Friday, December 4, 2009
Part Two: Caramelized Onion Swirl Bread
Ok...now onto the really good stuff...bread! And not just your ordinary bread, this is special because inside the crispy crust is a swirl of caramelized onions and rosemary...mmm. Perfect food for the season.
Here is what you'll need:
3 cups flour
2 tbsp vegan sugar
1.25 cups water
2 tsp salt
1 package of yeast
2 c. of finely sliced sweet onions (mine worked out to be exactly 2 medium onions)
3-4 tbsp. of olive oil
sprig of fresh rosemary
I started with a simple and very basic bread dough. Heat your water to around 100 degrees and add your packet of yeast. Stir and then let it rest for about 5-10 minutes, or until it gets pretty foamy. Add your salt, and about half of your flour and mix together for about two minutes. Then add the rest of the flour and mix/knead until all of the flour is nicely incorporated in the dough.
At this point, I usually set my oven on the lowest possible temp for a few minutes and then turn it off so I will have a nice and warm place to let the dough rise. Cover the bowl with the dough, and set it in your nicely warmed oven for about 45-60 minutes. At this point, your dough should look a lot bigger.
While your dough is rising, take your sweet onions and cut them into halves. Finely slice each half of the onion. Add the olive oil to a non-stick pan and heat your onions up to medium high for about five minutes. You just want your onions to soften up and start to turn translucent at this point. Turn your heat down to medium and let them slowly cook. Give them a stir every few minutes, you will start to see them turn a very rich golden brown color as they develop a yummy sweetness to them.
After the onions were done, I lined a 12x18 inch baking sheet with parchment paper. Make sure to liberally flour the surface of the parchment paper, as you will be rolling out your dough onto it. Take out your dough and lay it in the center of the sheet, sprinkle more flour onto the top of the dough and onto your rolling pin, and basically roll the dough out to fit the shape of the baking sheet. So in the end, you will have a nice, rectangular piece of dough. Add your onions in an even layer onto the dough, leaving one end where there is about a two inch section without the onions. This will serve as the part that closes the swirled bread, so there won't be onions gooping out of your bread. Sprinkle some fresh rosemary over your onions, or whatever other herbs make you really happy.
To roll the dough and onion up, I just grabbed the end of the parchment paper opposite of the onion-less two inch section. It took a bit of finessing the dough to begin the rolling process, but once it was started, you simply want to keep pulling up the parchment paper resulting in your dough rolling itself up jelly-roll style. Take that onion-less two inch section make press it against the outside of your dough. Then to that to each end as well, almost pinching each end shut.
I then transferred this rolled up dough to a new, clean sheet of parchment paper and formed the dough to my liking, heated the oven to 375 degrees and let it bake for 45-50 minutes, or until the crust is a golden brown color.
Let the bread cool, slice open and enjoy the amazement of what you have just made. Caramelized Onion Swirl bread just feels that good to make! It is especially yummy with the previous posting of Mushroom Soup! Eat lots and be merry!
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3 comments:
thanks for sharing this with us last night! it was soooo delicious! :)
beautiful!
I really like onions but I didn't know that there are recipes that it is about onions. It is even better that web show Viagra versus Cialis
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