How did I make it this far in life without knowing about this bread? Italian stecca (stick). I will be making this all the time now. I found this a couple days ago on a Polish blog. |
The next day, it will look like this. It is very sticky.
Spread out a kitchen towel and cover it generously with flour. This flour will not be mixed into the dough. It just keeps it from sticking. Dump the dough on the towel and slightly deflate it.
Make sure the dough is covered with flour then fold the towel gently over the dough and set it aside to rise again for 2 hours.
Here it is after 2 hours. Sprinkle a piece of parchment paper with flour.
Cut the dough into pieces about this size.
Stretch these pieces into baguette shapes. These will look very rustic. Spread them with olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt.
Let them rise until doubled, about 30-45 minutes.
Bake them at 500 degrees for about 25 minutes until they start to turn golden. Place them on racks to cool.
Look at this crumb!
I had made Caesar salads the day before and had leftover dressing so I tossed some lettuce with the dressing and filled the bread with it.
I added some grilled chicken too.
I can not image a better bread for a sandwich. Stecca is like a ciabatta baguette. It is light and chewy with a great yeast flavor.
Comments
That said this bread sounds and looks amazing and the sandwich you made is wonderful, Christer will love this, you know how he likes his sandwiches, lol,too bad you couldn't send him some!
I can see myself filling it with lots of goodies :-) something I love to do with ciabatta :-)
Have a great day!
Christer.
http://vraiefiction.blogspot.ca/2013/08/pollo-alla-milanese-sandwich.html
This looks divine! I can smell it now wafting through the house.......thanks.
How yumilicious! I can't wait to try it!
Mario