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Yeast Dough

Rosemary Parmesan Skillet Bread

March 26, 2018 by chrissy@mythankfultable.com

Rosemary Parmesan Skillet Bread

When my son was almost a year old, I remember reaching into the pockets of my big bathrobe and discovering about twenty cheerios and a binkie (pacifier). I stood still and thought to myself, “Well, I guess I am officially a mom.”

To me, the day I baked bread and it not only smelled like heaven but looked and tasted divine, I decided I was a baker.

I make mistakes when I bake. Sometimes I pour in butterscotch chips instead of peanut butter chips and make a happy little accidents. Sometimes I go off recipe and double the zest or the extract and blaze my own trail. But bread? the beauty of bread is that it starts as a promise and grows. There is (a little) room for imperfection.

I think bread is like faith. You have to wait and see. You feed it, you give it a warm place to grow, and you shape it.

Rosemary Parmesan Skillet Bread

You place it in the fire and you wait for it to become something real.

This bread, like all good things, takes time. However, it is pretty simple as far as labor goes. Mix the ingredients, cover and place somewhere warm, shape, and bake. It bakes in a cast iron skillet in the oven , which is such a great idea.

Filled with rosemary, brushed with olive oil and topped with more rosemary and parmesan cheese, This gorgeous crusty loaf of bread has a beautiful crumb and the flavor of rosemary just carries through the whole loaf.

Now,

Rosemary Parmesan Skillet Bread

I do grow my own rosemary. I have two small plants that every year I marvel that they return. They technically shouldn’t because of my zone, but maybe where they are located in my yard just has magic, because last year I harvested some. Another neat fact is that I don’t use a lot of rosemary in my cooking, so, two little plants make more than enough for this bread and more.

My children do not like things in their bread. No to chunks or seeds or spices. No to raisins. No to herbs. But this bread is too good for me not to make because the kids I brought into this world can’t appreciate it.

Make this with French Onion Soup and use the bread instead of croutons. Make this when it snows and the warm Rosemary and Parmesan will make shoveling and snow removal worth it. It can be paired with salad, tomato soup, beef stew, made into grilled cheese sandwiches, oh, the list goes on.

Rosemary Parmesan Skillet Bread

 

What I love about homemade bread is the fact that you know exactly what goes into it. Flour. Yeast. Salt. Water. Sugar to feed the yeast if you are like me and want to make sure it blooms. Time. Love. Pretty simple stuff.

I use a basic AP Flour but have since purchased Artisanal Flour (More expensive and fancier bag) and have noticed little difference. You can play with heartier flours, but it will impact the density and consistency of the bread.

Rosemary Parmesan Skillet BreadI can not express how proud you will be when you take this out of the oven. Like those cheerios, it will rename you as a baker, for sure.

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

ChrissyRosemary Parmesan Skillet Bread

Click below for a printable recipe!

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Rosemary Parmesan Skilled Bread

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Original recipe from www.handletheheat.com with a few modifications by yours truly. So delicious, the combination of rosemary and parmesan make this the perfect accompaniment to soup or salad, or stand alone with or without butter!

  • Author: chrissy@mythankfultable.com

Ingredients

Scale
  • 2 Cups of Lukewarm Water
  • One Packet of Instant Yeast (2 1/4 Teaspoons)
  • 4 1/2 Cup Bread Flour
  • 3 Tablespoons dried Rosemary (I did not chop this- I crumbled it in my hand to both make the dried rosemary into smaller pieces and release natural oils.
  • 1 1/2 Teaspoon Salt
  • 3 Tablespoons Olive Oil
  • 1/3 Cup Freshly grated Parmesan Cheese

Instructions

  1. Place yeast and warm water in a large mixing bowl.
  2. Combine flour slowly, stirring with a wooden spoon or plastic spatula.
  3. Incorporate rosemary, salt, and mix until combined.
  4. Cover bread dough with a clean, warm, damp towel and leave in a warm spot to double in size. (I left mine over night, but it was ready for the next step in an hour or so).
  5. Place two tablespoons of olive oil in the cast iron skillet, making sure to oil the surfaces where the bread dough will touch.
  6. With floured hands, remove dough from the bowl, shape into a ball, and place in the oiled skillet.
  7. Preheat oven to 400*
  8. Allow bread dough to rise a second time in the skillet, approximately 30 minutes.
  9. Right before placing dough in the oven, pour remaining olive oil on the dough and brush to cover the top surface.
  10. Make a slash on the top of the bread in an X shape with a sharp knife.
  11. Sprinkle additional rosemary on top of the bread.
  12. Bake in a 400* for 25 minutes.
  13. Pull Bread out of the oven, sprinkle liberally with the Parmesan cheese, and return to the oven.
  14. Bake for an additional 20-25 minutes, when golden brown.

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Posted in: bread, Recipes Tagged: Bread, Parmesan, Rosemary, Skillet Bread, Yeast Dough

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!

Print

Overnight Easy Artisinal Bread

Print Recipe

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.

Did you make this recipe?

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

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