages, none of which are long winded, it's perfect to slot in around the chores you know you've got to tackle so why not get home-made bread as a bonus!

Here goes :

You can choose whether you use the salt, oil and sesame seeds as a topping or roll in semolina and sprinkle with Nigella seeds before baking.


Pide


one sachet of easy-blend yeast – 7g

pinch of salt

700g plain white flour

plus extra

1 egg, beaten

100ml olive oil

400ml lukewarm water

30g sesame seeds and coarse sea salt

2 tbsp semolina

or extra semolina and Nigella seeds to sprinkle


Put the flour into a large bowl and make a well in the centre. Pour in the yeast and the olive oil reserving a little to brush over the bread prior to proving, add the water.

Mix until the dough forms into a firm ball, leaving the sides of the bowl. Cover with a clean damp cloth and leave to rise in a warm place until doubled in size. 1 – 1½ hours.

Lightly flour two baking sheets.

Knock down the dough - divide into two, shape each into a round ball and then roll each in 1 tbsp of semolina . Roll out and shape into two ovals and place on the baking sheets. Brush with beaten egg, sprinkle with sea salt, the reserved oil and sesame seeds. Alternatively you can sprinkle with additional semolina and Nigella seeds. Leave to prove for 30 minutes in a warm place.

Pre-heat your oven 210c/190fan/Gas 7.

Make dimples all over the surface of the bread – use your index finger vertically into the bread and you'll achieve the same size.

Bake in a hot oven for 15-20 minutes until golden brown and when the base is tapped the bread sounds hollow.

From the recipe given you'll get two pide – 30x20cms or 12x8” in old money.


You don't have to be an accomplished bread maker – it's easy. There are variations on the theme of pide in Asia, the Middle East and Eastern Europe. In Turkey there are pide street food shops called “pideci”.

You can top pide with your favourite ingredients – feta, mozzarella, cheese with leek and potato – break an egg in the middle and bake with the bread.

The choice is yours!

A couple of photos to follow ...

Saturday, 15 April 2023

Two loaves!

Here are the two loaves fresh out of the oven :


Here's one of them sliced and ready to be devoured!



My immediate instinct is to slice, butter and consume – cook's privilege surely!

However – stoically I resisted and in the interests of all things practical - I also foil wrapped a loaf and popped into the freezer.

The verdict – not that I am in any way biased you understand – the ability to freeze the loaf is an added bonus – you can use one and freeze the other.

Here's the veggie option I mentioned - top a toasted slice and add mushrooms in balsamic :


Mushrooms in Balsamic


Serves 4 as a topping


4 tbsp rapeseed oil

500g chestnut mushrooms, sliced

4 cloves of garlic or paste

pinch of salt

4 tbsp balsamic vinegar

2 tbsp soft brown sugar

60g shaved parmesan


Heat the oil in a frying pan, add the mushrooms and garlic and a pinch of salt. Cook on high for 5 minutes until browned. Mix the vinegar with the sugar and pour over the mushrooms. Stir until syrupy – 1-2 minutes – toast your slices of Cheese and Onion Muffin Loaf under the grill and top with the mushrooms, garnish with shaved parmesan.

Variety is the spice of life!

Lets do breakfast … or brunch if you prefer

What about a Cheese and Onion Muffin Loaf – a thick slice, toasted – topped with a poached egg and then the world really is your lobster – bacon on the side – sausage too. For a veggie idea mushrooms are always a winner with me!


Cheese and Onion Muffin Loaf


170ml vegetable oil

1 large egg

284ml buttermilk

70ml milk

500g self raising flour

1 tsp English mustard powder

Pinch of cayenne pepper

1 tsp salt

150 mature cheddar cheese, grated

bunch of spring onions – or 6 if you want to be precise

200g Crumbly Lancashire cheese, crumbled

or Lancashire Tasty if you can get hold of it


Kit required


You have a choice – one x 900g loaf tin for one loaf

or

two x 450g for two loaves


You can either grease your tin with oil and then

line with baking paper overlapping so that it's easy

to remove


or


You can use cake liners instead


Pre-heat your oven 160fan/180c/Gas 4.

Mix together the wet ingredients – vegetable oil, egg, buttermilk and milk – ideally in a large jug.

Mix together the dry ingredients in a large bowl – flour, mustard powder, cayenne and salt and then add the grated cheddar (reserve a handful to sprinkle over the top of the loaves) and spring onions.

