Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Bakey McBakerson

I think part of my current addiction to all things baking-related is also pregnancy-related (when I was pregnant with Isla I baked constantly. Something about nurturing maybe?) but not entirely.

Yes, I still bake sweet things (current favourites of the house: date loaf, date scones, muesli bars, apple and rhubarb crumble) but I've also started baking our own bread. I hope that we can stop buying shop bread altogether shortly, as I'm definitely getting better and faster at making it, and I hate the thought of the preservatives/sugar/salt/etc in even "premium" commercial bread. (The local bakehouse is organic, but expensive too, so that's a no to Mr Organic Sourdough).

Anyway, today I made my first loaf using a new recipe, and it was freaking delicious. Like that kind of delicious that will ruin all other breads eaten hereafter. It's just a basic white loaf, so not great on the GI scale, although I plan on trying it as wholemeal, and maybe adding some seeds to it next time. Chia seeds are reportedly awesome for you, so maybe some of those?

White bread image from here. Because mine was butt-ugly.
Anyway, here's the recipe, as taken from Taste. Written by Anneka Manning (1998) and adapted based on users comments.

PREPARATION: 20min
COOKING: 20-30min
MAKES: 12 slices-ish
INGREDIENTS:
  • Melted butter, for greasing and brushing
  • 500g (3 1/3 cups) plain flour
  • 2 tsp (7g/1 sachet) dried yeast
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 375mls (1 1/2 cups) lukewarm water
  • Extra water, for brushing
  • 1 tsp poppy seeds, for sprinkling
METHOD:
  1. Brush a 10 x 20cm (base measurement) loaf pan with the melted butter to lightly grease.
  2. Place the plain flour, yeast and salt in a large bowl and mix well to combine. Make a well in the centre and add the water to the dry ingredients. The water needs to be lukewarm - if the water is too hot, it can kill the yeast.
  3. Use a wooden spoon to stir until combined and then use your hands to bring the dough together in the bowl.
  4. Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead for 8-10 minutes or until smooth and elastic. (The best way to knead is to use the heel of your hand to push the dough away from you and then lift it with your fingertips and fold it over itself towards you. Turn the dough a quarter turn and repeat.) You can tell when the dough has been kneaded enough by pressing your finger into the surface of the dough - if it springs back, it has been kneaded sufficiently. If the dough hasn't been kneaded enough, the resulting bread will have a holey, crumbly texture and poor structure.
  5. Shape the dough into a ball. Brush a large bowl with the melted butter to grease. Place the dough into the bowl and turn it over to lightly coat the dough surface with the butter. This will stop the surface of the dough drying out as it stands, which can affect the rising process. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a damp tea towel and then place it in a warm, draught-free place to allow the dough to rise. The ideal temperature for rising bread dough is around 30°C.
  6. Leave the dough in this spot until it is double its size. This quantity of bread dough should take between 45-75 minutes to double in size. When the dough is ready, it will retaining a finger imprint when lightly pressed. If left to rise for too long, the bread texture will be uneven and have large holes. If not left for long enough, it will have a heavy, dense texture.
  7. Once the dough has doubled in size. Punch it down in the centre with your fist.
  8. Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead again for 2-3 minutes or until smooth and elastic and returned to its original size.
  9. Preheat oven to 200°C.
  10. Divide the dough into 2 equal portions and shape each into a smooth round. Place the portions of dough side by side in the greased loaf pan. Brush lightly with the melted butter. Stand the pan in a warm, draught-free place, as before, for about 30 minutes or until the dough has risen about 1cm above the top of the pan.
  11. Gently brush the loaf with a little water and then sprinkle with the poppy seeds. Bake in preheated oven for 30 minutes or until golden and cooked through. The best way to tell when the loaf of bread is cooked is to tap it on the base with your knuckle - if it sounds hollow, it is cooked.
  12. Turn the loaf immediately onto a wire rack and allow to cool. If left in the pan, the loaf will sweat and the crust will become soft.

  13. Once cool, store the loaf in a well-ventilated place at room temperature. This bread is best eaten on the day it is made. However, it makes great toast 1-2 days later. Make any stale leftovers into breadcrumbs and freeze in a sealed freezer bag to have on hand for later use.

I just ate some of this loaf with mashed avocado, salt and pepper for lunch, and it was genuinely delish. Hope you enjoy. 

x

Things I Have Done


When I started thinking about living life more lavender (twee alert!), I was overwhelmed with how much I could do. In fact, I was so overwhelmed that I did nothing instead. Information overload and all that.

