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yeast

Cinnamon Swirl Bread

January 2, 2021 by chrissy@mythankfultable.com

I must confess, I am the only American who did not embrace a sourdough starter during this pandemic. Don’t get me wrong, I can and do make my own kombucha, I am all about sourcing local ingredients and making things from scratch. (I learned this from my ex, before I met the father of my children, I had never made a cake that didn’t come from a box.) However, in the midst of all that has been going on in the world, I just couldn’t wrap my head around the nurturing of a starter. So, we were a non-homemade bread household…sigh. (Let’s be honest if that was the worst thing in the last nine months? there needs to be a paradigm shift).

In one of my favorite podcasts, the last question the host asks each guest is, “What is saving your life right now.” The response can be anything from something serious to something silly. My response, would be bread. Yes the scale reflects this but darn it, bread has made me happy. I have been buying artisanal bread at my grocery store. Hello toast. Hello grilled cheese. Hello pretty sandwiches for breakfast and lunch. Bread has been a beautiful part of every day. I am not sorry.

This bread, however, I did make all by myself. It did not require a starter, it made two perfect loaves (I realize I do not have proper bread pans with the exception of those disposable ones), and it was pretty simple. My kitchenmaid is showing signs of wear, so I switched over from the dough hook to hand kneading and that was therapeutic as well.

It is winter in New England, and even though we haven’t had too much snow yet, the cold has arrived for sure. So for me the idea of setting my oven to a warm temperature, making sure there is an environment where my baby bread can double in size, and slicing into a freshly baked loaf all have an allure. I am not really a fan of cinnamon raisin bread, but straight up cinnamon bread is beautiful.

Because of the timing, I also used the remainder of the bread to make my Christmas morning casserole (overnight French toast with blueberries and cream cheese). I think it was extra special this year, using my own cinnamon bread. And hey, if we didn’t need Christmas morning to be a little more special this year (for those of use who celebrate), when would we? I also believe in the sharing of baked goods, which has made this school year so weird. No Friday morning breakfasts, no cookies to bring to the lunchroom, no cinnamon rolls for PD days. I am like a wandering baker. This recipe makes two beautiful loaves, so get to baking and gift someone the other loaf. It will be good for both the receiver and the giver. I promise.

In these crazy times when we are doing our best to make the world safe and do good things, why not make cinnamon bread? You’d be surprised how comforting it is for the soul. Then, if you are like me, go take a big long walk so your clothes still fit. (Insert praying hands emoji here).

As always, I hope you enjoy this recipe, which I straight up took from Taste of Home (credit is given in the recipe link) and thank you for coming to the table.

love,

Chrissy

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Cinnamon Swirl Bread

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The original recipe for this bread is from Taste of Home. I changed the directions only in using more cinnamon in the mix. It is a simple, flavorful bread recipe with a delightful cinnamon swirl. It’s one of those recipes that will be baked again and again.

  • Author: Taste of Home

Ingredients

Scale
  • 2 Packages of Active Dry Yeast 
  • 1/3 Cup Warm Water (110*)
  • 1 Cup Warm Milk (110*)
  • 1 Cup of Sugar, divided
  • 2 Large Eggs, room temperature
  • 6 Tablespoons Butter, softened
  • 1 1/2 Teaspoons Salt
  • 5 1/2–6 Cups of Flour
  • 4 Tablespoons Cinnamon

Instructions

  1. In a large bowl, dissolve yeast in warm water (I usually mix in a few tablespoons of sugar to bloom the yeast).
  2. Add milk, 1/2 Cup Sugar, Eggs, Butter, Salt, and 3 Cups of Flour. Stir in enough of the remaining flour to form a soft dough.
  3. Turn dough onto a floured surface, knead until smooth and elastic. (6-8 minutes). Place in a greased bowl, turning once to oil the surface of the dough. Cover, set to rise in a warm place until it is doubled in size (one hour).
  4. Mix Cinnamon and remaining sugar. Punch down dough and divided into two parts. Roll each portion into a rectangle measuring approximately 8 x 18 inches.
  5. Sprinkle Sugar/Cinnamon mixture within 1/2 inch of the edge. 
  6. Roll up each dough jelly roll/cinnamon roll style, starting at the short edge and pinch to seal.
  7. Place each roll of dough into a greased loaf pan, seam side down.
  8. Cover breads with damp kitchen towels and set to rise in a warm spot. (1 1/2 hours) until doubled in size.
  9. Preheat oven to 350*
  10. Bake breads until golden brown 30-35 minutes.
  11. Remove from pans to wire racks to cool.

