Tag Archives: biga

Pugliese

Apulia, or Pugliese in English, is the heel off the Italian boot.  It is the most productive agricultural plain in all of Italy.  And from these plains grows the durum wheat used to make traditional Pugliese.  It is a very wet dough, comparable to ciabatta, but slightly more dense.

This is not a quick bread to make.  The hour and a half of flouring and folding is time-consuming but without it, it just wouldn’t be Pugliese!  I used bread flour exclusively for this recipe as I didn’t have a close source for fancy durum wheat.  This bread showed me the necessity for being able to properly make a boule.  The softness of the dough makes it want to succumb to gravity more readily than a lesser hydrated dough.  I made one in a banneton and the other simply on a floured peel.  Interestingly, both turned out the same shape!  I baked one of the loaves a bit longer than the other giving it a marvelous deep caramel colour.  What I didn’t expect was the crackling that occurred when I took it out of the oven.  The crust began to fissure and made quite a pronounced snapping sound!  Note that these loaves do indeed soften as they cool.  The taste is a nutty soft texture with a chewy crunchy crust.  Viva Italia!

Rosemary Potato Bread

Ok, so I cheated and made this bread a few weeks ago. It turned out much better then. For make up, I did the boule with the cross on top as in the Greek Celebration Bread on pg. 114. I admit, I have a hard time shaping the boule. It seems I get more side to side spread than upward rising, though the spring when baking does make up for some of the lack of rise. I guess I’m not getting enough surface tension when shaping.

I froze the biga and had enough to make two recipes (Peter Reinhart uses three types of pre-ferments, sometimes call starters for his breads – the biga is the Italian version). I placed the biga in the refrigerator overnight to let it thaw slowly and then set it out for an hour to come to room temperature. The first batch I made with barely a half teaspoon of rosemary as it is a heavily oiled herb and can easily overwhelm any dish. Since my sister-in-law in highly allergic to rosemary, I used dried thyme from the garden in this recipe; about a teaspoon. To add something different I took a small white onion and cut thin slivers to place in the empty spaces.

For some reason, this time it took forever to get any color on the bread. It’s much more pale in colour than last time.

It was a hit a few weeks ago and I hope a hit tomorrow!