The Fresh Loaf

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Polenta bread with sunflower seeds and rosemary

JennyBakesBread's picture
JennyBakesBread

Polenta bread with sunflower seeds and rosemary

Last week I was considering baking a bread with corn porridge to use up some polenta lurking around in the back of the cupboard. As a northern European, cooking with corn is unfamiliar to me and associated with Italian and/or American cuisine. As a child in the 80's, I thought maize = corn = tinned sweetcorn. Tinned sweetcorn was either an unwelcome addition to tuna mayonnaise or one of the 10,000 things crammed into salads along with boiled eggs and cubes of cheese. I was convinced that one of the key benefits of adulthood, would be not finding sweetcorn hiding in my food (and getting to mix lemonade and cordial whenever I wanted). When I first got my hands on Tartine #3, I flicked straight past the corn porridge bread drawn in by less humble more exotic grains. This year, I've baked two types of bread with maize flour and/or polenta from The Handmade Loaf. Both loaves tasted fascinating and smelt so enticing that I decided to make a naturally leavened bread with corn porridge. I picked this recipe from the inspiringly beautiful blog Girl meets Rye.

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I've incorporate some of the suggested changes mentioned at the end of the original blog post. The night before the bake, I prepared the polenta by mixing together 150g coarse cornmeal with 385g of boiling water in a bowl and covering the mixture with clingfilm. This mixture was left at room temperature to cool and when mixed into the bread was set into a rubbery mass.

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For the final mix, I did not add the 50g of water used to dispense the salt as the white bread flour I use tends need less water than average. Before adding in the polenta, I broke it down a little with a fork. However some clumps of about 1-2cm diameter remained, I tried to pinch these out while folding but a few remained. As the temperature is still cool here, the dough seemed a little sluggish so I stretched the bulk fermentation to 4.5hours at room temperature (68C)

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These changes made the dough soft, light and easy to handle. Unlike previous attempts the dough was better behaved and not quite as wobbly or worrying as the maize bread which I accidentally over-hydrated a few weeks ago. The smell and taste of this bread is truly outstanding. There is something special about the combination of maize, rosemary and seeds which just doesn't often feature in traditional English cooking. It's a great combination of add-ins, with a clear procedure which is fully explained here and straightforward to reproduce. I'll definitely be trying more of the recipes from Girl meets Rye in future.

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Happy baking!

http://jennybakesbread.blogspot.com/2016/03/maize-and-sunflower-seed-bread.html

Comments

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

looks absolutely stunning! I am envious of the crumb you achieved. I wish I could reach through the screen and take a bite. Well done!

JennyBakesBread's picture
JennyBakesBread

You'd have a fight on your hands my family really loved this bread.

I was just looking at your whole wheat loaves and am considering giving the recipe from theperfectloaf a go. I've posted a question about it on your blog-post as that seems like a better place to ask... :)

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

For the longest time I was putting some corn meal in every bread I baked for a long time after tying it when another Fresh Loafian, janetcook, mentioned putting it in her bread to enhance the flavor.  Donlt know whyu I stopped doing so since it is one of those flavor enhancers that really works and might impart a bit of sweetness too - like durum.  Will have to check out the Girl Meets Rye blog too.

Happy baking 

JennyBakesBread's picture
JennyBakesBread

These had 1/2 cup of coarse cornmeal per loaf which seemed like quite a bit to mix in. It's definitely a trick I'm going to hold in reserve, especially when it comes to baking white loaves in future as it's a very different hint of something compared to wholemeal rye. If there is any cornmeal in the back of one of your cupboards why not bring it out again...

Isand66's picture
Isand66

Beautiful bake Jenny!  I love polenta in breads and this one looks tasty and perfect.

Here's a link to one I made that I think you may like :https://mookielovesbread.wordpress.com/2015/12/19/durum-polenta-ricotta-porridge-bread/

Happy Baking.

Ian

JennyBakesBread's picture
JennyBakesBread

Thanks Ian, I've bookmarked the recipe - unfortunately I don't have any durum flour at the moment but as soon as I order some more flour I'll try it out.

STUinlouisa's picture
STUinlouisa

Porridge bread is a favorite and yours looks great. Last summer tried drying and grinding fresh sweetcorn into meal, that adds a whole new level to polenta or cornbread. Might have to try it with the canned stuff which I normally can't abide. 

JennyBakesBread's picture
JennyBakesBread

Thank you!

Don't let me tempt you into buying tinned sweetcorn that is yucky stuff.

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

canned sweet corn is one of those great ingredients to make all kinds of stuff that has corn in it.  I especially love it in tamales, tortillas and corn bread when fresh corn is out of season.