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Posted in: My Story Tagged: Cinnamon, Dough, sugar, swirl, yeast

Overnight Easy Artisinal Bread

March 13, 2018 by chrissy@mythankfultable.com

Overnight artisanal Bread

You know how you can be really good at some things in a day but not good at others? That’s how the blog has been for the last few weeks. Between sinus infections and wrapping up sports and school and more storms (when will winter end?), the blog has been the thing I have let go.

I have managed to be a mom, housecleaner, meal preparer, Language Arts Consultant, daughter and friend. I have headed back to the gym and hot yoga classes. I bought a cold press juicer. So, in some ways, I am doing good things. I. Am. Just. Not. Writing.

Which is hard, because the whole point of this blog was incorporate two great loves and some of me and make food magic while learning how to keep up with technology and plug-ins and whatnot. It’s a learning curve I put myself on willingly, so to put it aside is hard. I get the blog-guilt. Which, is not unlike mom-guilt.

What I have kept doing, is cooking, photographing, and editing photos. So, like the days when you only wash and dry the laundry but don’t fold it (Some people do this). I am just getting to the final stage now.

This bread. Oh bread, if you were one last meal you would be enough. Bread is the sound and smell and warmth of all things good. I am not allergic to gluten, obviously. If I was, I would be in love with something else. But for me, bread would be my “If you could only have one food forever what would it be?” food.

I don’t mind kneading, I have just started to hand the kneading part over to my dough hook and kitchen aid, but this bread…Oh this glorious bread needs nothing. Except, time.

This bread is mixed the night before. Left somewhere warm overnight; the longer the better, then shaped into a ball and placed in a casserole dish in the oven and baked. It is that simple.

When you take this bread out of the oven it sings to you. A series of cracks and pops and you think to yourself, “I am amazing.” and you are.

When I make this bread, my son comes out from whatever hidey-hole-man-cave he has

 

hidden himself in and grabs a knife for the butter. He stands at my kitchen counter and makes crumbs and smiles because he has the bread bug too. So, for me, this bread has more magic – because to make your child smile is a gift on any day.  To make my son smile is a small miracle. So bake bread I will.

In New England we are getting yet another nor’easter tomorrow (sigh), and I will be starting this bread tonight so tomorrow afternoon, snow day or not (we will be I school until almost July) we will have bread. It will be a gift, my house will smell wonderful and my son will be happy. I think you should bake this bread too.

I hope you enjoy this recipe, and as always, thank you for coming to the table!

Chrissy

Click below for a printable recipe!

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Overnight Easy Artisinal Bread

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This overnight artisanal bread delivers all of the promise of bread without the hard work. Recipe from The Baker Chick via Simply So Good.

  • Author: chrissy@mythankfultable.com

Ingredients

Scale
  • 2 Packets Active Dry Yeast
  • 1 Tablespoon of Sugar
  • 1 1/2 Cups Lukewarm Water
  • 3 Cups of Artisinal or All Purpose Flour
  • 2 Teaspoons of Kosher Salt

Instructions

  1. Dissolve packets of yeast into lukewarm water, and add sugar.
  2. Stir mixture and allow yeast to bloom.
  3. When the yeast mixture has a soft, light bubbly surface, combine with flour and salt.
  4. Combine mixture and place in a bowl. Place somewhere warm and cover with either plastic wrap or a warm, moist towel (I use a bartender towel for this).
  5. Allow dough to sit for 8-24 hours. It will rise and get bubbly.
  6. Preheat oven to 450* and place dutch oven or casserole dish in the oven to preheat.
  7. Turn dough onto a well floured surface and shape into a ball. Allow to rest.
  8. When the dutch oven has preheated, carefully remove and place dough into it.
  9. Return to oven and cover with lid for 30 minutes.
  10. Remove lid and continue to bake for an additional 7-15 minutes.

