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Archives for October 2017

Community Pizza

October 20, 2017 by Deborah

When I first began dreaming of the School of Cooking and Sharing, I knew that our first offering would be a community pizza night. Pizza is the perfect way to begin baking. It is a relatively easy yeasted dough, has a very flexible timeline, and is incredibly forgiving. After all, at the end of the day there is melted cheese on hot bread so you can’t go wrong. Better yet, it is a bread meant for sharing. Anytime there is pizza, there is a party. It is food for gathering around the table, eating with your hands, telling stories and laughing. Teaching people to make pizza at home isn’t just about building a dough – it’s about building a community. I’ve seen this over and over again when I have taught private “pizza for happy hour” classes in the homes of donors, led after-school healthy pizza baking programs for hungry kids, hosted pizza baking parties at the local drop-in center for homeless teens, or grilled pizza in my own backyard with friends and family. One of my favorite things that happens after I’ve taught a class on pizza baking is when my phone lights up the next weekend with pictures of people baking pizza at home for the first time – they are never alone! That’s why over time I have come to think of this recipe as a recipe not just for pizza, but for “community pizza.” I’ve had requests for step by step directions with photos to show what the dough “should” look like at each stage. This past weekend I had some very special pizza chef hand models in town and I can assure you that their results were as delicious as they are beautiful! Each step is important, but as you will see below the timeline is incredibly flexible. You can make crust this afternoon to bake this evening, or you can make crust this evening to bake next week. It’s up to you and your schedule. Just don’t forget that community pizza is as much about the people eating your pizza as it is the pizza itself!

STEP ONE: GATHER

Ingredients for pizza dough are simple so quality matters. I use King Arthur Flour in all my classes because the quality of the flour is consistent and because I know that the company and the people that work there are committed to using their resources to help end childhood hunger. Many of our kid’s baking programs here in St. Louis are possible because of King Arthur’s generous donations of flour, recipe books, and resources. For this recipe you will want their White Whole Wheat Flour (a great way to incorporate more healthy whole grains into all your baked goods) and their higher protein Bread Flour. You will also want yeast (my favorite is SAF), salt and a little bit of olive oil. That’s it! Infused oils like garlic, basil or rosemary can make your dough even more delicious. Play around with the flavor and develop your own “signature” recipe!

While you are gathering your ingredients, don’t forget to gather your friends as well. Call your community and let them know there is a pizza party in the works. One of my favorite things to do is make a few batches of dough in advance and then top and bake the pizzas with friends on a Friday night, but you can make your own pizza community any time of the week.

STEP TWO: BLOOM

Because yeast is alive we want to make sure that it is warm, well-fed, and happy so that it can do what it’s meant to do. Isn’t that what we want for everything that’s alive? When we buy dry yeast it is in a dormant state and we need to wake it up gently. Start by putting 1 3/4 cups of warm water into a bowl. People always ask, how warm? Remember that yeast is alive, so make it a comfortable temperature, like a warm bath. Too cold and it won’t grow, too hot and you can kill it.

Next add 2 1/4 teaspoons of yeast (that’s a packet if you are using packets) and 2 1/4 teaspoons of brown sugar. Whisk them together and let the yeast get warm and eat the sugar to come to life….

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Filed Under: Recipes, Responsive Slider Tagged With: community, pizza

School of Cooking & Sharing

October 19, 2017 by Deborah

It’s back to school season, and even as an adult I love the anticipation of new adventures in the fall. This year I’m thrilled to be part of a great new adventure in St. Louis – the Operation Food Search School of Cooking and Sharing! The Little Flour mission has always been to help people feed themselves and others well, encouraging people to bake and share with their friends and neighbors. The bakery’s capacity to sell Flour Basket subscriptions has always been limited by the space and time required to produce naturally leavened breads, but almost every time I deliver a basket the recipient takes a bite of fresh bread and says “I wish I could do that.” My response, “You can!” So many people think they don’t have time. Others had a disaster with yeast years ago and have been afraid to try again. Some have read complicated recipes and think it’s just too hard or requires too many fancy tools and ingredients. I love proving them wrong. Over the past two years, I have come to love teaching people to bake and share their own special loaves. Flour. Water. Salt. Yeast. A little bit of time and love and you have a loaf of bread. The more people I taught, the more I wanted to teach.

I just needed a teaching kitchen. Enter the Operation Food Search School of Cooking and Sharing.

I’m thrilled to be part of the team of volunteer chefs teaching in the OFS kitchen this fall. The School of Cooking and Sharing is a philanthropic cooking school designed to help our entire community eat well. We want everyone to enjoy cooking delicious and nutritious foods including the naturally leavened breads, whole grain pizza crusts, and family friendly quick breads that Little Flour has always been about. And we want to fund the programs that make sure everyone has access to the healthy ingredients they need to make it happen. Paula Gray from King Arthur Flour’s Bake for Good Program spent time with us in September showing us what it really means to bake for good as an organization. She left us with a lot of great flour (our house favorite is King Arthur’s White Whole Wheat) and a lot of great inspiration. In this teaching kitchen, sharing is an essential part of baking. Every class we teach at the school funds a nutrition education program for hungry kids in our community.

It’s the teaching kitchen I’ve always dreamed about. So this is where you will find my baking classes this fall. But if you check the schedule you’ll find so much more! We have classes with local “celebrity chefs” who are donating their time and talent to help end childhood hunger in St. Louis. We have cookbook authors and local sommeliers lending their talents. There’s something for everyone. And as a leader in nutrition education in St. Louis, Operation Food Search recognizes that everyone in our community benefits when everyone eats well.

Join us as we continue to Bake for Good throughout the school year!

Filed Under: Classes Tagged With: bread

No Yeast Cheesy Biscuits with Fresh Herbs

October 15, 2017 by Deborah

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We are so excited to be working on some kid’s baking recipes along with our friends from Operation Food Search here in St. Louis.  This week we had a bounty of fresh herbs donated from a local community garden and the kids loved these fantastic biscuits that are loosely based on a recipe from King Arthur’s Flourish blog.  Talk about easy, with only three real ingredients in the original recipe: flour, cheese and milk! In keeping with our passion for whole grains we did swap in some great sprouted whole wheat flour, and of course some of the fresh herbs from the garden, but feel free to use 2 cups of any self-rising flour you have on hand or make your own by mixing 2 cups less 2 tablespoons regular or white whole wheat flour, 1 tablespoon baking powder, and 1 teaspoon salt. I hope you enjoy them as much as we did…

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Filed Under: Bread, Kitchen Notes, Microbakery, Recipes

We are all about the baking and breaking of great bread in our community. Baking, teaching and advocating with and for hungry kids. Learn more...

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Recent Posts

  • Sharing Bread
  • No Yeast Pizza for Young Chefs
  • Community Pizza
  • School of Cooking & Sharing
  • No Yeast Cheesy Biscuits with Fresh Herbs

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