Indeed, the whole thing was not far from the ‘madding
crowd’ – a shrieking siren, a huge man stomping in boots and funny clothes, a
police-looking person, a lot of black smoke, and myself.
What do you suppose could have caused such
weird behavior, and why do you suppose these people looked at me in a suspicious
manner; as if I were inebriated, or a little ‘round the bend’ ? After all, it
was only four o’clock in the morning –
What these outsiders just didn’t seem to comprehend
was that idiosyncrasies of a certain nature can take place when one creates a
calamity centered-around-baking, such as the one at hand.
Actually, it all started quite innocently for
me on that particular day in our bake-along group of Rose’s Alpha Bakers. The
recipe would be the divine croissant-looking sticky pastries, ‘Kouigns Amann’,
from Rose Levy Beranbaum’s latest book, “The Baking Bible” (p. 481).
That afternoon I had composed a beautiful still life of all the goodies in my mis en place, with the little yellow yeast package tilted just-so near the ruler to please Woody, and the glistening little metal rings casually posing for their picture with the best of the best Organic butter with 85% fat for baking. And so the picture was taken and happy baking began.
In Highlights for Success for this recipe, Rose explains “high fat butter and high protein bread flour are ideal to keep the butter layers from breaking through the dough. The consistency of the dough and butter must be the same to distribute the butter evenly throughout the dough, so maintaining the correct temperature of the butter is ‘critical’ (p. 486).
As I
progressed first from letting the dough rise, to rolling it out, I began not
following directions properly, thus flailing about. The first were the dough
package flaps. Of course, I didn’t see what was happening - yet.
I also had not
taken heed that my butter was harder than the dough because I had not checked
it’s temperature at the last minute as it lay re-cooling from too warm to now firm
but not workable in the fridge. So now it had actually become too hard, enough
so that the consistency differed from the dough. I had cooled it too long at
the end before using it. Have you figured out what happened?
Once again, a
familiar, loving voice emanates:
“The butter
should be the same consistency as the dough when they are rolled together or it
will break through the dough and not distribute evenly”.
Now, after rolling a faulty dough package into a 7x13” rectangle, I was meant to have done Turn One and refrigerate the dough for an hour.
On Turn Two things began to feel strange, although they really had since the beginning. However, now while rolling, I caught sight of several long bright-yellow bananas, like submarines swimming just below the surface of the dough – they were not at all a soft 68-70 degrees as they would have been if they had become a component of the dough in its turns. And so what now -
I frantically begin
to poke the dense butter, attempting to cover the boats with pieces of dough
and sugar when I could. Sugar, freezer, refrigerator minutes. I am aware this
is more than totally futile, and not even time for sugar, and that I am like a
child sailing a paper boat. However, a last-ditch effort couldn’t hurt – or
could it? So, finally, ruined-rounded-pinched-bunched-bundles of birds residing
in tin nests were dispatched into the 400-degree oven.
I frantically begin to poke the dense butter, attempting to cover the boats with pieces of dough and sugar when I could. Sugar, freezer, refrigerator minutes. I am aware this is more than totally futile, and not even time for sugar, and that I am like a child sailing a paper boat. However, a last-ditch effort couldn’t hurt – or could it? So, finally, ruined-rounded-pinched-bunched-bundles of birds residing in tin nests were dispatched into the 400-degree oven.
Of course, I
realize that this whole endeavor has been sabotaged by my own errors. But hope
does spring eternal, even as the butter now begins to seep out with intention.
The shapes of dough are interesting, and I am watching still with hope to see
lovely toasty colored pastries with touches of caramel.
Therefore, it
is not that I didn’t see the black ‘caramel’ becoming more than black caramel,
or that I didn’t smell something suspicious, but it wasn’t until black smoke
billowed in huge black puffs from the back of the stove that I yanked the door
open, grabbed the pan with gloves at least, and became aware of the tell-tale
piercing alert of the alarm, heard my husband raising his voice, and caught
sight of the entry of two men from Gulliver’s Travels who were not impressed by
an hysterically laughing woman saying something like oh my goodness, or worse.
In the
aftermath, and thanks to our rescuers, I was curious as to what qualities these
‘non-pastries’ would actually have in survival, if any.