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Thursday
Sep172009

Munched, gleefully


I failed. F-a-i-l-e-d. It was epic.

It was gnocchi.

Had you walked into my kitchen in the late-afternoon hours of Wednesday, September 16, 2009, you would have found me covered from hand-to-elbow with dough and in near exasperated tears, with every viable work surface buried under the detritus of my humiliation, my father at my side in a valiant effort to salvage the day, my husband on the phone patiently talking me down from my fit of pique and, in calm, even tones, assuring me that takeout would be more than fine for dinner.

I tell you, I can make gnocchi. Honestly. While not regularly enough to say often, I've made it enough times to consider myself passably adept. But this, this was a new, devil of a recipe. A recipe that wanted to take me down.

And boy, did it ever.

It went straight for the knees, pinned me to the mat and had me calling for Daddy. I won't go into too many details or point any flour-encrusted fingers, since I'm not entirely sure that the fault is that of the recipe or my own. Or a combination of the two. The blame may lie with the potatoes. Who knows.

I will tell you that the dough refused to come together in any semblance of a workable substance. I had a languid blob lounging smugly on my kitchen counter. No matter how much flour I fed it it would not be sated; it was still boundless, still a slowly-oozing, formless mass.

That's when I called in reinforcements.

We rallied, we prevailed. Somewhat. My father and I managed a handful of successful dumplings, those few sent into the boiling water, then tossed with softened butter and a handfuls of Parmesan. Optimistically, we each tried one.

It was a joyless mouthful. They tasted of defeat. Defeat and cheese.

So abject was I, I was tempted board up the kitchen and declare it all a lost cause. If it weren't for the Fig and Walnut Bread we had made earlier in the day, I might have scrapped any tattered remnants of faith I had in my culinary ability.

The bread was a riff on Julia Child's white bread that we make quite often, a fruit-filled version based on a combination of flavours I have done before. Enriched with milk and fragrant with honey, the sturdy crumb is the ideal sort to be wrapped around a swirl of dried figs, walnuts and the subtle, savoury presence of thyme. It is a bread to be cut into thick slices, toasted enough that you hear the fruit sizzle ever so slightly, slathered with sweet butter in lavish proportion and then munched, gleefully.

And we did exactly that, while we waited for the delivery man.

Fig and Walnut Bread with Thyme
Adapted from Julia Child's Homemade White Bread.

More than just saving my pride, the bread saved today - if it wasn't for the bread, I'd be here empty handed. And I hate to do that. So while this may have not been my intended offering, please accept it, with the admission that since this was an unplanned debut, I did not take notes as conscientiously as my usual. But we are all good enough friends that I hope that my best guess will suffice for now.

The loaf in question is already a thing of the past, and there has been another petitioned for the weekend; I will retry the recipe then, to double-check my recollection.

Saturday, September 19, 2009: I tested the recipe again last night, and made two changes - both pertaining to butter. I added the 2 tablespoons of butter to the milk/water mixture to reduce the number of steps, with no ill effects to the final bread. Surprisingly, I also decided it is better to forgo the smear of butter in the swirl since the fat causes the layers to separate, leading to loss of filling when the bread is sliced. Without the butter the dough gripped the figs and walnuts more firmly.

Ingredients
3/4 cup chopped walnuts
1/4-1/2 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves, chopped
fine grain sea salt, optional
1 cup water
1 1/4 cup milk
1/4 cup honey
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 teaspoon active dry yeast
6 cups all-purpose flour (or thereabouts)
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/2 cup muscovado sugar or dark brown sugar
1 cup chopped dried figs
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and cooled

In a medium skillet over medium heat, toast the walnuts for about 5 minutes, stirring often. Once the nuts are lightly-golden and fragrant remove immediately from the heat and into a bowl. Toss through with a sprinkling of fine sea salt, if using, and the chopped thyme. Set aside to cool.

In a small saucepan over medium-low heat, gently warm the water and milk. Add the honey, stirring to dissolve. Stir in the butter, heating gently until melted. The mixture should be warm, around 105-110°F. Pour liquids into the bowl of a stand mixer or a large bowl. Stir in the yeast and allow to stand for five minutes.

To the yeast, add 3 cups of the flour and the salt. With the dough hook attachment or by hand, mix to combine (if using a mixer, proceed on medium speed). Continuing to stir, add the remaining flour a little at a time, until the dough begins to pull away cleanly from the sides of the bowl; it should still be slightly sticky.

