Well meanwhile I did laundry all day (from 11am until...3?) - eight loads all told. Don't look at me like that, I haven't done laundry in two weeks, it's not that we make an inordinate amount of laundry! Anyways, when I was bringing the last load up it occurred to me that it would be awesome to have some nice crispy bread to sop the gravy up with. It was a little late in the game to whip the bread maker out, but there was just enough time to go to Sobey's before it closed and get a foccacia which I could crisp up in the oven. Well, I came in, hung up my laundry, and relaxed by grabbing my laptop and checking Facebook (there's three flights of stairs between me and the laundry room!) Anyways I saw that Heather had posted a link to a recipe for beer bread from Ezra Pound Cake. I was curious, because 1) I had a bottle of beer in the fridge, 2) I wanted to make some quick bread, and 3) I'd had beer bread before, and was fairly sure I liked it.
Well, it turns out beer bread is a "quick" bread which doesn't require yeast, which is fine by me! It is definitely closer to a biscuit than a bread though, so keep that in mind. Also, it doesn't taste much like beer - I used a locally-produced (Moncton NB) Pumphouse Scotch Ale, which, ironically, was the beer I was drinking at the Pumphouse while I was trying beer bread for the first time! It's really quite tasty and smooth - a little bit sweet, a little bit bitter, and a little bit smokey, I thought it would be a perfect candidate for this experiment (although next time I might try something heavier).
Here's the recipe, from Ezra Pound Cake .com!
Beer Bread1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Grease a 9-x-5-x-3-inch loaf pan.
From Rebecca Crump (EzraPoundCake.com)
Makes 1 loaf
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 3 tablespoons sugar
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 bottle (12 ounces) beer
- 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, melted (Note: Feel free to reduce to 1/4 cup.)
2. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.
3. Using a wooden spoon, stir the beer into the dry ingredients until just mixed.
4. Pour half the melted butter into the loaf pan. Then spoon the batter into the pan, and pour the rest of the butter on top of the batter.
5. Bake for 50 to 60 minutes, until golden brown. Serve immediately.
Ok, so there's the beer fizzing away on top of the dry ingredients...I maybe should have had a slightly bigger bowl? I also had a hard time getting all of the flour to mix in, I felt the mixture was a bit dry.
My other concern was the amount of butter. I used a frozen stick of President's Choice organic unsalted butter which I melted in the microwave, but it wasn't a full stick - it was like, 4/5s of a stick. And once I poured half of it on the bottom, I was thinking "this is probably too much butter"; by the time I was pouring it over the top I was thinking "Holy sh*t, this is WAY too much butter...it will either be crispy and delicious, or a soupy mess".
So...do you see what I mean about the excessive amount of butter (the oregano and freshly-ground black pepper were my own special touches)? I just found out about 2 minutes ago that Heather used the 1/4c. of butter, and I think next time that's what I'll do. The one step I don't have pictures of is the FIRE! Yes, that's right, as the bread was rising and the butter was sizzling, the butter was flowing out of the loaf pan and drizzling onto the element below...and started to catch fire! Flames, in my oven! Eeek! Chris had the good sense to snuff the fire out with a cookie sheet, and took it out. I suggested that maybe the pan could sit on the cookie sheet so it could catch the drips...and it worked! No more flames! Of course, this wasn't as impressive as the time someone I know opened up a toaster oven and a foot-long flame shot out, but still, a little scary!
Fifty minutes later I finally got to meet my bouncing baby beer bread! And it wasn't swimming in butter! Yay! I thought it was tasty-looking and crispy, but I still didn't know what the texture was going to be like - the beer bread at the Pumphouse was fairly bready, as far as I could recall...when I tried this, it was more like a homemade biscuit, which was and wasn't dissapointing at the same time. I like biscuits, and this is the closest I've ever come to making them, but it's not what I was expecting. Still, I'd do it again, just...with less butter next time. Speaking of butter, I noticed something interesting when we turned the loaf out to cut it...
OMG LOOK AT THAT CRUST!!! It's like somebody deep-fried it...which they pretty much did. Chris told me that he could feel butter oozing out of it...I believe him!
Also, next time I'm going to put some herbs and spices into it, just to give it another taste dimension...cumin might be nice?
Anyways I'm looking forward to snacking on some of this tomorrow morning for breakfast...maybe I'll warm it up and spread a little goat cheese on it? ;)
what a project!! I can see that you have alot of patience. Looks very nice also :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Niki! The lamb isn't hard, you just put it in the slow-cooker and forget about it for a few hours, and the bread was very easy (much easier and faster than regular bread, even bread that's made in the bread maker!)
ReplyDeletebeer bread - a must try now in the winter!
ReplyDeleteLamb is my favorite. I adore its softness when cooked. but never tried beer as an ingredient to make bread. So interesting! I sometimes use mineral water but never beer.I must give it a try.
ReplyDeleteZerrin - the beer gives it a sweetness, and it doesn't taste of alcohol at all...I didn't even really notice a beer flavour, the bread was sweet enough that I ate it with strawberry jam the next morning and it was delicious! I haven't decided yet whether a heavier or lighter beer works best, but next time I do it perhaps I'll use a cheaper, commercial beer rather than a more expensive, locally-produced one...
ReplyDeleteI love lamb too, it isn't commonly eaten by the locals where I live (not a large lamb-producing area, although local lamb is available in stores, more often than not it's frozen lamb from New Zealand). I'm lucky that my boyfriend likes it, he grew up in a family that was not very adventurous about their cooking, the kind of people who eat a lot of hot dogs and hamburgers and french fries...
Maria: it's easy and delicious, but now there's a layer of congealed butter all over the bottom of my oven that smokes when I turn the oven on...so I'm going to have to get intimate with some rubber gloves and a bottle of oven cleaner before I make any more of it!
Roasted lamb and beer bread...I know what I am craving.
ReplyDelete