The Cheese Board (10 page)

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Authors: Cheese Board Collective Staff

BOOK: The Cheese Board
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Some recipes (mostly sourdoughs) require
steaming
during the bake; this step creates a crunchy crust with an attractive color. The Cheese Board ovens have powerful internal steaming mechanisms that help produce the shiny baguettes and crusty Suburban Breads. We have developed a home-oven method using a metal roasting pan filled with ice water that reproduces pretty closely what occurs inside a Cheese Board oven. (In addition, we mist certain loaves with a spray bottle to further enhance the crust.) If the recipe calls for steaming, prior to preheating the oven place a large metal roasting pan directly on the floor of the oven and proceed with the instructions in the recipe.

At the Cheese Board, we like to bake sourdoughs until they have a dark, rusty brown finish. Challah is baked to a deep mahogany color and brioche a golden brown. The final aesthetic judgment is up to the baker (this means you).

CRUMB

After you bake a loaf of bread, let it cool and cut a slice or two to assess the crumb.
Crumb,
in the baking world, refers to the interior texture of the bread. Obviously, a different type of crumb is desirable in different baked goods. A much-prized goal at the Cheese Board is to bake a sourdough bread riddled with large holes, as this means that the bread is light, chewy, and moist. Generally speaking, a moister sourdough dough will give a better crumb. The length of the kneading time and the rising period also influence the crumb of sourdough breads.

If you are a new baker, you will find wet doughs hard to knead and shape at first. As you become more experienced in making sourdough breads, try increasing the amount of water by a small amount each time you make the recipe and lengthening the kneading and rising times, too. The holes in your bread will get larger and larger, until the only way to keep the butter and jam on your bread will be to cut it lengthwise.

In breads that employ commercial yeast, the prized end result is not chewiness and big holes, but a system of even, tiny holes that are not compacted or compressed at the bottom crust. Moisture, kneading, and an adequate rising time will help bring about the desired texture.

In the case of scones and muffins, a delicate cakelike crumb is achieved by adding enough liquid, mixing briefly and gently, and handling the dough or batter delicately.

CHAPTER ONE
THE MORNING BAKERY
Scones, Muffins, and More

WE CALL THE HOURS BETWEEN 7 AND 10
A.M.
at the Cheese Board the Morning Bakery. This is when we serve coffee, tea, and many of the pastries featured in this chapter. During Morning Bakery hours, the cheese counter and refrigerated cases remain closed. The store’s space is rearranged to make a counter for fast service and the preparation of hot drinks. Many of the pastries are taken out by customers to eat on the way to school or work. Regulars pause at the few tables and chairs inside, or take their chances with the weather out front on the benches under the store’s awning. At ten o’clock, as if stagehands were changing sets, the coffee urn is wheeled behind the counter and covered, and the coffee-line counter is disassembled to assume its next role as a supporting member of the show by becoming the express line for breads and prepackaged cheeses.

In this chapter we have included most of our Morning Bakery goods: scones, muffins, brioche-dough breads, granola, and shortbread cookies.

What we refer to as a “scone” at the Cheese Board is actually closer to a rich buttermilk biscuit. Our scones have a fine, cakelike crumb, and we use sweet butter, cream, and buttermilk as basic ingredients. The two secrets to making them are to barely combine the liquid ingredients with the dry, and to add extra cream or buttermilk if the mixture seems too dry. Just enough liquid will produce a succulent scone, while too much liquid produces a flat scone. One other helpful piece of advice: To keep the dough from sticking to your hands when shaping scones, dip your fingers into a bowl of water first.

Our very moist, large muffins are quick and simple to make. A successful muffin is made by combining the wet ingredients and the dry ingredients in a few quick strokes. The batter should be somewhat lumpy. Overmixed muffins are tough and will fail to rise properly. The batter for most of our muffins can also be made into
small loaves
.

Brioche dough is a simple, sweet egg dough. Chocolate Things, pecan rolls, and brioche are all made from this dough. At the store we refrigerate the dough over-night before we roll it out the next morning. This works well for our schedule and may work best for yours, too.
However, the dough is also sublime when made and baked the same day.

