BROA DE MILHO (PORTUGUESE CORN AND RYE BREAD)
Broa de milho is a hearty corn and rye bread that's perfect for dipping in stews and for avocado toast. This bread is "no-knead" and has no final proof. The baking approach is simple and it tastes delicious.
Provided by Melissa Johnson
Categories Recipes
Time 1h40m
Yield 2 loaves
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Hydrate the corn flour with the boiling water, 1 hour, covered.
- Thoroughly mix all of the ingredients together (hydrated corn flour, additional water, rye flour, all purpose flour, sourdough starter and salt).
- Cover and let the dough ferment until it's aerated and domed (~6.5 hours in a 70F room). You won't see the dough double, but it will become domed and aerated.
- Preheat your oven to 400F with a stone/steel/baking sheet in it.
- Divide the dough in two, and place half in a floured bowl. Flour the top of the dough.
- Flip and swirl the dough in the bowl until you have a smooth loaf.
- Slide the dough onto a floured peel or parchment and place it in the oven on the hot stone.
- Repeat with the second half of the dough.
- Bake the loaves at 400F for 1 hour.
- The crust will be crunchy and the inside temperature should be over 205F.
OLIVE ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH
This recipe is a classic artisan-style sourdough bread with 30% whole wheat flour. We add the kalamata olives and chopped rosemary during the initial mixing for a scrumptious flavor that is spread throughout the final bread. This loaf makes a great appetizer or snacking bread.
Provided by Melissa Johnson
Categories Recipes
Time 1h40m
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Mixing and Bulk Fermentation
- Thoroughly mix the flours, water, starter, and salt in a bowl that has enough room for the dough to double in size.
- Add the olives and rosemary and continue mixing until they're evenly distributed. Note the level of the dough and the time. Cover the dough and let it rest on your counter for 30 minutes.
- With damp fingertips, stretch and fold the dough, lifting the edges of one side of the dough and folding it over to the other side. Go around the bowl 2 to 3 times, stretching and folding, and stop when the dough feels tighter. Cover and let the dough rest again for 30 minutes.
- Perform three more rounds of stretching and folding as in step 2, separated by 30-minute rests.
- When the dough has almost doubled in size and the surface is puffy and bubbly, end the bulk fermentation. Depending mostly on temperature, this will likely be 6 to 10 hours from mixing.
- Pre-Shaping, Bench Rest, and Shaping
- Scrape the dough out of the bowl onto a well-floured countertop and pre-shape it into a ball.
- Cover the dough with your inverted mixing bowl and let it bench rest for about 20 minutes.
- Flour the top of the dough and use your bench knife to flip it onto the floured side. Shape the dough into the appropriate shape for your baking vessel.
- Final Proof
- Let your shaped dough rest on its seam while you flour your proofing basket, then place the dough in the basket seam-side up.
- Cover the basket and let the dough rise for another 1 to 3 hours for the final proof. The dough will expand in the basket but not double in size. If you want to bake much later, you can do the final proof in the refrigerator for 10 to 12 hours and bake the dough directly from the cold.
- Baking and Storage
- Before the end of the final proof, preheat your oven and baking vessel for 30 minutes at 500°F (or 450°F if that is the heat limit of your baking vessel).
- Remove your dough from the refrigerator, flip it out of the basket onto a piece of parchment paper, and score the top of your dough.
- Transfer the parchment and dough to the base of your baking vessel, cover, and return the vessel to the oven.
- Bake for 20 minutes and then drop the oven temperature to 450°F. After another 10 minutes, take off the lid, and after another 5 to 10 minutes, remove the bread from the oven. The internal temperature should be 205°F or higher.
- Let the bread cool on a rack for about 2 hours before slicing.
- Store the bread cut-side down on your cutting board with a cloth over it. Slice and freeze after 3 to 4 days.
More about "corn porridge and rosemary sourdough bread recipes"
POLENTA AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH | THE PERFECT LOAF
From theperfectloaf.com
Estimated Reading Time 9 mins
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD - PINTEREST
From pinterest.com
8.7K pins
CAN I BAKE AN ARTISAN-STYLE BREAD RECIPE IN A LOAF PAN?
From breadtopia.com
PORRIDGE SOURDOUGH | THE MILLER'S DAUGHTER
From themillersdaughter.co.uk
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD | RECIPE | BREAD, …
From pinterest.co.uk
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD | RECIPE | BREAD, …
From pinterest.co.uk
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD | JANSCHOLL | COPY …
From copymethat.com
BLUE CORN SOURDOUGH! : R/SOURDOUGH - REDDIT.COM
From reddit.com
BREADTOPIA - CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH …
From facebook.com
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD | RECIPE
From pinterest.com
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD | RECIPE
From pinterest.com
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD - RECIPES
From forum.breadtopia.com
15 SOURDOUGH BREAD RECIPES-LITTLE SPROUTS LEARNING
From littlesproutslearning.co
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD - RECIPES
From forum.breadtopia.com
CORN PORRIDGE RECIPES ALL YOU NEED IS FOOD
From stevehacks.com
SOURDOUGH BREAD WITH OLIVE OIL AND BALSAMIC VINEGAR RECIPES
From newlyrecipes.com
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD - RECIPES
From forum.breadtopia.com
INGREDIENTS FOR CORN PORRIDGE BREAD - BREAD DOUGH, POLENTA, …
From pinterest.com
CORN PORRIDGE AND ROSEMARY SOURDOUGH BREAD RECIPES
From tfrecipes.com
Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »
You'll also love