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Topic: high rise corn bread (Read 849 times)
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Zazzy
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I made this lovely bread yesterday - it's a hybrid of a yeast bread and corn bread and it's clearly going to be a challenge to not eat it all before tomorrow. High Rise Corn BreadHi-Rise's Cornbread
(Artisan Baking Across America, Maggie Glezar)
Make a poolish:
1-1/4 cups unbleached bread flour 1-1/2 teaspoons instant yeast (Rapid Rise) 3/4 cup water, lukewarm
Combine the flour and yeast is a large bowl, then beat in water. This will produce a very gloppy batter. Cover the poolish tightly with plastic wrap and let it ferment until it is very bubbly and well risen, about 2 hours.
Dough
2/3 cup water, lukewarm Fermented poolish 2-1/2 cups unbleached bread flour 1 cups plus 2 tablespoons stone-ground white cornmeal about 3/4 cup fresh corn kernels (1 large ear) 3 large eggs 2 tablespoons honey 1-1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil (I used olive oil) 1 tablespoon salt
Add the remaining water to the poolish and stir to loosen it.
By Hand: Combine the flour, cornmeal, and corn in a large bowl. Add the watered poolish, 2 of the eggs, the honey, and oil. Stir the mixture with your hand until it forms a rough dough. Turn it out onto your work surface and knead it, without adding flour and using a dough scraper to help (you are crushing the corn kernels into the dough as you knead). When the dough is soft and sticky, add the salt. Knead until the salt is dissolved and the dough is tighter and very smooth, about 2 minutes.
By Mixer: Combine the flour, cornmeal, and corn in the mixing bowl. Add the watered poolish, 2 of the eggs, the honey, and oil. Stir the mixture with your hand or a wooden spoon until roughly combined. Using the dough hook, mix on low to medium for about 5 minutes and the dough is very smooth. Add the salt and mix for about 2 minutes until it is dissolved.
This is a soft and sticky dough, so don't be surprised at the way it looksh.
Fermenting the dough:
Place the dough in a container at least 3 times its size and cover it tightly with plastic wrap. Let the dough ferment until it is light, well expanded, and doubled in bulk, about 1-1/2 hours.
Shaping and proofing the dough:
Generously butter two 9 x 5-inch baking pans. Cut the fermented dough in half. Using a rolling pin and plenty of extra flour for dusting this sticky dough, gently roll out one piece about 1/4 inch thick, pressing out any bubbles. Fold the sides of the dough into the center, letting them overlap by 1 inch or so. Roll out the dough again so that it is as wide from folded edge to folded edge as your baking pan. Moisten your hands with water and lightly pat the dough so that it is just slightly tacky. Now roll the dough up like a jelly roll, keeping the folded ends on either side. Pinch the seams to seal it, and lay the cylinder seam side down in one of the prepared pans. The cylinder should fit length-wise but should not touch the sides of the pan. Repeat with the other piece of dough. Cover the loaves tightly with plastic wrap and let them proof until they have risen 1 inch above the pans, about 2 hours.
Preheating the oven:
About 30 minutes before the breads are fully proofed, arrange a rack on the oven's bottom shelf and clear away all racks above the one being used. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
Baking the bread:
Beat the remaining egg until blended and brush the tops of the loaves with it. Bake the breads until well browned, about 50 to 60 minutes, rotating them halfway into the bake. Remove the breads from the pans and let them cool on a rack. I made mini-loaves, btw, which took about 25 minutes to bake.
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"It's not that chocolates are a substitute for love. Love is a substitute for chocolate. Chocolate is, let's face it, far more reliable than a man." Miranda Ingram
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Pina
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Hi Zazzy,I was going to bake your corn bread today. We have chili for dinner tonight and I always serve it with corn muffins ( I was told cornmeal prevents the gassy side effects of beans.)  Then I read - fermented poolish - in your recipe.I never heard of it and had to find a recipe for it. To me it sounds like a sourdough starter. Poolish 1 cup minus 2 tablespoons room-temperature water 3/4 teaspoon crumbled cake yeast 2 cups organic white flour with retained germ. In a 1-gallon plastic container,combine the water and yeast stir until the mixture is milky and foamy and the yeast is fairly dissolved.Stir in the flour until just combined.Cover and leave at room temperature for 5 hours.May be refrigerated for up to 48 hours before using.Bring to room temperature before using. Yield : About 1 1/2 cups Tonight I will serve my chili with corn muffins again.Once I have the fermented poolish I will bake your corn bread too. 
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The best thing I ever have in my kitchen is a friend who likes my cooking.
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Zazzy
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The poolish is just a sponge and is at the top of the recipe. It takes all day, though. And don't mix it in your food processor and think it may as well raise in there. ROFL It grew up and pushed the pusher out of the food processor and tried to take over the kitchen. Like the blob. 
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"It's not that chocolates are a substitute for love. Love is a substitute for chocolate. Chocolate is, let's face it, far more reliable than a man." Miranda Ingram
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Pina
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The best thing I ever have in my kitchen is a friend who likes my cooking.
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Eve
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Posts: 23
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This sounds very good. I will probably try it while the kids are out of town so I can have full use of the kitchen without being in the way. I'll let you know how it goes.
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I am only as strong as the caffeine I drink, the hair spray I use and the girlfriends I have.
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