Thanks, I'll give that a try on the next round and have some on hand for cooking on shorter notice.
Thanks, I'll give that a try on the next round and have some on hand for cooking on shorter notice.
My question is has anyone tried to freeze the dough or the bread to use for later? I would like to keep some on hand ready to go but would like to avoid the hassle of full on cooking bread every few days or so.
Pardon my ignorance. Does the spent grain need to be dried before making the bead?
It probably depends on your pub's theme. Garlic infused olive oil, horseradish dip, honey mustard dip, etc. Personally, I prefer hummus. There are any number of ways to differentiate it (spicy hummus, garlic hummus, guacamole/southwestern hummus, etc.On another note, what would be a good spread to serve with this? Think of how you go into a mexican restaurant and get chips and salsa; italian place bread and olive oil, steakhouse rolls and butter. For my brewpub, I would love to have baskets of this with ???? Honey Mustard Mayo? Honey Butter? Bacon Honey Butter? Horseradish Mayo?
It would have to be something that is relatively inexpensive and awesome with the bread and complement the line of fine, hand-crafted beers that will be on tap....
Please suggest!![]()
I use the spray bottle technique as well, it gives you a nice crusty bread. It is also great to use with rolls. Nothing like home baked bread and rolls, especially when they contain your spent grain from a recent brew day.Preheat oven to 425*F. Bake loaf on center rack for 20 minutes. Using a spray bottle with clean water, mist the entire loaf (6-8 squirts) every 5 minutes for the first 20 minutes. Then reduce oven temp to 375* and bake another 25 mins, or until loaf sounds hollow when thumped with a knuckle. Cool, cut, and munch.
Yum! This thread got me going, so thanks for the inspiration.
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So I am new to brewing and I still do extract brewing...could i just the specialty grains from steeping to make something like this? It sure does look delicious
Yeah, increasing the amount of flour is the way to go. My standard when using spent grains I haven't baked with before (after trying it standard, i adjust the flour and add adjuncts to compliment) is 3 cups whole wheat and 1 cup white. Perhaps a bit more white/water as dough consistency dictates. The rest I keep to the original recipe.
I almost never buy bread anymore. The spent grain keeps for a while in the fridge, and a new batch or two every week is enough.
How long will you keep the spent grain in the fridge for? I assume you just put it in a covered container.
Ingredients
3 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon rapid-rise yeast
1 1/2 teaspoons table salt
2 cups finely grated Parmesan cheese
3/4 cup and 2 tablespoons room temperature water
1/2 cup spent grain, preferably low on the roasted malts
1/4 cup and 2 tablespoons lager
1 tablespoon white vinegar
1 tablespoon minced fresh rosemary
Instructions
Combine and whisk flour, yeast, salt, Parmesan, and rosemary in large bowl. Add water, grain, lager, and vinegar. Using a silicone spatula, fold together mixture, scraping up dry flour from bottom of bowl until a ball forms. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it sit at room temperature for 8 to 18 hours.
Line a 10-inch skillet with a sheet of parchment paper and spray with nonstick cooking spray. Transfer dough to a lightly floured work surface and knead 10 to 15 times. Shape the dough into a ball by pulling the edges into the middle. Transfer the dough, seam-side down, to your parchment-lined skillet and spray the surface of dough with nonstick cooking spray. Cover the dough loosely with plastic wrap and let it rise at room temperature until your dough has doubled in size, around 2 hours.
About 30 minutes before your dough is done rising, adjust oven rack to the lowest position, place your Dutch oven (with the lid on) on the rack, and heat the oven to 500 degrees. Dust the top of your dough lightly with flour and, using a sharp knife, make a 6-inch-long, 1/2-inch-deep slit along the top of the dough.
Carefully remove your dutch oven from the oven and remove the lid. Pick up dough by lifting parchment and lower into the Dutch oven. Cover the Dutch oven and place in oven. Lower oven temperature to 425 degrees and bake covered for 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, remove lid and continue to bake until loaf is deep brown and the center of the loaf registers 210 degrees, 20 to 30 minutes longer. Carefully remove the loaf from the pot; transfer the loaf to a wire rack and cool to room temperature, which would take about 2 hours.
