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Isis recipe request Amy????? Thank you Amy

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hahahah ***** Better late than never and I'm so pleased you sent

this to me.

It's sounds very good and like one I can master.

Thank you very much,

Isis

 

 

 

, " Amy " <sandpiperhiker

wrote:

>

> > I know you bake bread, do you have a rustic roll recipe

> > that isn't too hard? I'm not a real experienced breadmaker

> > but I probably could master a rustic roll. I would like a recipe

> > calling for seeds on top.

> > TIA,

> > Isis

>

> Whew this is old... but here ya go! I adapted this to be seedy from

> " The Italian Baker " by Carol Field and it worked well. Hope you

like

> it! They are somewhat flat and pillow-shaped rolls, easier to shape

> for beginners than a " rolled " roll. They are also sized for a

> sandwich, so if you want to use them for dinner - go with maybe 3-

or

> 4-inch squares, pressing the rectangle to the appropriate width

before

> you cut.

>

> Seedy Pane Rustico

> makes 8 large rolls

>

> 1/2 c cracked hard wheat berries

> 3/4 c unbleached all-purpose flour (or the new white whole wheat is

nice)

> 2 1/2 tsp active dry yeast

> 1 c warm water (110*F)

> 2 1/4 c whole wheat flour

> 1 tbsp salt

> unbleached all purpose flour for kneading

> seeds of your choice: sesame, poppy, sunflower, or a mix...

>

> Soak the wheat berries in cold water for 1 to 3 days or pour boiling

> water over the berries and let stand 6 to 8 hours. Drain the wheat

> berries and process the berries and all-purpose flour in a food

> processor or blender just until caorsely chopped. If too finely

> chopped, the berries won't be crunchy.

>

> Stir the yeast into the warm water in a mixing bowl; let stand until

> creamy, about 10 minutes. Stir in the berry mixture. Mix the whole

> wheat flour and salt and stir 2 cups at a time into the yeast

mixture.

> Stir until the dough is stiff and sticky. Knead on a surface floured

> with all-purpose flour until dough is firm and elastic, but still

> slightly tacky, 8 to 10 minutes.

>

> First rise: Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, cover tightly

> with plastic wrap, and let rise until doubled, about 2 hours.

>

> Shaping and second rise: Punch the dough down on a lightly floured

> surface and knead briefly. Shape into a long rectangle by flattening

> it with your forearm (your hand works too, but it's slower!). Cut

into

> eight 5-inch squares (a bench knife** is best for this if you have

one

> - just press to cut, no sawing). Place on a lightly oiled baking

sheet

> (here is where I would use my silicone baking sheet liner).

*Lightly*

> brush the " pillows " with water and sprinkle with seeds; very gently

> pat the seeds into the dough. Cover with a clean towel and let rise

> until well-puffed and almost doubled, about 1 3/4 hours.

>

> Baking: Heat oven to 450*F. Bake 10 minutes, spraying once with

water

> early, maybe 3 minutes in. Reduce the heat to 350*F and bake 15

> minutes longer. Cool completely on racks.

>

>

> **I've had many bench knives over the years, and here's a picture of

> my favorite one. The handle is extremely comfortable and it's a joy

> to use. http://tinyurl.com/z6lnc

>

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