
Cinnamon Raisin Walnut bread is (was) on the schedule for Week 9 in the Bread Baker's Apprentice Challenge. I'm baking my way through Peter Reinart's award winning book along with 200+ other amateur bakers. Want to join in the madness, or just learn more about this semi-crazy undertaking? Check out the following links:
- Pinch My Salt BBA Challenge page—master resource for the challenge
- Buy the Book Bread Baker's Apprentice by Peter Reinhart
- List of Breads See what's coming up.
- Blogroll See who's baking. Great list of some amazing foodie (and not-necessarily-foodie) blogs.
- Flickr Group Photos, photos and more photos!
- Twitter Search for #BBA to find challenge tweets.

It's super delicious.
The End.

Kidding! Not about the delicious part, though. I would never kid about a cinnamon-infused, raisin-and-walnut-filled bread. Not this one. Because it's goooood. Here, let me show you.

Have I mentioned that bread making involves a lot of waiting? Because it does. But that's OK, because you can fit in all kind of things in the mean time. Fun things like laundry. At least that's what my bread wait time consists of. There are only two humans in my home; how do we end up with so much laundry? Oh, right. I save it all up for the weekend. Ahem.
Back to the bread.

After about 2 hours, the yeast works its lovely magic and THIS is what you get — soft, puffy dough. The only issue I had, though, was that this dough seemed to get "tough" after degassing. Anyone else run into that?
I split the dough in two pieces, shaped on into a regular loaf and popped it in a pan. For the second half, I decided to try the alternative described in a side-note — cinnamon-swirl bread. That alternative got a big "DUH" from me. More cinnamon PLUS sugar rolled in the middle of a cinnamon-infused dough? "Duh, of course I'm going to do that." And I did.





Oh, baby, did this smell good. There's nothing like fresh bread, I tell ya.

Although the flavor was exceptional — especially the cinnamon swirl version (SO good), I felt like the bread was a little too dense, but Dwight didn't think so. "Mm, ssiss goord," he said, gesturing with the bread in hand, having just taken a big bite of it. Success.
Your loaves look great. Nice photos and write up.
ReplyDeleteHave fun,
Susie
This makes a fabulous french toast...try this again and use just a little less flour and more kneading time...you might get a light, fluffy result!
ReplyDeleteKiller swirl! Did you have it toasted the next day? Even better!!
ReplyDeleteWow, beautiful crumb. I, too, was expecting some oven spring, but, alas, none.
ReplyDelete