Baking recipes

Scroll through our posts below to try all sorts of delicious baking recipes from our instagram baking videos. New baking videos are posted the first week of each month on Instagram and Facebook.

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Bread Recipes Deidre Lotecki Bread Recipes Deidre Lotecki

Ciabatta - it takes a day...but it's worth it! I swear!

Ciabatta is my favourite bread! I have paid a ridiculous amount of money for a single loaf of ciabatta (and I would happily do it again!), but guess what, you can make it at home for pennies! Literally! My food costing comes in around $0.30 whaaaaaatttt! Amazing! It is a labour of love though because it takes about 24 hours to make, but what else are we doing, it’s quarantine! If I am going to have 24 hours to dedicate to a bread it’s now! Yay! This delicious bread starts the day before with a pre-ferment called a biga. A biga is basically a lump of firm dough, I think in theory it was a lump of the dough from your bread baking the day before, but obviously if I made dough it would all be eaten that day. That lump of dough then sits for ideally about 18 hours at room temperature so it can gain lots of flavour and grow some natural yeasts, giving it that sourdough tang without needing to worry about a sourdough starter, because that takes like a week and I can’t be bothered!


Ciabatta Bread before going into my belly!

Ciabatta Bread before going into my belly!

Ciabatta

Yield: 1 loaf (approximately 10”x4” rectangle)

Biga:

  • 2/3 cup Flour

  • 1/4 cup Warm Water

  • pinch of Instant Yeast

Final Dough:

  • 1 1/4 cup Flour

  • 1/2 teaspoon Instant Yeast

  • 2/3 cup Warm Water

  • 1 teaspoon Salt

  • Biga that has sat for 12-18 hours at room temperature

  1. In your mixer with a dough hook combine your Biga ingredients - 2/3 cup flour, 1/4 cup warm water and pinch of yeast. Mix for 3 minutes on a low speed.

  2. You should have a little dough ball, this is your Biga! Place your biga in a greased bowl with a lid/saran wrap and leave at room temperature for 12-18 hours. It should become bubbly and rise.

  3. Once your Biga is ready to go, place it into your mixer along with all of the other ingredients for the final dough. Mix with a dough hook for 4 minutes. This dough is going to look very sticky and goopy, that is perfect!

  4. Place the dough into a greased bowl or pan that has a lid and let sit and proof at room temperature for about 1 hour or until doubled.

  5. Once your dough it ready you will fold your dough ball in half 4 times, I like to use a rectangle pan instead of a bowl when I make ciabatta because it has 4 sides, and i can turn the pan for each fold so I make sure to do this 4 times. Grab the edge of the dough and fold it in half, then turn the pan or bowl 90 degrees and repeat, do this until you get back to where you started and your 4 folds will be complete! Now put the lid on and let sit at room temperature for 1 hour.

  6. Now that your dough has sat, you will repeat the 4 folds like we did earlier. Then place a lid on and let it sit at room temperature for 30 minutes.

  7. Our dough is now ready to shape. Grab a large baking tray and dust it fairly heavily with flour.

  8. Place your dough gently onto the tray and gently stretch the dough into an approximate 10”x4” rectangle shape. Try not to squish the dough, we don’t want to collapse too much of the volume.

  9. Now heavily dust the top of the ciabatta bread with flour, then drape a clean tea towel on top and let it sit at room temperature for 30 minutes.

  10. While the dough is resting, heat your oven up to 450*F and place a clean metal tray on the bottom rack of your oven, this needs to be hot when we bake our bread.

  11. Once your dough is ready to go, place it into the hot oven, on the rack above the one with the hot tray, then grab 1-1 1/2 cups of water and carefully pour it onto the metal pan that is on the bottom rack and its going to SIZZLE and create STEAM! Quickly close the oven to capture all the steam and bake your ciabatta for about 20 minutes. DON’T OPEN THE OVEN! If you take a peak into the oven it’s going to release the steam we just created and we want to keep that steam in there to allow our dough to grow and expand in the oven before it crusts up.