Add the wet to the dry together with the Crumbly Lancashire taking care not to overwork the mixture – divide into the two loaf tins and top with the reserved grated cheddar. Bake for 65/70 minutes until golden on the top. Push a skewer through the middle – it should be clean when removed. You can cover with foil once golden. Leave to cool for 15 minutes and then remove from the tins and place on a wire rack to cool completely.

Hold that thought ...


Saturday, 8 April 2023

Another quick and easy bread recipe …

of the “no yeast” variety.

There's only one word for this loaf – scrumptious!


Cheese & Pecan loaf


60g Parmesan cheese, grated

350g plain flour

1 tbsp baking powder

pinch cayenne pepper

125g mature cheddar cheese, cut

into small cubes

60g chopped pecan nuts (or walnuts

if preferred)

4 spring onions, trimmed and chopped

250ml full fat milk

1 large egg

170ml tub of sour cream

salt and black pepper

900g (2lb) loaf tin, well buttered and

lined


Pre-heat your oven 180c/160fan/Gas 4

Sprinkle half the grated Parmesan cheese into the loaf tin to coat the base and sides.

Mix the flour, baking powder, cayenne pepper, 1 tsp salt and lots of black pepper into a large bowl. Mix in the cheddar cubes, nuts and spring onions.

In a separate bowl whisk the milk, egg and cream together then fold into the dry ingredients.

Spoon in the loaf tin, smooth the top and sprinkle with the remaining grated Parmesan cheese.

Bake for 50/55 minutes until golden brown – skewer test i.e. insert skewer into loaf, on removal should be clean. Cool in the tin for 5 minutes, turn out and transfer to a rack to cool.

Serve warm with lots of butter.

You could serve as part of a breakfast, a brunch, a snack or just because it's scrumptious!

Then there's a muffin loaf ...


Whilst I'm on the subject of bread … hints and tips

Before you have a go at baking the bread here's the helpful stuff that the recipe doesn't mention.

I used mature cheddar cheese in the mix and unsalted butter, melted, to brush the crust.

The beauty of this recipe is that you don't handle the bread mix and so no need to knead – sorry, couldn't resist. Use a round bladed knife to bring it together.

Use a 2lb loaf tin 9x5½x3” (in old money) – 900g approximately 23x13x7cms (in new money). Grease and line the loaf tin, even if it is non-stick. You could use a cake or loaf liner – if you do then spray the liner with Fry Light sunflower oil. It takes away all the heavy duty washing up of your loaf tin.

Turn the loaf tin after 20 minutes to make sure you get an even crust.

Let the loaf cool.

Most people are addicted to chocolate and all things sweet – give me a thick slice of good bread spread with quality butter and a lump of cheese any day.

The loaf is quite dense, cheesy with a slightly sweet background. It might sound strange but it's excellent. I thought the Soda Bread loaf was the easiest and quickest I'd ever made – this loaf is quicker still.

Just in case you've forgotten the “raising agents” are the yeast in the beer and in the self-raising flour.

Now for another quick and easy bread recipe of the “no yeast” variety!

Saturday, 1 April 2023

Whilst I'm on the subject of bread ...

 … here's another quick and easy bread recipe which is perfect as part of a Ploughman's Lunch. It uses beer and self-raising flour as the raising agents and I warn you it's delicious and moreish!


Beer Bread

Serves 6-8


100g cheddar cheese

375g self-raising flour

3 tbsp caster sugar

330ml ale, such as India Pale Ale

20g butter, melted (optional)


You will need a 2lb loaf tin – makes one 2lb loaf


Preheat the oven to 160fan/180c/Gas 4.

Grate the cheddar cheese into a mixing bowl. Sift in the flour and the sugar, then mix well. Then, slowly pour in the beer, mixing as you go, until the mixture comes together to form a wet dough.

Pour the dough mixture into a greased loaf tin and bake in the middle of the oven for 45-50 minutes, or until the bread is risen and golden brown. To check if the bread is cooked all the way through, tap the bottom with your knuckles – it should sound hollow. During the remaining 4-5 minutes of cooking you can brush the crust of the bread with the melted butter, if preferred.


after adding the beer


ready for the oven


before the melted butter


fingers itching – leave to cool


just add butter to sample – worth the wait!


You might want to have a glance at the Hints and Tips coming next before you have a go ...