After last year's distinct lack of activity I am trying to take advantage of the fact I work part time to get baking fitted in. Kudos to you if you are someone who can juggle a full-time job with your baking. I envy you. I just can't do it. Not yet anyway. Working on it. The point is I'm aiming to get something baked (and ideally up on the blog) each week. This week I was in a bread mood. Actually, I've been in a bit of a bread mood for a while now but this week was extra bread-y since I made two different loaves. Sadly, you're not getting the one of them quite yet because after doing a really good job the first time, the subsequent attempts have been a bit...flat. The dough won't hold it's shape so rises sideways rather than up. I think I may be over-proving.
But the other bread turned out well! Having been obsessing over Bake Off the last couple of weeks (applications for the next series were due last Sunday) I have found myself reading lots of articles about the show and past contestants. In amongst those I stumbled across one on Beca, who made it to the semi-finals in Series 4. This article was specifically about her yeasted tea-loaf she made during the Sweet Dough week (and received high praise from both Paul and Mary): a Welsh bara brith. Literally meaning 'speckled bread' it is a sweet loaf filled with mixed fruit. And being a tea-loaf, it's obviously got a healthy amount of tea in there too.
Aside from the fact I wanted to try something new and different, what really motivated me to make bara brith this week was the bag of mixed fruit sitting in the cupboard, as I still have loads to use up from making mince pies and panetonne over Christmas. Even after baking this I have leftovers so mixed fruit may crop up again in the next few posts.
I did end up making a slight tweak to the recipe: I used instant yeast, not fresh. According to my newest bread book (which I will gush about properly when I post a recipe from it) there's not much difference between them. Instant yeast is more convenient (and what I had in my cupboard). I just halved the amount required.
I sent this along to the lovely ladies at Markinch with my mother-in-law on Monday. They are always so nice about my baking and appreciate what I send. They've been enjoying this over the week and plan to make toast with any leftovers that may have gone a little stale.
Recipe - adapted from Beca Lyne-Pirkis via Wales Online
Makes 1 x 2lb loaf
Tea-Loaf:
- 450g/1lb strong white flour
- 7g/0.25oz salt
- 10g/0.35oz instant yeast
- 75g/2.5oz butter
- 50g/1.75g brown sugar
- 2 tsp mixed spice
- 350g/12oz mixed dried fruit
- 1 egg
- 225ml/8fl.oz strong warm tea (I used two Twinnings Breakfast Tea teabags steeped for 5 minutes in 225ml boiling water, then let it cool slightly)
- 50g/1.75oz caster sugar
- 50ml/1.75fl.oz water
- Put the flour into a large bowl. Add the salt on one side and the yeast on the other and rub into the flour to combine.
- Rub in the butter using your fingers until the mixture looks like fine breadcrumbs.
- Mix in the sugar, mixed spice and dried fruits until evenly distributed.
- Add the egg and tea and bring everything together to form a dough.
- Knead the dough until it is smooth (I stretch the dough away from me then fold it back on itself before giving it a quarter turn and repeating for about 10 minutes).
- Place back in your bowl and cover with an oil piece of clingfilm. Leave to rise in a warm place until it has doubled in size (about 1 hour).
- Grease a 900g/lb loaf tin.
- Knock back the dough, shape and fit into the loaf tin. Cover with the oiled clingfilm and prove for another 30 minutes. Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 200°C/400°F/Gas Mark 6.
- Once proved, remove the clingfilm from the dough and back in the oven for 20 minutes.
- Cover the bara brith with foil and leave to bake for another 25-30 minutes.
- Remove from the tin and allow to cool on a wire rack.
- Make the sugar syrup by bringing the water and caster sugar to a boil in a small saucepan.
- Cook the mixture until it takes on a syrupy consistency.
- Remove and use a pastry loaf to cover the loaf in the glaze.
- Allow to set and cool before serving.
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