The Fresh Loaf

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beccad18's picture
beccad18

Portuguese Bread recipe search

Hi there,

I'm hoping someone can help me find a recipe for a bread I know as Porguguese Bread.  I've serched for it and I'll I've found is recipes for Portuguese Sweet Bread. 

The bread I had was white bread that had a hard bottom with a chewy crust and was usually a free form loaf.  The bread itself was similar in texture and moisture to rye bread.  I had it in northern New Jersey, but I was just discussing it with my roommate who also ate it in Philidelphia. 

Does anyone know what I'm describing and can maybe point me in a direction of a recipe?  Maybe this bread has another name?

Thanks a lot for any help!

Becca

Moriah's picture
Moriah

Alan Scott, Artisan of the Brick Oven, dies

Alan Scott, 72, Artisan of the Brick Oven, Dies

By DENNIS HEVESI Published: February 5, 2009

Alan Scott, whose blacksmith's skill in using radiant heat led to a revival of the ancient craft of building brick ovens, allowing bakers to turn out bread with luxuriously moist interiors and crisp crusts, died Jan. 26 in Tasmania, Australia. He was 72.


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Alan Scott in 1988; his skill in using radiant heat paid off.


The cause was congestive heart failure, said his daughter Lila Scott. Her father had returned to his native Australia several years ago after becoming ill, she said. Ms. Scott and her brother, Nicholas, now operate OvenCrafters, the company their father opened nearly 30 years ago in a large Victorian home in Petaluma, Calif.


Several thousand amateur bread bakers and thin-crust pizza makers now have backyard brick ovens, many with cathedral-like arches, that were built either by Mr. Scott, with Mr. Scott or according to specifications he laid out with his protégé Daniel Wing in their 1999 book, "The Bread Builders" (Chelsea Green Publishing).


More than a how-to manual, the book is also a meticulous treatise on the history of bread making and the physics of baking, with instructions, for example, on how long to let the dough rise. Mr. Scott, who held instructional workshops around the country, played a role in bringing brick ovens to hundreds of bakeries and restaurants as well.


For centuries, beginning before the Middle Ages, home cooking was done mostly on a family's open hearth; villagers would share a single brick-oven bakery.


Mr. Scott "took oven designs that were hundreds of years old and refined them," said Dick Bessey, who teaches oven-building at Kendall College in Chicago and at the San Francisco Baking Institute. Mr. Scott's drawings, he said, "allowed virtually anybody to build an oven that would perform in a way that would equal the old communal ovens."


Though he found his inspiration in the past, he used modern materials: high-grade bricks, high-temperature cements and insulation, ranging from Vermiculite, which is used to insulate walls and attics, to ceramic blankets - "if you want to spend a lot more money," Mr. Bessey said. To build an oven for a homeowner, Mr. Scott would charge $5,000 to $10,000, not including material costs. For even higher fees, he would line an oven with authentic Italian refractory, or heat-resistant, tile and clad it with high-quality cut stone. In most brick ovens, a wood fire is built directly on the hearth floor. When it dies down, the ashes are swept out and food is put in to bake in the radiant heat - far higher than the usual 500 degrees Fahrenheit of a regular oven and sometimes up to 800 degrees. The walls hold the heat for hours, allowing batch after batch of bread to bake.


Brick-oven communities have sprung up on Web sites, with enthusiasts asserting that everything, from fruit galettes to slow-cooked roasts and especially pizza, tastes better when baked in brick scented by wood smoke.


Born in Toorak, Australia, on March 2, 1936, Alan Reid Scott was one of five children of Arthur and Lilian Burbury Scott. Besides his daughter Lila and his son, Nicholas, he is survived by his wife, the former Laura Argyros; another daughter, Samantha Bald; two brothers, Robert and Michael; two sisters, Eleanor Bjorkston and Sylvia Lerch; and a granddaughter.


Mr. Scott graduated from an agricultural college in Australia, then worked for a fertilizer company. "He never wanted to work for anyone else again," Lila Scott said. "He hitchhiked around Australia, Sudan, Ethiopia and then Denmark, where he opened a jewelry shop."


He moved to California in the mid-'60s and opened a blacksmith shop by the beach near Point Reyes, fashioning statuettes, chandeliers and hand-foraged fittings for wooden boats. One day, a friend, Laurel Robertson, the author of the cookbook "Laurel's Kitchen," asked him to make handles for a brick oven she intended to build. He completely redesigned the oven, employing his knowledge of how heat is best retained.


The project opened up far more than a new line of business. For Mr. Scott, brick-oven building became a way to bring a community together. Indeed, for a smaller fee, he would supervise a gathering of neighbors in building a communal oven, drawing on old traditions. "A lot of his ovens were done like Amish barn-raisings," Mr. Bessey said.


Originally published  February 5, 2009 in the New York Times.