Shortbread is the only cookie we make regularly at the Cheese Board. This simple, classic cookie is prepared with sweet butter, flour, a little sugar, and a pinch of salt. The most important step in making shortbread is to cream the butter and sugar together sufficiently to make a very light, fluffy mixture (using room temperature butter makes this step much easier). The amount of flour used can vary, depending on weather conditions and the moisture content in the ingredients. Once the right amount of flour is added, mix briefly to incorporate the flour and butter into a smooth, stiff dough that can easily be rolled out to the desired thickness. Use as little flour on the rolling surface as needed to allow the dough to move outward as it is rolled. If the dough begins to stick, sprinkle flour on the top of a metal spatula and slide it under the dough to deposit the flour where needed.

 
There’s something very bizarre about waking up in the middle of the night to go to work. Riding my bike under the stars, in the rain, or whatever weather, that’s powerful. It’s spectacular to have the streets to yourself early in the morning. There are no cars. Sometimes I’ll weave back and forth up the middle of University Avenue—just because I can. There’s no one out on the street, and the streetlights are all blinking. It’s almost postapocalyptic.
—ADAM
 
When you get up at 3 in the morning, you think, “Ughh … not again, not this early!” But once you get here, it’s fun. You have nothing to sell, and two hours later you have all this stuff coming out of the ovens. You’re taking bread off of the pans and getting it onto the shelf, and the shelves are filling up. You see a few cars going by and then a few more cars. Then it’s ten to seven and there are people waiting to come in. It’s that energy. And then it’s a mob. And I love that mob. It just keeps you going.
—STU
 
THE CHEESE BOARD
HOURS OF OPERATION
The bakery side of the store has different hours from the cheese counter (which shares the same space), so if you want a cup of coffee after 10
A.M.
, you’re out of luck. We make and sell our pizza in a different storefront than our cheese and bakery store; and did we mention that the pizzeria has a schedule that is not the same as either the cheese counter or the bakery? In order to test our customers’ patience even more, we are open only half a day on Mondays, and even then we are only halfway open, as we don’t open the cheese counter on that day (unless, of course, it’s near a holiday!). Why is our schedule so odd? Our business’s methods and schedule may seem random, but there is a reason behind them. The operating schedule is a reflection of decisions made by the members as the store evolved and is rooted in the fundamental nature of our collective.
As with many of the other ventures that have been supported by the entire membership, the Morning Bakery began with a small group of people wanting to try something new. A few members wanted to open the doors of the store earlier to sell pastries and breads, accompanied with coffee and tea, to customers for a quick and simple breakfast. At that time, in 1991, we were open only between the hours of 10
A.M.
and 6
P.M.
The large demand for our bakery products was requiring us to begin our baking shifts earlier and earlier in the morning. Impatient customers, waiting on the sidewalk for our doors to open and looking through the front window, could see warm breads and pastries piling up and cooling on the shelves. We could all see that it didn’t make a lot of sense. But many of us were reluctant to make a change that would require us to become a larger group and, more importantly, make us have to get up earlier in the morning!
In standard businesses, if demand grows, you simply hire more workers. We, however, try to stay a close, small group while accommodating our deep need for innovation. Our solution was to open earlier and restructure our shifts. In the end, we struck a balance between fostering creativity and honoring our group’s wish to remain small. The added bonus of opening earlier was that it made space for a whole list of new products. Initially, we offered a minimal menu at the Morning Bakery, but today the shelves are completely full at 7
A.M.
, and we have a rotation of daily specials.
 
I can remember in the old store on Vine Street we would set up every morning, and then at quarter to ten before we opened, we’d all go out and take a break and drink coffees together. That was nice.
—A LONGTIME MEMBER
 
The things people think about the Cheese Board! About five years ago I was waiting in line at Andronico’s and this woman said to another woman in line ahead of me, “What are you going to do now?” and she responded, “I’m going to buy a couple of baguettes at the Cheese Board.” “Oh, really, you’re going to go there? I heard those people sleep together, is that true?” I cracked up, I was thinking of saying, “Yep, they do, ma’am, they do. I know, I work there!” Just kidding! It’s so funny.
—GUILLERMO

 
SCONES
 

Currant Scones
This is the original Cheese Board breakfast scone, and for years it was the only kind of scone we baked. One of our customers dubbed it the Ur-Scone. The production of this scone has changed from its humble beginnings of about sixty scones a day to over six hundred being made on Saturdays. The pure flavor of unsalted butter is the most important component in this recipe (
see a discussion on butter
). You should have on hand extra buttermilk and cream, as the amount of liquid that you will need can vary depending on weather conditions and the amount of moisture in the flour. How much cinnamon topping to use has always been a topic of discussion on the early-morning shift.

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