T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3208.1 | La Cloche | TLE::EIKENBERRY | Don't confuse activity with productivity | Fri Aug 30 1991 13:38 | 14 |
| I get great crusty bread by baking it in my La Cloche, which I got
through the BreadBasket, which is now King Arthur's. Somebody just
posted their number in another note - the one about buying in bulk.
I didn't see it offered in their latest catalogue, but they may still
have some.
--Sharon
P.S. It used to cost around $35, but when they moved from Washington
to Vermont, the shipping from the potter in Washington to VT brought
the price to $50. It may be that they found this price to be too high,
and have discontinued selling it.
|
3208.2 | WILLIAM-SONOMA MAYBE | SAHQ::WILLARD | REMEMBER THE PRIME DIRECTIVE | Fri Aug 30 1991 14:30 | 8 |
| You might try William Sonoma, either mail order or through a local
store, there was one at Colony Square.
The only other method I know of is spraying the top of the loaf with
water while baking....
Cynthia
|
3208.3 | Use steam | GUESS::GOLDMAN | | Fri Aug 30 1991 15:21 | 8 |
| Two techniques:
1. Bake the bread on an oven stone
2. Put the empty broiler pan in the oven under the rack where you have
the stone while you preheat the oven. A few minutes before you
put the bread in to bake, put boiling water in the broiler pan.
Do this with a long-handled pot to avoid being scalded.
|
3208.4 | Thanks, but..... | KERNEL::SIMA | Alison Sim | Mon Sep 02 1991 08:46 | 11 |
| Thanks for all your help! I live in the UK so postage from
Washington probably would be quite expensive :-)
Can anyone explain what an oven stone is? Is it like the kind
of flat terracota plates that you can buy to cook pizza on?
Thanks
Aly
|
3208.5 | note 994 | GIDDAY::BRYDEN | | Mon Sep 02 1991 19:19 | 4 |
| Aly,
Have a look at note 994, there is a very good discussion
on oven stones there...
|
3208.6 | EASY CRUSTY BREAD | ATLEAD::PSS_MGR | name | Mon Sep 09 1991 17:51 | 21 |
|
WOW! I never knew my mom's crusty bread was such a rare thing....
I thought everyone did it this way...
You won't believe what we do...after baking the loaf, let it cool.
When you want your crusty bread, put it in a small brown paper bag
(the kind you get from the grocery store) in a preheated oven at
325 for about 15-20 minutes. (Just roll the end of the bag and make
sure the bag doesn't touch the burners) VOILA! crusty bread and real
tender inside. We leave it in the bag until ready to serve so that
it stays warm.
We usually cut the bread once it's cool the first time...but not
all the way through so the pieces stay together. Butter both
sides and put garlic salt on both sides. Put it in a brown paper
bag for 15-20 minutes and you have great crunchy garlic bread
(just the outside) You can also sprinkle parmesan/ramano cheese
on the slices...
Yum...Kristen
|
3208.7 | | MONTOR::GOGUEN | Ah yes, it all seems so bloody easy... | Thu Sep 19 1991 15:10 | 9 |
|
As noted in .2 if you use a spray bottle and spray the bread
every 10 min or so while baking it should come out real crusty
on the outside and soft on the inside.
-kg
|
3208.8 | ice cubes | DECEAT::MORGENSTEIN | Slammin' | Fri Sep 20 1991 11:35 | 4 |
| My husband tosses a couple of ice cubes in the bottom of the oven. It's easier
than trying to find our spray bottle.
Ruth
|