Mako's picture
Mako

Intro to brick ovens

Hi I was hoping to get a thread started about everyones oven.  I'm looking to build my own in the spring and would like to know what people have.

Some questions

Did you make your oven from plans or a book?

Did you get your oven from a manufacturer?

-please provide link

How much did the oven cost? free pizza counts :)

-parts

-labor

Did you do the work yourself or have it installed?

How big, and how many pizza's /loaves can you get in your oven

Please post pictures

hsmum's picture
hsmum

when is dough sufficiently worked? when overworked?

Hi there; I've just joined the list, having just started baking bread from scratch using Richard Bertinet's method. I'm afraid I have a very basic question that I'm hoping someone will have the patience to answer for me.  As I'm kneading or working the dough, how can I tell when it's ready to set to rise?  For that matter, how can I tell when I've overworked it?  I'm just using basic white bread dough (flour, yeast, salt, water).  Sometimes it turns out beautifully after working the dough for just a few minutes; other times after 45 minutes of working the dough (!!!) it's still VERY sticky (and seems to be getting stickier, if possible!) When I've had the stickiness, the dough is certainly responsive and feels alive in my hands -- it's just impossibly sticky.  After 45 minutes of working it, I've given up and set it to rise and it does double within roughly an hour.  But on baking, seems more doughy than usual.  What gives?  I'm being very careful about weighing the ingredients.  All the yeast I've used is from the same jar (active dry yeast).  If any of you can help me out I would really appreciate it -- thank you!

Karen

cleancarpetman's picture
cleancarpetman

Bring out the WFO's

WFO Friends-
     I have plans to build a brick oven starting this April.  I decided while I wait for warmer weather I should learn to bake bread.  I have baked bread in a loaf pan at 350* for an hour for nearly 30 years.  TFL has been a breath of fresh air and my baking has taken off with slacker doughs and more fermentation.  I am still a newbie at it and love this site for its wealth of knowledge.
      Now my two passions are together with the brickies uniting. 
      While I was baking a loaf at a time yesterday on a round bake stone I pined for a bigger oven or hust a rectangular bake stone.  I found that mixing, stretching and folding, shaping and final proofing was bottlenecked by the oven capacity.  I also wondered how a brick oven baker prepares enough dough and times the bake to put out a justifiable quantity of bread, which I would say is ten loaves and more. I understand that the firing can be justified by other uses but I am speaking of bread alone here.  I know bulk fermentation, something I have yet to try, is a key here but want to hear from those who have actually done it. 

ccm

 

  

SylviaH's picture
SylviaH

Wide Yeast English Muffins photos

These are made using half the recipe given at http://northwestsourdough.com .  I have made these before and they are very good with plenty of nooks and crannies with a mild sourdough flavor.

These are baked in the oven for a few minutes after grilling!

Half recipe made 18 muffins! 

Sylvia

Anonymous baker's picture
Anonymous baker (not verified)

Chocolate chip cookies...

Please, could someone share their best chocolate chip cookie recipe.....I usually use the recipe on the back of the Hershey's chocolate chip bag, and use butter. Thank you.

SteveB's picture
SteveB

Ciabatta using Double Flour Addition/Double Hydration

For those interested in the double flour addition mixing technique, its application in the production of ciabatta can be found here:

http://www.breadcetera.com/?p=162

SteveB

clazar123's picture
clazar123

Is this a record?

9 days-capture to loaf!

Thursday :

    I brought a small container of flour/water (25 g flour/equal g water) to my basement office to capture the local yeast, after reading how people order sourdough culture from all over the world.

Friday:

By Friday afternoon it was bubbling

Saturday,Sunday,Monday:

By Monday it was really active.

I took it home,started discarded half/ feeding it twice a day for the next few days.

Wednesday:

By Wednesday it was easily doubling itself so Wed night I started feeeding it (no discard) so I had enough to use for a Saturday bake.

Saturday:

I baked an absolutely ideal,perfect loaf of French, sourdough bread using just a basic recipe. I don't have a camera but it had perfect crust,perfect crumb, it "sang" coming out of the oven and was San Fran sour! WOW!

So-9 days capture to perfect finish. I even impressed myself! I am making another loaf today and hope it turns out the same.

If this had been my first experience with sourdough I would have wondered what all the hoopla is about with all the posts on how to do a good sourdough. Having baked many bricks, I am really appreciative of the wonderful outcome of this project and all the knowledge this forum has provided.

maawallace's picture
maawallace

Parisian Raspberry Macarons

These little guys aren't nearly as difficult to make as one might think by the prices they command in french patisseries. It is a sugared, egg white and almond powder exterior and then whatever interior you like. Here, I used both raspberries and raspberry jam. Also popular are caramel, chocolate ganache, pistachio ganache, and many, many more.

I won't put up a recipe now as I don't have it with me. If there is a bunch of interest, I will find the recipe I used and post.

Matt

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