Saturday, May 19, 2012

The Box

What's in the box, in the box... what's in the box today?


A box arrived this week. What's inside?


That's right my friends... pasta for days. Nay, for months! Perhaps even until the end of my PhD *fingers crossed*


Friday, April 27, 2012

Finally!

Focaccia pugliese... I finally made it right!


Can't guarantee I'll overcome my blog fatigue anytime soon, but I do need to write about this year-long bread-making saga at some point.

Hope you're all well! Also, Cambridge rain, please go away permanently. It's already the end of April.

YH

Monday, February 27, 2012

Best Bread Ever (and Butternut Squash Soup)

This is quite possibly the best homemade bread recipe, ever.

I think I would be able to sell this in the Cambridge market square.
In 2006, Mark Bitmann aka The Minimalist of the New York Times published a recipe for No Knead Bread by master baker Jim Lahey. Apparently it created an enormous amount of hype amongst foodbloggers worldwide...

So I may be 6 years late to the party, but now it's my turn to jump on the No Knead bandwagon. This recipe is amazing! I love the fact that the method is so simple, the ingredients don't have to be weighed out precisely, and most of all, the end product looks and tastes so good.

Since it's been documented everywhere, I'll be brief with the recipe. For more details, check out the original article here, the video here, and the ever so slight modification that I used here.

No Knead Bread


Ingredients:
3 cups flour (I used bread flour - it has a high protein content)
1 1/2 cups water
1/4 tsp regular instant yeast
1 tsp salt

1. Add flour, yeast and salt to a bowl and give it a swirl to mix. Add the water and mix until roughly combined. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and leave at room temperature for 12-18 hrs.
It will look like a shaggy mess - this is fine.

2. At this stage, the mixture will have grown and be very soft and bubbly. Move onto a floured surface and bring the edges into the centre. Flip over onto a floured cotton towel (so that the side with the gathered folds is at the bottom). Place towel with dough into a bowl and let rest for 2 hrs.

3. After waiting 1.5 hrs, place a heavy pot into the oven and heat to 220-230 deg C. When the 2 hr rise is over, throw the dough from the towel into the superhot pot, (hopefully the folded side will now be back on top). Immediately put the lid on the pot and put back in oven for 30 mins. After that, take the lid off and bake for another 15 mins or until browned nicely.

In summary, you dump stuff in a bowl, leave it, leave it some more, dump it into a pot and bake it. Done. How much easier could it be? I've decided to make this bread on a fortnightly basis at least, starting the dough on Saturday night, and baking on Sunday night so that I have fresh bread for the start of the working week!

Whilst I'm at it, here's a recipe for butternut squash soup we made the other day:

Butternut Squash Soup


Ingredients:
2 medium-sized butternut squash
2 carrots and 2 onions chopped finely
300 mL double cream
1 chicken stock cube
random herb/spice assortment: nutmeg, sage, thyme (salt and pepper)

Fry carrots and onions in olive oil and/or butter over medium heat until soft. Then add chopped chunks of the squash, together with the nutmeg, sage and thyme. Fry for 10 mins or so, until the squash starts to soften.


Add enough water to just about cover the squash pieces, throw in the stock cube and boil for 30-40 mins or until squash is soft.

Blend the whole mixture with a stick blender, then mix in the cream. Salt/pepper to taste. Serve topped with some cracked black pepper and a bit of cream, or with some freshly baked bread!


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First blog post in months - finally found the motivation thanks to this bread. I've been bread crazy lately... feels more like biochemistry than normal cooking, with all the talk about % hydration and gluten. So many interesting factors, actually it might be more like methodology, optimising a reaction. Speaking of optimising, I still haven't nailed Focaccia Pugliese despite several attempts. I think I have to increase the hydration significantly.

Hope you're all well!

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Bibimbap House, Cambridge

Follow me on Twitter! https://twitter.com/HungrytheAte

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Pork Bulgogi Bibimbap (£9.50)
When I wrote about going to Little Seoul a while back, I had incorrectly thought that it was the only Korean restaurant in Cambridge. In fact, there's another restaurant on Mill Rd with an interesting approach to Korean food...

N and I decided to pay Bibimbap house a visit for lunch recently, and were pleasantly surprised to find only one kind of item on the menu - Bibimbap! (not surprisingly) In some way, I almost prefer a restaurant that does not offer many options because it means they have confidence in whatever it is they specialise in serving.


Bibimbap House only do 7 different kinds of bibimbap, from your standard bulgogi bibimbap to japchae bibimbap and even the infamous ham (read: spam) and kimchi bibimbap.

We order the regular bulgogi bibimbap and the pork bulgogi bibimbap which both come as a nice set with miso soup and two of my much beloved sides. Unfortunately, they weren't my favourite sides - a mash potato salad and some vegetables - I'd much prefer some kimchi, or those fish cakes, or the jelly things, or those marinated potatoes... yum yum. I should probably learn their names.


The bibimbap itself was tasty and sizzling hot, full of gochujang goodness, although the rather large looking bowl was actually deceptively shallow. I very much liked the two bulgogi types, more watery than I'm used to at other Korean restaurants and not so sickeningly sweet, which made it better than usual!

And to top it all off, (presumably) the son of one of the chefs was at the table next to us, wolfing down a meal himself whilst playing his DS.

Yes, I like this place.

Bibimbap House
60 Mill Road, Cambridge, CB1 2AS
01223 506800

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