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Posted in: bread, My Story Tagged: Bread, Easy, Overnight Artisinal Bread, yeast, Yeast Dough

Late Night Focaccia with Jacob and Being a Mama Bear

January 21, 2018 by chrissy@mythankfultable.com
Focaccia Bread

About four years ago I wrote a paper for my MFA about my son, Jacob. He is a mixture of poetry and chaos. He is the kid that will run into the ice-cold ocean without hesitation. He is my grumpy-hoodie-wearing, grab-all-the-groceries-from-my-car-in-one-trip-kid. He is the kid who may not want to talk before school, but never leaves the house without saying, “love you.” We may approach life differently, but every day I see myself as well as his father in that kid. I am fiercely in love with that boy. He was the first to hear my heart beat from the inside. 

Jake’s Focaccia

The life lesson I have learned about my son is: the difference between poetry and chaos is cadence. It’s how you time things, how you shape things, how you let things rest for a bit. Which is also, a lot like making bread.

There are some mean people in this world. People who feel better when they judge or make other people feel inferior. People who feel they are entitled to say or do what they want when they want to unleash their misplaced anger on others.

I have had enough life experience to nod my head or acknowledge position, to do the right thing and to show kindness, and then there is that time when you are just done. And, that is when it involves my children.

I am all about “it takes a village.” I expect people who love my children to admonish them, if necessary. My friends know they are my fill in- that is a relationship based on trust and time. They have invested in my children’s lives, know who they are and who their Mom wants them to be. It is part of family, grafted or blood. We take care of each other.

I understand that I am far from the perfect parent and that I have made mistakes. Those are the things I replay in my mind, the “Should I have…” or the “Maybe if I didn’t…” But the bottom line is, I knew what it meant to have children before I had them, and I am a key player, not a sideliner. From single parenting as a result of divorce to now single parenting as my ex has passed, I am in this game. This long, exhausting, but ever so rewarding game of parenthood.

I tell my kids that you don’t stop loving or expecting or protecting because they get older and more responsible. It just doesn’t turn off. I never turns off.

So, when my child gets verbally lambasted whether he/she deserved correction from another adult or not, I am ever impressed when he/she does the right thing. When they show respect, follow instruction, chose the right path, I think, “Well all right, I have done a good job after all.”

However;

I have to say this, because as a mom, I may not have done the right thing if I had been there to see it happen.

I might have said all the things I think in my head but filter on a good day.

Maybe, I would have verbally leveled that person like they did my kid, and they could deal with the aftermath.

I might have even enjoyed it.

I don’t think Mama Bears look back at the people who put their cubs in danger and feel remorse.

Every day as an educator, I  ask myself, “How would I want a teacher to treat my kids in this situation?” If you are lucky enough to have had amazing teachers for your children, my bet is, they ask themselves the same question. That isn’t a skill taught in college, but some people who spend time with developing hearts and minds know enough to know be a guide, or a mentor, or even a role model. They step out of themselves to see the perspective of another before acting.

And then, as a parent, you know your children will encounter the garden variety ass, who feels entitled to “parent” your child. They like the way it feels when they reduce someone else’s kid to where they think he or she should be.

Especially, when they look and see that you aren’t around to see you aren’t there to see this behavior? You know the type. Sadly, me too.

Transition to bread for a moment: I know bread is evil. I got the memo. It has carbs and gluten and essentially destroys the universe. Blah, blah. So do mean people.

Here’s the beauty of bread. You take yeast and water and create life. You add flour, oil, salt. You stir and knead and move and flip it over and pound and then carefully place it into an oiled bowl. You lovingly run a clean cloth under hot water, wring it out, and fold it over the bread. You place it somewhere warm. You let it rise.  You knead it again and allow it to rise a second time. And then, you bake perfection.

So, when my son asked me to make focaccia after supper one night, and even found the recipe on-line to do make it happen, I stayed up late to coach the baker I didn’t know existed in my kid.

We used Anne Burnell’s recipe from the food network. Simple-salted dough that is doused in olive oil and set to rise in two sessions, dimpled with finger holes, and baked to a golden brown.

