Monday, March 07, 2011

Boule'd

You'll recall a couple of posts back when I told you about the new-ish Tartine Bread book and how much I love the technique tweak of using a cast-iron combo cooker as a baking cloche.
Well, I still love it. I've been doing about a batch a week using the Tartine formula, but I've also started using the combo cooker technique in place of a baking stone with other bread formulas wherever possible, because it just works that well. So we've been eating a lot of boule (a round shape bread, that is) vs. any of the other and less combo cooker-friendly loaf shapes. (So far, I have resisted buying the oval shaped cooker to use for batards, but I suspect it's acquisition is undeniable.)
I usually divide whatever that weeks' variation of the Tartine country loaf recipe happens to be into two or three large boules, but finally last week, a batch of grass-fed beef chili bubbling away on the stove and a batch of the Tartine bread being worked on the counter gave me an ah-ha moment and an idea that I don't know why hadn't occurred to me sooner.
Mini Boules! Perfect for recreating one of our old, back-in-the-day, before-certain-unnamed-casual-dining-restaurants-totally-skankified favorites, chili served in a bread bowl!

mini boules
The loaves themselves came out so, so perfectly. The Tartine recipe uses one kilo of flour, and I found that makes eight mini-loaves that are just about perfectly sized for an entree soup or chili vessel. I cut a round out of the top center of the crust and then extracted some of the guts of the bread to make more room. If you can restrain yourself from eating these guts smeared with butter right then and there, you could save them for breadcrumbs for something else or just put them on the side with the plated dish. They're not pretty, but they're pretty yummy.
mini boules gutted
And finally, fill that cute little sucker up with your favorite chili or soup:
mini boule chilli

Yummy! Especially the last bits of chili-soaked, squishy, crusty bread bowl to tear apart and devour.

These worked perfectly for their intended purpose, but they're also the perfect size for two peoples' worth of bread to go with dinner. As a rule I stash my weekly bake in the freezer and I had taken to quartering a loaf before bagging it so I'd have just the right amount to serve with a meal for two. But a whole little mini-loaf is much more fun, and it survives a quick trip into the oven to re-crisp better than a portion of a larger loaf, too.

I feel a soup party coming on!

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