Time for Avid Baker's Challenge monthly bake! For this month, we, at Avid Baker's Challenge (ABC), are baking Cheese-Stuffed Crusty Loaves, recipe taken from King Arthur Flour. A bread recipe, I was all smiles!
Best described about this recipe, quoted from KAF, "A lava-flow of aromatic cheese melts down the sides of these chewy/crusty loaves."
It really was a "lava-flow of aromatic cheese melts down the sides of these chewy/crusty loaves!" I was delighted! See the bottom of the loaves, the pool of melted cheese which has been baked to perfect crispiness, oh my, these are so yummy that my son and myself ate almost all of these crispy parts! The only thing I am not satisfied was, the colour of my rather pale-looking loaves.
First, you need to make the starter. I have used the whey from my Homemade Ricotta Cheese to replace the water required for the starter. Mix the bread flour, salt, instant yeast and whey. Cover and let rest overnight at room temperature. Mixture will be bubbly.
- The next day, mixture has doubled in size but I did not see any "bubbly" look! Too dry maybe?
- Again I have used the whey from my Homemade Ricotta Cheese. Mix the starter with the whey, salt, flour and yeast.
- I used the bread machine to knead the dough.
- Place the kneaded dough in an oiled bowl, cover and let rise for 1-1/2 to 2 hours until nearly doubled in bulk.
- Deflate the risen dough, roll it out into a 3/4-inch thick rectangle, about 9"x12", spray with water
- Sprinkle on with the grated cheese. I have used a mixture of cheddar and mozzarella.
- Roll it up into a log, pinching the seam to seal. Cover and let rise for 1 to 1-1/2 hours, till it is puffy but not doubled in bulk. I have unintentionally left it to rise for about 3 hours, went out for an errand and came back much later than my original plan of only an hour!
- It has doubled in size!
- Gently cut the log into four for smaller loaves, or two for bigger loaves.
- Place them on a greased or lined baking sheet, cut side down.
- Spread them open a little, to more fully expose the cheese. Spray with warm water and immediately place in a preheated oven and bake for 20 minutes, or until the cheese has melted and the loaves are a very deep golden brown.
The top of the loaves are bubbling and the cheese are oozing out just like a volcano! I tent the top with foil as it is browning too fast and the sides are not brown yet! When the sides starts to brown a little, I checked one loaf and satisfied that they are fully done, took them out as I do not want the loaves to be over baked and dry, especially since I baked these about 5 minutes longer than the recipe states.
The best part is the cheezy top....
and the crispy bottom!!!
The cheezy centre, especially good when eaten warm.
The interior texture is moist and soft. The outer crust is rather chewy. Very tasty loaf. We enjoyed these loaves for our lazy weekend dinner with canned mushroom soup, served piping hot with these crusty loaves! These loaves are best eaten while still warm.
The only changes I've made was to reduce the salt to 1-1/4 teaspoon in total as the whey that I used was already slightly salted.
To view the other members bake on this bread, please stop by Avid Baker's Challenge (ABC). We are currently baking from King Arthur Flour website, if you are interested to join in, please contact Hanaa.
Happy Easter, Joyce, and obviously happy baking, too.
ReplyDeleteYour crusty, cheesy loaves look very appetizing, and I'm looking forward to bake these - I love grilled cheese!
Happy Easter!
ReplyDeleteOh look at that cheese oozing out, yummy! Yes, I am sure that is the best part!
ReplyDeleteJoyce, this is a cheese lover's delight! I am ok with cheddar and mozzarella. And yeah, I will fight for the crispy brown bits!
ReplyDeleteJoyce , I love almost all of your bread but this is so far you best yet :D Yeah , oozy cheese and crispy crust and soft crumbs *sigh* Okay, I'll stop and get some tissue lol
ReplyDeleteLooks yummy .....I love cheese :)
ReplyDeleteWill try this !!
ShrutiRasoi
Hi, Joyce, if I let my son sees this bread, he must be asking me to do it coz he is crazy for cheese! Your cheese bread looks delicious!
ReplyDeleteI love all that cheese on top and oozing out from the loaf. So mouth-watering.
ReplyDeleteCheese-Stuffed Crusty Loaves look sinfully good.
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness...these look too good. I wish I had one right now! (and i just ate a huge breakfast!) Thank you for sharing...and for tempting me to make these today!
ReplyDeleteI'll bet these taste wonderful while still warm from the oven! They look delicious!
ReplyDeleteYour loaves turned out beautiful. Love the cheese-lava, haha. So cool that you used whey. I made ricotta a while back and froze the whey so I could use it in bread, but I keep forgetting I have it, haha. We loved these loaves too, btw. A huge hit!
ReplyDeletewow, i think the exciting part must be seeing the lava flowing out from the rolls :D
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh, love the step by step instructions and photos. Your cheese shots are amazing! I want that burnt cheese on the bottom!
ReplyDeleteThat just looks so good, that volcano top... and that bottom is tempting me so bad. When I look at yours I think my dough was wetter, it couldn't stand up like yours does. Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteDid I heard CHEESE! Yes,I'm a cheese lover especially in breads! Looks at those melting cheese oozing out! DDDroooling! LOL
ReplyDeleteJoyce,
ReplyDeleteI love the look of your lava flow bread.
I must try this this weekend . Look so yum!
mui
Joyce, the recipe's description about the "bubbly" starter really isn't a very good one, if it is not a very wet starter, like a poolish. You want to check its spongy structure, instead.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful!!
ReplyDelete