Start: 95.4 Last week: 88.9 This week: 87.3
My grand scheme to end world hunger using modern technology seems to have fallen on stony ground. Fortunately I can still eat.
When I joined the secret confraternity of home bread bakers back in the summer, the restaurant Necci 1924 fed us a remarkable lunch to tide us over the rising of the bread. Among the items was the most delicious kind of savoury Chelsea bun, a spiral confection of soft bread, prosciutto, tomatoes and, maybe (though I don’t remember) herbs like rosemary. I ate my fill, and lusted after more. But I didn’t know what they were called. So I threw myself on the assembled wisdom of The Fresh Loaf, where Scott Hall emerged from the chaos with some recommendations.
So I did it, based on the recipe in Dan Lepard’s Exceptional Breads but using my starter and only half quantities.
150 gm white starter at 100% hydration 390 ml warm water 500 gm grano tenero 0 10 gm salt 1/2 tsp demerara sugar 25 gm olive oil 100 gm prosciutto 100 gm sun-dried tomatoes
- In a large bowl, I mixed the water with the starter, then stirred in 250 gm of the flour. I covered the bowl and left that to get going, about 4 1/2 hours.
- Added 25 gm of olive oil (as per Scott’s suggestion of 5% oil) then tipped in the remaining 250 gm of flour, the salt and the sugar. In the absence of the mixer Dan’s reccipe calls for I did a stretch-and-fold every 10 minutes for an hour.
- I spread the dough out into a rough rectangle on a silicone mat and placed a layer of prosciutto on top, leaving about the bottom third clear along the long edge to seal it. Then striped the sun-dried tomatoes across the dough.
- Rolling to dough up wasn’t as hard as I expected, using the silicone scraper carefully. I transferred it onto a floured wooden board and sealed the seam as best as I could. Then sliced it into 12 rounds, which I transferred to an oiled baking tray, leaving space between them to allow for expansion. Next time I might try packing them in a little closer, even at the risk of them joining together.
- Covered with a cloth and allowed to rise for about an hour, then into an oven at 220 ℃ for 25 minutes.
- On removing them from the oven I brushed them again with more olive oil, going over them three times in total.
And that’s it. You can see the whole set of photos here. Were they as good as the ones at Necci? I don’t honestly know. May have to go back there soon. Were they good? You bet; gently chewy with the flavour of the ham and some bites intense with salty tomato. Definitely best warm, and they reheat brilliantly in a dry skillet over a low flame with a lid on.
I’m sending this to Yeastspotting, just in case anyone else wants to try it.
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Those buns look yummy. Did you use sun dried tomatoes in oil or are they the dried ones you reconstitute in water?
Thanks Mimi. They were! The sun-dried tomatoes I get are dry, not in oil, but I didn’t reconstitute them. They are quite soft. So I just cut them up a bit and layered them over the prosciutto.