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Mandy Apple Cinnamon Sourdough
Apple Cinnamon Sourdough
Chef
Intermed..
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Mandy’s Apple Cinnamon Sourdough Apple and cinnamon are a classic combination! Enjoy slices of this delicious sourdough plain, with butter, cream cheese or honey. Toast it or use it to make French toast. And even though it leans towards sweet, it pairs well with salty prosciutto! So, if you love apple pie or cinnamon rolls, give this recipe a try.

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Mandy Apple Cinnamon Sourdough
Apple Cinnamon Sourdough
Chef
Intermed..
StarStarStarStarStar
SHARE &COMMENT

Introduction

Mandy’s Apple Cinnamon Sourdough Apple and cinnamon are a classic combination! Enjoy slices of this delicious sourdough plain, with butter, cream cheese or honey. Toast it or use it to make French toast. And even though it leans towards sweet, it pairs well with salty prosciutto! So, if you love

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Ingredients

  • 3 Granny Smith apples (or small Bramley apples)
  • 1 ½ tsp ground cinnamon
  • ¼ tsp ground nutmeg
  • 3 tbsp brown sugar
  • Small knob of butter
  • 400g strong white flour
  • 260g water
  • 120g active starter (on the rise)
  • 1 tsp salt

Method

  • 1. Prepare the apples: Peel and dice the apples into 1.5-2cm cubes. Place apple in a small saucepan and toss with the cinnamon, nutmeg and sugar. Add the knob of butter. Cook over medium heat for 3-5 minutes, stirring occasionally, just until the apple is beginning to get tender. Remove from heat and leave to cool until needed.
  • 2. Step 1: In a large bowl combine the flour and water. Knead together (by hand or with a dough hook in a stand mixer) until you get a sticky and shaggy dough and there is no dry flour in the bowl. Tip: This is just a quick knead to combine the two ingredients. Cover the bowl with a clean tea towel and leave to sit at room temperature for 30 minutes (this is the autolyse step). Tip: Set a timer so you don’t forget your dough!
  • 3. Step 2: Once the 20 minutes are up, add the active starter to one side of the bowl and the salt to the other. If mixing by hand, knead together for 6-8 minutes, if using a stand mixer with dough hook, knead on a medium low speed for about 5 minutes. Tip: The dough will be very sticky and wet, do not add any more flour, this is exactly as it should be! Transfer dough to a well-oiled bowl, then cover the bowl and leave to stand and start to prove at room temperature for 30-45 minutes (30 minutes if making in a warmer room, 20°C or more, 45 minutes if cooler). Set your timer to remind you!
  • 4. Step 3: Once the timer has gone, we’re going to start adding the apple. Lightly dust a clean surface with flour. Turn out the dough onto the floured surface, a flexible dough scraper makes this easy. Oil your hands so that the dough doesn’t stick to you and gently start to stretch the dough out into a rectangle, roughly 20x30cm (it doesn’t have to be perfect!) Scatter half of the cooked cinnamon apple over the bread from edge to edge. Fold the dough up in thirds like a letter; bottom third up, then top third down, then fold up the left and right sides so you have a lovely little dough parcel. Spread a bit more oil around your bowl and place the dough back in the bowl. Cover and prove again for 30-45 minutes at room temperature.
  • 5. Step 4: Once your timer’s gone again, turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and oil your hands. Again, gently stretch the dough out to a rectangle roughly 20x30cm in size. Scatter over the remaining apple and fold up again as you did the first time so you have a dough parcel filled with the cinnamon apple. Oil the bowl again and return the dough to it. Cover and prove for 1 ½ - 2 hours at room temperature.
  • 6. Step 5: After the longer prove, turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Gently shape the dough into a ball, this process will knock the dough back, then tighten the surface of the ball by placing the dough on a surface not dusted with flour so that it grips the table, then cupping the dough with your hands and pulling it towards yourself. It will start to lift a bit as you’re pulling it in, so lift and rotate the ball 90°, then again cupping it and pulling towards yourself. Repeat this another 2 or 3 times. Place the dough in a well-floured 20cm (8inch) round proving basket or similarly sized bowl upside down so that the seam is facing up. Tip: I would recommend lining the basket or bowl with a clean tea towel or fabric basket liner and dusting that with flour, as the apple adds moisture to the dough and this can cause some of the dough to stick when trying to turn it out. Lightly dust the dough then cover and leave to prove overnight in the fridge.
  • 7. Step 6: The next morning, pre-heat oven to 250°C / 230°C fan assisted / gas 8. - If baking without a Dutch oven: Place a roasting tray on the lowest shelf to pre-heat and get a kettle of water on the go so that it’s boiling when needed. Once the oven is hot, turn dough out from the proving basket (directly from the fridge) onto a flour-dusted baking tray seam-side down. Score the top of the bread with a sharp straight-edged knife or scoring blade. Place tray with bread into the oven and pour the boiling water into the pre-heated baking tray on the lower shelf, there will be a blast of steam so be mindful of that when pouring the water. Bake for 30-35 minutes. The bread should sound hollow when you tap the underside.
  • 8. - If baking in a Dutch oven (I like using a 2.5l Pyrex casserole dish for this, ala Patrick Ryan style, using the lid as the base): Turn the dough out into the floured base of the Dutch oven seam-side down. Score the top of the bread with a sharp straight-edged knife or scoring blade. Cover with lid of Dutch oven and transfer to oven. Bake for 40 minutes, then remove the top of the Dutch oven and bake for a further 10-15 minutes. The bread should sound hollow when you tap the underside.
  • 9. Transfer baked bread to a wire rack to cool.

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