Turn the dough out onto a lightly-floured work surface and knead until smooth and elastic. The amount of time will depend on if you used a mixer or worked by hand, anywhere from 2-10 minutes. Place the dough in a large, lightly-greased bowl, turning the dough over to coat. Turn the dough right side up and cover loosely with plastic wrap or a tea towel. Set bowl in a warm, draft-free spot to rise until doubled in bulk, around 2 hours.

Butter two 8-by-4-inch loaf pans and set aside. Punch the dough down gently, then divide into two equal portions on a lightly-floured work surface. Taking one ball, roll out to a rectangle around 9-by-12-inches. Sprinkle half the sugar over the dough, leaving a thin border at all sides. Repeat with half of the figs and half of the toasted walnuts.

Start rolling the dough from the short end, forming a tight cylinder, pinching the seam together to seal. Bring just the edge of the ends of the roll up to enclose the sides and pinch to seal. Place the dough into one of the prepared pans. Repeat process with the second ball of dough.

Cover loaves loosely with plastic wrap or with tea towels, and allow to rise in a warm spot until doubled again in bulk, around 45-60 minutes. Preheat an oven to 375°F (190°C).

Brush the loaves with the remaining melted butter, and bake in the preheated oven for 35-40 minutes. The bread is done when it is golden brown and sounds hollow when tapped from the bottom. Turn loaves out immediately onto a rack, turning them right side up to cool.

Makes 2 loaves.

Notes:

• It is best to use a mild honey here, nothing with so much presence that it overshadows the mellow sweetness of the figs.
• Raisins, dates or dried cranberries would all be good substitutes for the figs, and resh rosemary for the thyme.
• For a straightforwardly-sweet filling replace the thyme with a generous sprinkling of cinnamon. Feel free to be generous with the muscovado as well.
• I scatter the figs and walnuts somewhat erratically; I think the uneven distribution results in a more interesting loaf. If you want a perfect coil of filling, be more precise.
• Zoë has a helpful photographic step-by-step of how to roll such breads on her (lovely, inspiring) site. Any of the doughs she mentions would be a fine match for this filling.

Reader Comments (30)

Oh, Tara, I know that taste of the defeat, that discovery of a devil recipe---and it's no good. I'm so happy you had this gorgeous loaf to tide you over.

September 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKristin

We all have those moments in the kitchen. It's hell and I know it. Luckily you had this delicious bread to help you through your moment:)

September 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterNutmeg Nanny

I have never tried gnocchi but I have had plenty of other defeating moments in the kitchen, so I understand. The bread looks delicious. I am a fig fiend, especially when paired with delicious spices and herbs like here. Sweet butter is also a great addition. :) Happy cooking.

September 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterEralda LT

You describe the crazy insane-ness of your frustrating culinary disappointment quite accurately. I've been there. I hate being there. I hope tomorrow is better. Please don't board up your kitchen!

September 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMama JJ

Oh I have been there. Culinary failure. I made a supposed to be a really good dumpling and it was such a mess.

Thanks Goodness to the fabulous bread!

September 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAnh

I am there more than I care to admit. But for each failure and disaproval shake of my husbands head, there spurs wild and crazy great creation. Just like you- gnocchi not working the way you imagined to a masterpiece loaf of bread!! I am saving this recipe! :)

September 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJennifer

What type of yeast did you use? I always use instant but I just wanted make sure I get the ratio right. This looks delicious.

Sorry for your gnocchi fail

September 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterWhitney

Kitchen life is full of ups and downs... But you seem to have done a great job with the bread though!

September 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKarine

Figs, Honey, Thyme, Walnut, Bread...5 of my favorite things all wrapped up in your delicious recipe. I absolutely can't wait to try this next week. Thank you for sharing!

I've never tried making gnocchi before, am quite terrified of it actually, but have had plenty of these moments before and always when I have company knocking on the door. I'm glad you had such a lovely loaf to wipe away the disappointment!

September 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAndrea [bella eats]

sorry to hear about the gnocchi episode, but my goodness - this bread more than makes up for it! i love hearty breads, especially with nuts and such. your loaf is simply gorgeous!

September 18, 2009 | Unregistered Commenter{kiss my spatula}

Kristin, is it not terrible when a dish can totally shake your faith in your capabilities? I love my husband for many reasons, one of which is his immediate instinct to blame the recipe - never me. Good man.

Nutmeg Nanny, thanks for the company in my misery!

Eralda LT, a fig fiend - my dear you're a woman after my own heart.

Mama JJ, I was back in the kitchen the next day, don't you worry. And this afternoon, I'm making more bread.

Anh, rather frustrating, no?

Thanks for that Jennifer!