3 cups spent grain
5 cups bread flour (approximate)
1 Tbsp salt
1/3 cup brown sugar
1 cup homemade Irish Stout
2 Tbsp vegetable oil
1 pkg dry baking yeast
1/2 tsp sugar
1/2 cup warm (112*F) water
Pinch of cornmeal
Combine grain, 2 cups of bread flour, salt, and brown sugar in large mixing bowl and mix thoroughly.
Dissolve 1/2 tsp white sugar in 112*F water in a small bowl. Sprinkle dry yeast on water surface. Cover bowl w. foil and hold between 110* and 115* for 10 mins.
Meanwhile, add beer and oil to grain/flour mixture and stir together. Slowly add 2 more cups of bread flour and combine (I just used my hands, coated w. flour to avoid sticking).
After 10 mins soaking, gently stir yeast mixture, replace cover and rest for 5 mins or until yeast cream is nice and thick.
Add yeast mixture to dough and combine by hand. Slowly add remaining bread flour until dough is stiff and only a bit sticky.
Turn out dough onto floured surface and knead for 8-10 minutes. Place dough in large bowl coated w. nonstick spray, cover w. damp towel, and leave for 2-3 hours (or until roughly double in size) in a warm spot to rise.
After initial rise, punch down dough and turn out onto floured surface. Shape into a round loaf, pulling the top of the loaf tight. Grease (or spray) a large cookie sheet and sprinkle with a bit of cornmeal to prevent sticking. Place loaf on prepared sheet, cover w. damp towel, and allow to rise for another 45 minutes to 1 hour, or until roughly doubled.
Preheat oven to 425*F. Bake loaf on center rack for 20 minutes. Using a spray bottle with clean water, mist the entire loaf (6-8 squirts) every 5 minutes for the first 20 minutes. Then reduce oven temp to 375* and bake another 25 mins, or until loaf sounds hollow when thumped with a knuckle. Cool, cut, and munch.
Yum! This thread got me going, so thanks for the inspiration.
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My lady just whipped up a couple loafs of spent grain bread from my steeping grains:
12oz Caramel 80L
4oz Black Patent
4oz Chocolate
Looks beautiful, but could use a bit more butter for flavor. But then, I love me some butter.
I wrote the whole thing up here: Baking Project: Spent Beer Grain Bread
My lovely baker says that for this recipe, she'd probably up the butter to about 2-3 tbsp, which will make the bread a bit softer. Another teaspoon of salt will help the flavor, and shouldn't affect the yeast too badly.
As for the processor, she doesn't see why not. Give it a whirl
Baking: It's science for hungry people.
You are very correct about the need for pictures. I was dreadfully aware of the lack of photographs when I was whipping up the blog post. I'll take some tonight.
She ran it at 375*F for 30-40 minutes, but I'm pretty sure she put it back in for a few more minutes due to the needle test.
Neither. She used a pair of loaf pans, so we can use it for sammiches.
This recipe comes out great, and I've been gradually simplifying it.Here's the recipe I use, easy and AWESOME. Pictures here: http://beerreviewdude.com/beer-recipes/spent-grain-beer-bread-recipe/
I put the spent (still wet) grains through my food processor to get them into a finer crush state.
Thinking of punching it down, kneading it some, then putting it into the bowl (covering with a towel) for another hour (or so) until it doubles again. Then I'll split it into loaves, let rise, and bake on my pizza stone.
Here's the recipe I use, easy and AWESOME. Pictures here: http://beerreviewdude.com/beer-recipes/spent-grain-beer-bread-recipe/
I get fluffier loaves when I let the second rise occur "in place". IN other words, I try to handle it as little as possible after the second rise. I also usually punch down before it has fully doubled. Punching down reduces some of the gaps and holes and fluffiness, so except for the loaves I am going to be using for sandwich bread, i hardly punch it down at all.
Spent grain (or any "whole grain") bread can be too dense if you over-handle the dough or punch it down overzealously.