  12. Your ciabatta will be done when it is golden brown and when you tap it with your finger it should sound hollow.

  13. Place your cooked loaf onto a wire rack to cool (this helps steam from forming under your loaf and giving you a soggy bottom!)

  14. Now eat your AMAZING ciabatta bread! I’m eating mine now! mmmm

Ciabatta is the GREATEST bread! It's soft, tangy and oh soooo delicious!

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Bread Recipes Deidre Lotecki Bread Recipes Deidre Lotecki

Focaccia! *Imagine an Italian Nona saying that*

I have about 20 Italian vacations planned in my Pinterest. Unfortunately I never have time to go to Italy…and now that I have time, I am not supposed to leave my house…how rude! So to fake my dream vacation we are making focaccia and watching movies in Italy in hopes that if I drink enough vino I might almost think I am there…almost! This crispy bread takes a few hours to make but you don’t need to do that much work, basically just move it from one bowl to another every few hours, nothing too crazy! I mean we have time on our hands now, but we don’t want to be labouring away for 6 hours, I have netflix shows to watch!

Focaccia Bread!

Focaccia Bread!


Focaccia Bread

Yield: 1 skillet sized pan, or a 9” cake pan, or whatever you’ve got!

Once you get to the final rise you will need to Preheat your oven to 450*F

  • 1 cup Warm Water (needs to be warm to awaken our yeast)

  • 1 teaspoon honey, sugar, or maple syrup

  • 1 teaspoon yeast, I used instant yeast, but use what you got, we’re in quarantine!

  • 2 Tablespoons Olive Oil

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt

  • 1 teaspoon dried herbs (optional)

  • 2 1/2 cups Flour

Topping:

  • 2 Tablespoons Olive Oil

  • 1/2 teaspoon Coarse Salt (if not just a sprinkle of regular salt should do the trick!)

  • Toppings such as: parmesan cheese, chopped garlic, sundried tomatoes, pepperoni, herbs, sliced onion, olives, pesto, really anything you want!

  1. In the bowl of your mixer pour your warm water and honey, stir to combine.

  2. Sprinkle your yeast on top of the warm water, then let it sit at room temperature for about 10 minutes or until foamy.

  3. Now add your olive oil, salt, dried herbs and flour and combine using the dough hook on the mixer.

  4. Using the mixer with dough hook continue to mix the dough for 10-15 minutes, or until the dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl and sticks together around the hook in a ball. If you need to, you can finish kneading this by hand, but I didn’t because it came together in the bowl.

  5. Place the dough ball into a greased bowl and cover it with a lid, saran wrap, or a tea towel and let sit at room temperature until doubled in size, mine took 1.5 hours.

  6. Now grease your pan (I used a cast iron skillet) using about 1-2 Tablespoons of olive oil, this is going to seem like a lot, but the olive oil is there to kind of fry the edges of your bread and make them crispy in the oven!

  7. Place your dough ball into the greased pan and using your fingers spread it out to fill the pan.

  8. Now cover your pan with a tea towel and let sit at room temperature for about 1 hour, until the dough rises up about 1/2"-1” (doubled). If you don’t want to eat this today, you can also pop your focaccia into the fridge instead of letting it rise and bake it off tomorrow or later in the day, just make sure you let it sit at room temperature until it’s risen after taking it out of the fridge.

  9. Preheat your oven to 450*F while the dough is resting in it’s pan.

  10. Using your fingers dimple the dough ALL over so it has lots of imprints, then drizzle it with olive oil, a sprinkle of salt, and any of the toppings you want. This isn’t a pizza, so you want to be able to see some of the dough peeking through, but a nice smattering of garlic or sundried tomatoes or olives is delicious! You can also bake this just with the olive oil and salt.

  11. Pop the pan into your hot oven and bake for 18-20 minutes, or until golden brown!

  12. Now pour yourself some vino, turn on “Under the Tuscan Sun” and eat your focaccia while pretending your on vacation. Heaven!

Crispy Italian bread baked in a skillet! Yummy!

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