Whitney, I use what is labelled "traditional" yeast, your typical Active Dry kind. It will not be entirely foamy after the 5 minutes of proofing, but you should see a bubble or two.

Thank you, Karine.

Hello Andrea! Shauna was talking about apple bread with rosemary, and I am really rather tempted to try that as well. If ever you want to try gnocchi, I adore Donna Hay's "cheat's gnocchi" (she also calls is ricotta gnocchi elsewhere). It is eggs, ricotta and flour, and they are unbelievably easy to make. They come out light and slightly tangy from the cheese.

{kiss my spatula}, the bread is soft and yielding, which I think compliments the fruit beautifully. At the same time, it has enough heft that it feels substantial - exactly what I was looking for.

September 18, 2009 | Unregistered Commentertara

Everyone is bound to have a bad day in the kitchen every once in a while. At least you know that you have that behind you now. I wish you happy baking in the future.

September 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAllison

So excited to have this recipe! I'm going to try my hand at this bread-baking business. Forget the gnocci, bread is where it's at.

September 18, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterkickpleat

I'm so sorry you had a failure, Tara. I find gnocchi impossible to make for some reason so I always buy them. I love the look of this bread - give me that over gnocchi any day!

September 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterDana

I'm sorry about your disaster. Not-so-secretly, I think it makes us all feel a little better about our own disasters.

And that Donna Hay Cheat Gnocchi sounds delightful. I'm all for cheating.

September 19, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterThe Leftoverst

What a sad gnocchi story! I'm so glad you could put failure aside (instead of closing your kitchen) and glory in your wonderful bread!

September 19, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterBarbara

oh this bread sounds so tasty! i think i might just make it tomorrow...

September 19, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterkelly

Bread looks soooo good. Shame about the gnocchi! It's really crushing when something fails so badly in the kitchen!

September 20, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterY

Allison, thanks so much for the positivity!

Jeanette, I think I could possibly live by bread alone. It's a torrid affair we're having. Please let me know if it works out for you.

Dana, thanks so much my friend.

The Leftoverst, if I can help just one person feel better through my comedic failure, then my work is done. That Donna Hay recipe is available http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=donna+hay+ricotta+gnocchi&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8" rel="nofollow">online, and is truly forgiving.

Thank you, Barbara!

Did you try it, kelly?

Y, thanks for the sympathy - it was such a catastprophe, I can't even tell you. I didn't even face the dishes until the next morning as I couldn't stand to look at the dough that night. It was that bad. I may have drowned my sorrows in bread. Maybe.

September 21, 2009 | Unregistered Commentertara

This looks absolutely lovely. I'd take this over impossible gnocchi any day!

September 21, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterElizabeth

I've been to that dark place of gnocchi disasters more times than I would like to remember - dough in my hair, all over the kitchen, going hungry, the depressing taste of potato balls in your mouth, the frustration...I have had some success though so always end up perservering and optimitically going back for more.

One successful attempt years ago that is really worth trying, as it's so easy and so delicious, was this one by Ursula Ferrigno:

Ricotta Gnocchi

300g ricotta cheese
85g Italian '00' plain flour, plus extra for dusting
1 garlic clove, peeled and crushed
2 large egg yolks
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
a little freshly grated nutmeg

to cook and serve:
200g tasty cherry tomatoes, halved
2 tsp peperoncino (dried chilli)
2 tbs olive oil
a handful of fresh basil leaves, torn
Parmesan, grated, to taste

Mix all the main ingredients together in a bowl. Knead lightly on a floured surface. Roll into a sausage-shaped log the thickness of your little finger. Cut at an angle to create shapes the length of the first joint of your index finger.

Boil the gnocchi in batches in a large pan of boiling salted water. When they rise to the top of the pan, skim out into a frying pan.

Add the cherry tomatoes, peperoncino and olive oil to the frying pan and saute until the gnocchi are stained with tomato. Serve with torn basil and grated Parmesan.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2004/sep/12/foodanddrink.features8

September 22, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterLucie

Oh yum. Gnocchi is sometimes hell to make!

September 22, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterNicomi "Nix" Turner

Perfection. A thick slice of this bread with some great blue cheese.Heaven.

September 22, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterCherie

I have been there so many times. Those are times when I wish I had patience, or that I didn't over-react really as often as I do.

While the experience may not have been ideal, your write up of it was very well crafted! I relly enjoyed reading this post.

September 23, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAllison Arevalo

I feel like I have received a surprise present at the bottom of a Christmas stocking! I have just discovered your blog and love it already. Your bread looks delicious.. and will be my inspiration to toy with yeast!

September 23, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterElaine@MessyKitchen

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