I was looking to make some bread today, but I didn't have a lot of time to mess around waiting on rising times and what not... so I looked through the new King Arthur Flour Whole Grain Baking book and we hit another winner! So this is the third one so far... the first two we picked to make were the Rosemary-Asiago Chop Bread and Sunny Citrus Squares.
Jeff loves rye bread, so when I saw that the recipe for Buttermilk-Rye Bread was actually a quick bread using baking powder and baking soda instead of yeast, I quickly made sure we had everything on hand and went to work.
Using just a couple bowls, this was quite fast to throw together this morning. Whole rye flour, bread flour and the leaveners are stirred together and combined with buttermilk, molasses, an egg, orange zest, caraway seeds and melted butter. Once poured into the pan and whisked into the oven, this bread bakes up into a beautiful caramel colored loaf. After sufficiently cooling down and sliced, the flavor of this is dark and robust from the molasses with just a hint of orange lingering in the background. The caraway seeds add that traditional mild anise flavor you find in rye breads with the buttermilk adding moisture, tenderness and a slight tang. This earned Jeff's stamp of approval as far as rye breads go - it gets mine as well because of the little prep time compared to some we have done before.
Dinner tonight, Gnocchi Gratin, takes some help from the market with some pre-made gnocchi. Once the gnocchi are cooked, a luscious smooth cheese sauce is started by melting butter and adding a bit of flour. Milk and broth are streamed in and allowed to bubble away until thick - even though I did whisk this in pretty slow, I still ended up with some lumps. To solve that, I just took our immersion blender and buzzed them away. After thickening, earthy Gruyere easily concedes to the heat and melts into the creamy sauce. Chives are added for a mild touch of onion with bacon lending a smoky flavor. The gnocchi are added in and this mixture is poured into a baking dish. Sharp Parmesan is scattered on top and this mixture bakes away until bubbly and the top becomes a light golden. The original recipe did call for a 22 ounce package of gnocchi, but I only found ones that were around 16 ounces. I just used one instead of splitting up two packages. As a result, I think our mixture was a little more creamy - but we both found that as a good thing and would use that amount again. This turned into a more comfort food-like dish than we thought it would be - kind of like a big potato casserole, but with an adult flare. We did find it a little difficult to try and capture this as a picture though!
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I just saw that cookbook come in at work. I'm still waiting for a chance to look at it. Just out of curiosity...does the molasses or the orange zest make the rye bread taste sweet?
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh! I don't like rye bread myself, so I have a hard time getting myself to make it- even though Andy loves it. I'm looking forward to giving this a try and seeing what he thinks of it. Thanks so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteI've never had gnocchi (yes, I'm pretty UNrefined : ) ) but this recipe looks like "must do" Into my "Joe's recipes" file!
ReplyDeleteBarbara - We actually didn't find the taste to be very sweet at all!
ReplyDeleteErika - I'm not too crazy about rye bread, but I liked this one.
Cyndi - Really? You need to give Gnocchi some love! It is very good stuff.
I made the gnocchi last night, and it was delicious. But it definitely won't feed four-six hungry people; if I'd made a salad, it probably would have stretched further, but we only got three plates out of it :) I snagged the leftovers this morning while my husband was away; we'll see how they reheat at noon!
ReplyDeleteJen - Yeah, the serving size is not too large. I liked the leftovers, but the sauce was a bit thick.
ReplyDeleteHi! I made this recipe last night. I used 1.5 packages gnocchi since you said there is a alot of sauce if you don't. My husband and I really enjoyed it a lot! I served it with a salad (balasamic vinegar dressing) and some TJ garlic nan. We ate about half the dish.. maybe a bit less. So the serving size is more like 4 hungry people.
ReplyDeleteCan you believe Albertsons didn't have gnochhi? Trader Joes did of course.
Tanya - Glad you liked it! I'm surprised that Albertsons didn't carry it!
ReplyDeleteHi Joe-
ReplyDeleteDo you think this bread would work subbing either dark corn syrup or honey for the molasses? Can't deal with the smell of it:-). And now...to further butcher your recipe-would it kill it to leave the orange zest out? Thanks-you do such a great job with your blog!
Sheila in MD
Sheila -
ReplyDeleteYou could certainly make the changes - I don't think it would hurt too bad, you just wouldn't get the same depth of flavor!