As a mom, I can’t tell you the joy of watching my son follow the directions, and to see him knead the bread and actually like the cadence of kneading the flour and the dough on the board. As a baker, who does use the kitchen for therapy, I am more than happy to know he too will have this outlet, should he choose.

We didn’t need to make bread. I have bread. What we did need, was time together. Time to create poetry out of chaos.

It was well past my bedtime when the focaccia came out of the oven and I admit we did not wait for it to cool before I cut into it.

I know dipping focaccia in olive oil and sea salt and cracked pepper around ten thirty at night is a bad dietary choice. I know it is not calorie friendly. I know all of the things and why it was a bad idea.

But sometimes, you stand in the kitchen with your son who has been through some stuff, and you eat the bread he baked because it is a celebration of what he can do. To create something amazing in the midst of brokenness. You embrace the poetry of your kid and rip off a piece of golden salty amazingness. You leave the dishes on the counter and you talk. And you thank God for the moment you have been able to capture in your heart.

I ride my kids hard. I am always the tough parent, just by reality dictating that I must be the consequence giver and the line toe-er. I have rules and expectations because I am the mom. That is my job. MINE.

I feel like in a world where people feel compelled and entitled to spout their verbal garbage, (can I get an amen?) our kids should at least have a way to combat the wounds inflicted. Bullies come in all sizes. Some even smile at you when they say hello.

All that to say, I am glad my kids know that even when the outside world can be unkind, they can create and make beautiful things. If I have taught them to respect people, to follow rules, to be kind to others, and even bake bread, they too can make poetry out of chaos.

I don’t think people intentionally hurt, or at least I would like to believe it, but I am wrong. Some people are really that ugly on the inside. And while as a grown up I know it’s really their issues, I can’t help but wonder. I can’t protect my kids from everything, but God help you if it warrants my stepping in. I am raising children in an imperfect world, as an imperfect parent, but my love is strong. My love is big, and hopefully, my kids know I have their back.

With Momma love, and perfect bread, the world can be a better place.

I hope you enjoy this recipe, and as always, thank you for coming to the table!

Chrissy

Click below for a printable recipe

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Late Night Focaccia with Jacob

Focaccia Bread
Print Recipe

Chef Anne Burrell’s recipe for Focaccia Bread is easy and delicious. It also makes for an excellent late night snack with your favorite teenager.

  • Author: chrissy@mythankfultable.com

Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 3/4 cups warm water
  • 1 package active dry yeast
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 5 cups all-purpose flour, plus additional for kneading
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt, plus coarse sea salt, for sprinkling
  • 1 cup extra-virgin olive oil, divided

Instructions

  1. Combine warm water, yeast and sugar in a small bowl. Put the bowl in a warm, not hot or cool, place until the yeast blooms, at least 15 minutes.
  2. In the bowl of a mixer, using a dough hook, combine the flour, 1 tablespoon of kosher salt, 1/2 cup olive oil together.
  3. Slowly add the yeast mixture and combine on low speed.
  4. Once the dough has come together, continue to knead for 5 to 6 minutes on a medium speed until it becomes smooth and soft.
  5. Transfer the dough to a clean, lightly floured surface, then knead it by hand for five minutes.
  6. Lightly oil the inside of a bowl with olive oil and place dough inside, turning to coat. Cover it with a damp cloth and put it in a warm place until the dough has doubled in size, at least 1 hour.
  7. Coat a jelly roll pan with the remaining 1/2 cup olive oil.
  8. Put the dough onto the jelly roll pan and begin pressing it out to fit the size of the pan. Turn the dough over to coat the other side with the olive oil. Continue to stretch the dough to fit the pan.
  9. Make finger hole impressions all the way through the dough.
  10. Put the dough in the warm place until it has doubled in size, about 1 hour. While the dough is rising a second time, preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
  11. Give a generous sprinkle of seas salt over the top of the focaccia.
  12. Lightly drizzle a little oil on top.Bake the dough until the top of the loaf is golden brown, about 25 to 30 minutes. Remove the focaccia from the oven and let it cool before cutting and serving.

Did you make this recipe?

Share a photo and tag us — we can't wait to see what you've made!

 

 

 

Posted in: bread, My Story, Recipes Tagged: Bread, Focaccia, Food Network Recipe, Olive Oil, Salt, yeast

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