222 Goshen Logo
GOSHEN COFFEE COMPANY
Header Images
Bringing flour...
LINKS

Posts Tagged ‘ St. Louis ’

KMOV – Great Day St. Louis – Sourdough Demo

Friday, February 6th, 2009

This morning, Debbie and Matt were invited to the KMOV studios to do a spotlight on how to make a sourdough starter. Along with host, Carol Daniel, Matt got to demo his “secret” recipe and technique that many have tried but find difficulty reproducing. Must be the wonderful Edwardsville air that gives 222 Bakery’s sourdough the right, ZING!

222 Bakery at KMOV Great Day St. Louis

WATCH THE VIDEO!

Building a Levain from Scratch

Start with:
1 cup of organic (if possible) bread flour
1 cup of tap water (if possible use water from a filter)

Mix thoroughly until it looks like pancake batter. This will be your levain.

Let sit overnight covered on the counter. After 24 hours you will see little change. Measure out 1 cup of the levain and add to it 1 cup of bread flour and 1 cup water. Again let sit on the counter for 24 hours and repeat for 7 days. At the end of 7 days you will have a bubbly sweet smelling levain.

To make a loaf of Sourdough French bread
mix in one bowl

½ tsp salt
3 ½ cups bread flour
1 Cup of Levain
1 ½ cups Water

Create a volcano shaped hole in the center of the flour and the levain and 2/3 of the water. Mix with your hands until it comes together, adding additional water as needed.  Form the dough into a ball. Turn the ball of dough onto a floured counter top and knead for 20 minutes, stopping to rest as needed. Your finished dough should be smooth and firm. Place in an oiled bowl (olive or vegetable oil will work) and let rise in a warm, non-drafty location (such as the top of your refrigerator) until doubled in size. Cut the dough into 2 equal size pieces, lightly compress and fold the edges to the center.  Roll into a ball and place in oiled bowls covered with a tea towel.

Preheat oven to 400º F.  If you have a baking stone preheat it also.

When the loaves have once again doubled in size turn them out onto a floured peel, score the top with a razor blade and bake until they are sound hollow when you tap them, approximately 40 minutes.

Gerard Craft of Niche

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Last night we were invited to a “Chef’s Dinner” in St. Louis with all the top Chef’s in the Metro region. Among all amazing people we met, Gerard Craft of Niche was present. Gerard was written up in the February 2008 FOOD and WINE magazine.

Niche Restaurant logo The chef and owner of Niche and the adjoining Veruca Bakeshop & Café, Gerard Craft, 28, began his career washing dishes in a pool hall in Salt Lake City. His love of cooking led him to take a job at Bistro Toujours, one of the city’s top restaurants, under Bryan Moscatello (a Best New Chef 2003). Craft held positions at Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles under Mohammad Islam and the Metropolitan in Salt Lake City under Perry Hendrix. He moved to St. Louis in 2005 to open Niche, which is in a converted warehouse in the Benton Park area. Menu standouts are a “Bacon and Eggs” sandwich of braised pork belly, buttery brioche and an oozing poached egg.

It is great work people like this that is making St. Louis – a great food town.

Thanks Gerard and Congrats on the write-up.
Gerard Ford of Niche

Make a trip to Niche soon.
NICHE
1831 Sidney St.
St. Louis, MO 63104
314.773.7755

MORE ON NICHE @ STLBITES