
From Bourdain’s Les Halles Cookbook. Fricking great. Two lessons:
- Adding a bit of port and a bit of balsamic to the soup seems like a big flavor hack (and as such is awesome)
- My broiler sucks and I’m buying a blowtorch
Side note, I love watching really flavorful stuff reduce slowly for a long time. Reminds me of the recipe for “Weapons Grade Ratatouille” that I want to try sometime soon…

So I have recently been experimenting with some higher hydrated doughs. Normally the breads I make are somewhere around 60%-70% hydration. This mean there is 60% of water to flour. For example in a 500 gram loaf I would have 310 grams of flour and 185 grams of water. The texture of a 60% hydrated dough is nice, it is slightly sticky but easily comes off your hands and the bowl. It is easy to form into a dough and knead. It is slightly softer than the play-dough you played with as a kid. The crumb on this type of dough tends to be tight and uniform. Perfect with a pad of butter and good for sandwiches. The bread you see above is closer to 90% hydration. It was a sticky wet mess and ended up being this beautiful focaccia.
I used this recipe http://veganyumyum.com/2008/05/poolish-focaccia/ I added garlic from a garlic press, sliced tomatoes and sea salt to the top. It ended up being great and you would do yourself a favor by trying your hand at it. (I didn’t use the full cup of olive oil for the top, only about 1/3 of cup)
In highly hydrated dough you get more of that artisan look, with large bubbles and un-uniform crumbs. They are pretty bread and the textures tend to be soft and chewy. The downside is they are pain to handle. They don’t really form into dough and instead you have to try some other techniques to make them into bread. One technique that is used in this recipe is folding. Folding and waiting allows the gluten to develop on its own as the flour continues to absorb the water and it hydrates. The gentle folding allows it to continue to stretch like you do when you knead. Some people don’t like this method because you end up using a lot of bench flour and flour that doesn’t get entirely incorporated is noticed. Additionally, as you add more flour you reduce the hydration and there is no exact way of knowing what hydration you end up at with this method. I just found this method which I think is called a french fold and looks fantastic.
I am going to try this next. See if it works. Since my last post I also have made beautiful sourdough loafs. The secret to a great crust on sourdough, a spray bottle at the beginning and middle of the baking process. The more I make bread the more I realize this simple fact: flour+water+time+yeast=yum.

Roughly based off this Martha Stewart recipe, if you also make chicken with it. Martha knows her roasted veggies – my recipe for oven roasted Brussels sprouts was one of hers originally.
This one is a win. Kristin likes it too. Yay.
Ed – I’ve decided to call this recipe “Why don’t I have any white wine on hand with which to make a pan sauce?” Chicken. Because lord knows that would have just killed this sucker.