It wasn't until I re-read A Slice of Organic Life that I started to think in small chunks. And those chunks were things I could actually manage.

True to form, I still ended up getting way over-excited and decided I would become the permaculture-organic-make-or-grow-everything-myself Queen. But I have since settled back down and decided that any improvements we make are still improvements, and besides, I can't sew to save my life so there is no way I could possibly make everything.

The best way for me to tackle information-overload-induced procrastination is by doing one thing at a time. So weekly, or more regualrly perhaps, I'll provide a post with a you-can-do-it-now tip. Sometimes they'll be big, sometimes they'll be small, but you can almost always do it now and improve your LQ (Lavender Quotient).

So if you're looking for one thing you can do right now to improve your LQ, make it this:

Check out what you can and can't recycle 
in your local council area. 

Recycling Near You is such a cool, simple concept (Sorry, this one is Australia only at this stage). Just pop your postcode in and it tells you straight away info like what you can/can't recycle in your council bins, what your hard rubbish nights are, links to council documents, etc.

Mobius Symbol. From Bless Designs.
Again, I'm in danger of exposing what an enormous dork I am, but I was so excited to get a definitive answer to the question of what exactly I can recycle. I was so stoked to find out that any plastics from the laundry, kitchen and bathroom can be recycled by my council (sans lids and not including clingwrap) as well as the fact that the envelopes I receive on a daily basis with the plastic windows can also be chucked in with the recyclables. We can recycle al-foil here so I now use that and baking paper rather than clingwrap, and not that we order take-away very often but when we do, the plastic boxes can all go too. Score one for the nerds!

So that is one thing you can do this week that will actually make a difference. And I started paying so much more attention to what was going into our rubbish bin as a result, which has meant we now only fill our regular rubbish bin to about 1/4 of its capacity. Our recycling bin is always full though. Happy days.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Why?

So, a little bit of background and some understanding as to what this is all about:

I'm a stay at home mum of one very active and hilarious 18-month-old girl, with another bub on the way (due beginning December). My husband Sparky, Isy and myself live in a teeny tiny house in the Blue Mountains, about an hour out of Sydney.

An embarassingly old shot of us. (I'm a bit camera-shy.)


We're smack-bang in the middle of organising major renovations and an extension to our 1950s fibro cottage, and hope to start construction within the next 4 weeks. We hope (optimistically) to be finished the majority of the construction before baby #2 arrives in late November/early December.

I am a complete garden nerd. I love gardening magazines, shows, blogs, forums etc, and often find my bedtime reading consists of Organic Gardener or one of my numerous vegetable gardening books.  I have to admit, as excited as I am about the upcoming works on our house, I am a tiny bit more pumped at the idea of finally bringing to life my plans for a big vege garden and small orchard in our backyard and seeing just how much we can live off our little patch of land.

I used to own and run an independent jewellery label, Trove, but decided to close the doors earlier this year. (I am currently in the process of selling the last few hundred pieces, so do check it out if you are interested - the prices are pretty damn good.) After three years of building the business up - I had 40+ hand-selected stockists world-wide, showed my collections at Rosemount Australian Fashion Week and was on the verge of hiring permanent staff - I suffered major burn-out. I was trying to be an excellent full-time Mum to a very active, not-very-sleepy toddler, trying to run a busy jewellery label and trying to make every individual piece I sold (all production was down to me too) and it took its toll on me emotionally and physically.



As a result of the turmoil and angst we felt earlier this year, I started thinking about living more simply. Sounds twee, I know, but I can really see and really understand the value in living a life well, living a life wholly and living a life simply and naturally. And that's really where this journey, the Lavender Experiment, really begins.

I want to document the things I do (successfully and unsuccessfully) in trying to live life more simply and more naturally. I'm also keen on sharing the renovation process as it goes along, the garden's construction and other things that pique my interest along the way.

Hopefully you'll find it interesting. I know I will!

Brooke x

Sunday, August 29, 2010

The Who in the What Now?

Welcome to The Lavender Experiment.


I mother, I wife, I cook, I clean, I bake and I plan renovations. I garden, I read, I project-manage said renovations. I budget, I shop, I grow handmade businesses up, I burn myself out when they become successful, I close them down. I also blog.


My name is Brooke and I'll be your host on this journey into the simpler life. Let me also be your cautionary tale. For "simpler" is in the eye of the beholder.