It’s a cool and silent night with incessant rains over the
weekend. Ears are now attuned to the pitter patter of the rain on window glass,
ledge and on leaves. The murmur of water spouting out of the drainpipe is
soothing and sleep inducing like a lullaby. Eyes heavy, we turn off the lights
to retire for the night. Barely had we slipped into the sweet slumber when the
boisterous croaking of frogs shredded the silence of the night. “Must be a bull
frog”, muttered my daughter, miffed up at being disturbed.
Next morning we discovered a multitude of toad spawn firmly
and safely enclosed in a jelly in our pond. Bare stems of a curry leaf plant
close by revealed some fattened caterpillars and some more butterflies in the
making.
Warm aroma of leaf mold
suffuses the air as we carefully tread on the wet ground to check the movement
perceived behind the bushes and
lo!……..we discover a majestic crow pheasant foraging in the mound of leaves and
multifarious vegetation that springs up
after rains.
This is the second Crow Pheasant sighting of the year.
The yeasty aroma of freshly bread makes me rush back to the
kitchen where my Rustic Potato Loaves are being baked for the dinner.
Rustic Potato Rolls
The recipe is
from Leslie Mackie, from the book Baking with Julia. I have adapted the recipe
from here.
In the recipe, the rolls are baked in a baking stone. I have
used my baking tray. The recipe has a spoonful of dill added to the dough. I
have added oregano. Loaves have to be transferred to the baking tray with great
care. They should be placed seam side up.
Ingredients
4 ¾ cup all-purpose flour
3 medium size potatoes (Boiled, cooled and mashed)
2 ¼ teaspoons instant dry yeast
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 teaspoons salt
½ cup warm water plus a little more (reserve water from
boiling potatoes)
1 teaspoon dry oregano or mixed herbs or fresh herbs of your choice
Method
Dissolve yeast in ½ cup warm water. Add mashed potatoes, oil
and salt. Add flour 1 cup at a time. Knead
well. Keep adding water if required. The dough will feel dry initially but will
come together soon. Knead for 8 to 10 minutes till supple, soft and slightly
sticky but not wet.
Place dough in an oiled bowl. Cover and let rise for 30
minutes. It may not double in size, but will rise noticeably.
Preheat oven to 190 degrees C.
Punch lightly and cut the dough into two equal halves. Take
one half, flatten, start rolling from one end until almost to the other end,
stretch gently, dust its edges with flour and finish rolling. Roll back and
forth to taper the ends. Repeat with the other piece.
Place dough on a parchment paper, seam side down. Cover with
a kitchen towel, leave to rise for 20 minutes.
Before placing the baking tray in the oven, throw three ice
cubes onto the oven’s flour, shut the door.
Roll the dough onto greased baking tray carefully, seam side
up. Slide in the baking tray. Throw in some more ice cubes. Bake for 45 to 50
minutes or till the loaves turn golden brown. Turn the loaves so that they are
evenly browned.
Remove from the oven and cool in the rack.
Linking to Vegan Thursdays and Yeastspotting and Twelve Loaves
This baking adventure of bread and summer herbs is for our #TwelveLoaves August challenge!
very well made
ReplyDeleteWow! Potato bread?! That is interesting and the shape of the dough is so simple yet pretty. I am going to mark this and hope to make this some day soon :)
ReplyDeleteThat looks really delicious, and thanks once more for the lovely description of life in your part of the world @_
ReplyDeleteOooh, I've made this bread and love it. Your photos are so amazing.
ReplyDeleteI love the frogs, toads, caterpillars, that magnificent crow pheasant but especially this lovely rustic bread. Any bread with potato in is going to be special but this one makes me want to build a pizza oven and get cracking baking it outside. I love your end of summer vegetation and would imagine it grows very quickly Namita. I get a real kick out of looking at what is extremely exotic garden varieties here but that are just "garden" there. Thank you for this amazing recipe. Brunhilda is still going strong and hasn't gone out since late April so is doing a wonderful job and this potato bread might be in her immediate future. She might not be the same as an outdoor pizza oven but she is a really good second best ;)
ReplyDeleteoh my ... this sounds lovely!
ReplyDeleteGreat choice for the August #TwelveLoaves theme!
Thank You Kimberly!
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