The other day I made a similar bread to this one, a Caramelized Cranberry Crazy Bread. It tasted so good, and was such a great success, that I thought I would try another kind. I had apples and pecans handy, so this is what I ended up with. Even better than the cranberry, I think.
breakfast
Caramelized Cranberry and Camembert Crazy Bread, with Toasted Walnuts
Looks kind of crazy, doesn’t it? I’d seen crazy breads (aka pull-apart breads) before, but this was a first attempt. I think that the yeast went crazier than expected though, because the loaf bloomed like mad and quite overflowed the pan. Oh well, nice effect, I guess. The cranberries and walnuts are a nice contrast to the funkiness of the camembert. Not sure if I should consider this a “sweet” or “savory” bread, but I do think that the presentation will wow.
Apparently yesterday was National Pancake Day. Who knew? Well, actually I knew after I saw about 50 foodie blog / recipe / retail references to it. But not knowing before hand, I wasn’t really with it. Oh well. Anyway, after seeing those fifty or so references, I had a craving, so I made this for breakfast. The pancake for lazy people. Pass the syrup please.
Everyone has their own way of cooking bacon. In the pan, in the oven, even in the microwave. My method involves the oven, covering the pan with aluminum foil (for easier clean up), but also by placing the bacon on a wire rack placed on the prepared baking sheet. Why? Well, two reasons: 1. by raising the bacon away from the pan, there is better airflow, so the bacon crisps from the bottom as well, leaving the bacon nice and flat and 2. also because the bacon is raised from the pan, it causes less splatters (the reason bacon splatters is because the heated grease under the bacon doesn’t have any place to go with the bacon on top of it, so it eventually “pops” to have the air/grease escape, causing splatters. I don’t know that this is the “best” method, but it is the one that I use. Onwards:





