Most Breadheads know that my favorite dough for any kind of roll or bun is my Best Ever Crescent Roll Dough recipe. The added potatoes make for a soft roll with a tender crumb, and is the secret ingredient in almost all of the recipes for state fair and 4-H blue ribbon winners. Today I made some delicious herb rolls to accompany grilled pork chops for Labor Day, using some leftover parsley potatoes that were in chunks, not mashed. To get perfectly smooth potato for the dough I used a ricer. Perhaps not everyone is familiar with this rather old-fashioned kitchen gadget, but there's nothing better for producing light, fluffy mashed potatoes. The cooked, peeled potato pieces go into the hopper, and the two handles are pressed together, like a giant garlic press. The process of extrusion forces air into the potato puree, resulting in lighter, fluffier mashed potatoes that are perfectly smooth, and therefore ideal for bread making. There are commercial versions with a slightly different design, some of which cost as much as $130, but you can get the model pictured here, which is the same one I use, for less that $15 at Target. I baked the rolls in round, glass casserole dishes. I like using round pans for dinner rolls, because they look so pretty in a basket on the table. A 1.5 quart casserole dish will hold a dozen rolls made with 2 ounces of dough each. For a 2-quart dish, you can make the rolls 2.5 ounces each. Any leftover dough can be baked in a loaf pan. Remember that when using glass dishes for baking, reduce the temperature by 25 degrees F., because glass heats up faster and retains heat longer.
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Regular readers of this bread blog know that when we have mashed potatoes for supper at St. Bede Abbey, chances are the leftovers will end up in a batch of dough. The kitchen crew has even taken to making the potatoes without extra flavorings (no garlic, no pepper, no chives) so that I can use them as easily for sweet breakfast rolls as for Sunday dinner. Last night I mixed up a batch of potato roll dough with the intention of making cinnamon rolls for breakfast, only to discover that we were completely out of cinnamon. Fortunately, I'm a 21st century monk with WiFi and an iPad, so I looked up "breakfast rolls" on Pinterest and found a recipe for Strawberry Rolls using pie filling, which I just happened to have in the pantry. Not long ago I made rolls with pineapple filling and orange glaze and the brethren had no qualms about trying something new, so I decided to give it a try. (I also shaped three loaves of potato bread for later breakfasts.) Pie filling is a bit runnier than cake and pastry filling, which is what I usually use for breakfast breads, so it was a bit of a challenge to get the dough rolled up. The results, as you can see, definitely made the effort worthwhile. I drizzled on the lemon cream cheese icing just before morning prayer and put them on the breakfast table. As predicted, my fellow monks made the rolls disappear in no time, so I was glad I kept a few in reserve for food photography later in the day when the light got better. You can find the recipe I used for strawberry rolls with lemon cream cheese icing HERE, although I used my own dough recipe, the ever-versatile dough for Best Ever Crescent Rolls. The photos above should give an idea about how I spent Friday night. There were about five cups of left over mashed potatoes in the fridge, so I mixed a batch of Best Ever Crescent Roll Dough, which is just about the most versatile dough in my baking repertoire. It makes wonderful dinner rolls, cinnamon rolls, sandwich bread, and (if you omit a cup of flour and mix it a little slack) donuts. This morning the brethren had caramel pecan cinnamon rolls and donuts with hazelnut frosting. (A little culinary hint. Keep a few of those flavored half and half creamers in the pantry, but not for coffee. Both the French vanilla and the hazelnut flavors make exquisite frosting. Add to powdered sugar with a pinch of salt and whisk until smooth, then heat in the microwave until the frosting just barely starts to bubble. Cooking it briefly will get rid of the raw-cornstarch-and-sugar flavor, plus make it easy to drizzle. AND if you use the hazelnut flavor and add Dutch process cocoa to the frosting, you get Nutella flavored frosting but at a fraction of what a jar of the real stuff costs.) But even after breakfast and setting aside sandwich bread for lunch and dinner rolls for supper, I still have four dozen cinnamon rolls and two loaves of bread left. I could of course, double wrap everything and freeze them for future use, and I do that often enough. But one of my Facebook buddies posted a Pay It Forward challenge a few weeks ago and I signed up, so I think I'm going to deliver a random loaf of kindness or two. Here's the idea: You post this as your Facebook status I'm participating in this Pay-It-Forward initiative: The first five people who comment on this status with "I'm in", will receive a surprise from me at some point in this calendar year - anything from a book, a ticket, something home grown or made, a postcard, absolutely any surprise! There will be no warning and it will happen when the mood comes over me and I find something that I believe would suit you and make you happy. These five people must make the same offer in their FB status and distribute their own joy. Simply copy this text onto your profile, (don't share) so we can form a web of connection and kindness. The first five people who sign up (I manged to get seven!) are the ones for whom you do random acts of kindness. BUT of course I couldn't leave well enough along and also posted this: HOWEVER---we won't make the world a better place if all we do is help our FB friends. SOOOO, if you're in with ME, you have to agree that when you do something nice for a FB friend, you have to do something for a stranger as well. For example, you could leave money at a restaurant to pay for the meal of the next person who came in from the cold. Read Matthew 25:31-46 for ideas! Who's with me? My first random act of kindness was to send a "valentine" to a food media friend of mine. I got the butter knife at a flea market for $2, and then used metal stamps and a hammer to make the inscription. I got the idea from Pinterest. I'm definitely going to be making more of these! But because I made the commitment, today I have to do a kindness for a stranger, or more accurately, several strangers, since I have plenty to share. I've been trying to encourage this sort of behavior lately. Last Sunday I was preaching at a parish in Morris Illinois, and in the narthex I put out about 80 photo greeting cards I had made and asked people to send a note of encouragement to someone they know who is hurting. The reaction was overwhelming: people were genuinely grateful to have an immediate, practical way to express Christian love and concern. It's the sort of thing we all want to do but somehow other things get in the way.
So when you read this blog, if you are at all inspired, get off the computer and do a random act of kindness now. Bake a batch of cookies and take it to the nurses in the local ER or the staff at the Veteran's Home, or drop it off at the police station. Call someone you know who has lost a loved one in the past year and just spent Valentine's Day alone, and invite them to lunch. Send a card with $10 for pizza to a college freshman, take a pan of lasagna to that single mom down the block, shovel the walk for the neighbor who yells at your kids. And start a batch of dough---we can change the world, one loaf at a time. A follow-up to yesterday's post. I recently received a request for advice on how to freeze unbaked rolls to make them fresh later for a holiday meal. First off, I've not had much success with this idea, although there are websites with a variety of tips and techniques for it. However, it takes a relatively long time for the frozen rolls to freeze completely, thaw and rise, and often the yeast gets compromised in the process. Commercial ventures use a freezing process not possible in the average kitchen. What I recommend instead is that you go ahead and bake the rolls, let them cool completely, and then wrap them for freezing and re-heating. I've written about this before but I think a little reminder is in order just before the holiday baking season gets underway. The rolls have to be stone-cold before you wrap them because otherwise the moisture from the cooling rolls will collect on the inside surface of the wrapper and then settle on the crust of the breads, making them soggy. Some food writers say to simply place the rolls in a freezer safe bag (a better seal that ordinary plastic wrap or a recycled bread bag). However, you could also wrap the rolls in aluminum foil and THEN place them in a plastic bag or wrap. Then on the morning of your meal, take them out of the bag and let the foil packet thaw slowly in the fridge. Reheat the foil-wrapped rolls at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes (after the turkey or roast is out of the oven and resting on the counter before carving). Then remove from the foil and serve---you can brush the warm rolls with melted butter if you want to soften the crusts a bit. This same method (foil, then plastic, thaw in the fridge, reheat) works for whole loaves, too, although they take longer to thaw and reheat. |
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