Tag Archives: teaspoon paprika

Cheddar, Beer and Mustard Pull-Apart Bread

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So Husband is really big into home brewing, which is awesome, but it also means we have a lot of beer sitting around. We drink it, give it away to friends/strangers, and still it piles up! So I have started cooking with it more often. I found this recipe while browsing Pinterest (to quote Husband “What DON’T you find while browsing Pinterest?!). It. Is. Amazing! I cannot stop eating  this wonderful bread. And it wasn’t that hard. So delicious and rich and the flavours meld perfectly

This came from a site called The Smitten Kitchen. The recipe suggests using a bread maker, but since I do not have one, I did not use it. I will include both sets of directions. =]

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Cheddar, Beer, and Mustard Pull-Apart Bread

Ingredients:

For the bread:

  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1/4 cup plus 1/3 cup beer (I used Husbands Agave Wheat Beer. Light and just a bit sweet)
  • 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, divided
  • 1/3 cup rye flour (use additional a-p flour if you don’t have this) (I did not have any, so I used my fresh ground flour)
  • 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
  • 2 1/4 teaspoons (1 envelope) instant yeast
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 large eggs, at room temperature

For the  filling:

  • 3 tablespoon unsalted butter
  • 1 tablespoon Dijon or a mustard of your choice
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 teaspoon mustard powder
  • 1 teaspoon paprika
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • Several grinds black pepper
  • 1 1/2 cups shredded cheddar

Directions:

To make the  dough:

  1. In a small saucepan, heat the 4 tablespoons butter and 1/4 cup of beer, just until the butter has melted. Remove from heat and add the remaining 1/3 cup beer. Set aside to cool down slightly. You want the mixture warm (110 to 116 degrees), but not steaming hot.
  2. Meanwhile, in the bowl of a stand mixer, stir together 2 cups of the all-purpose flour, sugar, yeast and table salt. With the mixer on low, pour in the butter-beer mixture, mixing only until the flour is moistened. Add eggs, one at a time, and mix until combined. The batter will look lumpy, but will become smooth in a moment. Add the remaining 1/2 cup all-purpose flour and all of the rye flour, mixing until just combined. Replace paddle with a dough hook and let the machine knead the dough for 3 to 4 minutes on low. (Or, if you aren’t using a machine, knead with your hands for about 5 minutes. Heads up, I had to add about 3 cups of flour to my dough to keep it from sticking to my hands and the bowl and everything else!)
  3. Oil a medium/large bowl and transfer dough to it. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and set aside for 50 to 60 minutes, until doubled. Meanwhile, prepare fillings.

To make the filling:

  1. Back in the same small saucepan you used for the butter and beer, melt the 3 tablespoons butter. Remove from heat and whisk in mustard and Worcestershire until smooth. Set aside.
  2. In the bottom of a medium bowl, stir together mustard powder, paprika, table salt and several grinds of black pepper. Add shredded cheddar and toss until grated strands are evenly coated with spices. I like to keep this in the fridge until needed so it doesn’t get soft and clumpy, making it harder to sprinkle over the dough in a bit.

To assemble the bread:

  1. Either coat a 9-by-5 loaf pan lightly with butter or a nonstick spray and set aside.
  2. Turn dough out onto a well-floured counter and roll the dough into a 20-by-12-inch rectangle, making sure it doesn’t stick to the counter by lifting sections and re-flouring the counter as needed. Brush the butter-mustard-Worcestershire mixture evenly over the whole surface, right up to the edges. Cut the dough crosswise into 5 strips; each should be 12-by-4 inches. Sprinkle the first one evenly with a heaping 1/4 cup of the grated cheese (which is now fine to leave out at room temperature). Gently place another strip on top of it, coat it with another heaping 1/4 cup of cheese, and repeat with remaining strips until they are stacked 5-high and all of the cheese is used.
  3. With your very sharpest serrated knife, gently — so gently! The lightest sawing motions the weight of the blade will allow! — cut your stack into 6 to 7 2-inch segments (each stacked segment should be 4-by-2 inches). I say 6 to 7 range because while your 12-inch length should clearly yield only 6 2-inch segments, I find that the soft dough stretches so much when you lift and stack it that I end up with 7. Either amount will fit; this is totally not something to fret over.
  4. Arrange stacks of dough down the length of your prepared loaf pan as if filling a card catalog drawer. I make this easier by standing my loaf pan up on its short end to make the next part easier. If, when you finish filing all of your dough stacks, you ended up with less than needed for the dough “cards” to reach the end of the pan, when you return the pan to rest flat on the counter again, just shimmy it a little so the dough centers. It will all even out in the final rise/oven. If you ended up with toomany dough cards, before you add the last stack, simply press gently on the dough already filed to make room for it.
  5. Loosely cover the pan with more plastic wrap and set it aside to rise again for 30 to 45 more minutes. Meanwhile, preheat your oven to 350 degrees.
  6. Bake loaf for 25 to 35 minutes, until puffed and brown. Transfer it to a wire rack and let it cool for 5 minutes before flipping it out onto a serving plate/cutting board. Serve warm with cold beer.
  7. Loaf “pulls” apart the easiest when it is hot or warm. If it has cooled beyond the point that the layers wish to easily separate, simply serve it in thin slices. Wrap leftovers in plastic and keep at room temperature for a day. I bet the leftovers would be fantastic reheated with scrambled eggs.