Banana and Honey Bread
It was about time for a failure, and here it is right on cue. The first of many to be sure. The dismal outcome pictured below is banana and honey bread from Jamie Oliver's Happy Days With the Naked Chef.
This recipe seemed the perfect thing to try. After my wild success with Nigella's whirligig buns, I was keen to try some more yeast recipes. Then I found some pre-cyclone bananas in the bottom of the freezer. I'm not sure how long frozen fruit is supposed to last, so I thought I should use them asap.
Alas, they were heavy, dense, doughy, salty and all round revolting. I could easily have broken a window if I had thought to heave one in the right direction.
There are a few problems with the recipe and my preparation that I can identify.
First of all, the recipe called for six bananas. This should then be topped up with water to make up 625ml. Well, english bananas must be puny because five bananas easily exceeded 625ml on their own. I think this dominance of bananas contributed to the heaviness of the dough. It struggled to rise, and then it was a pretty poor effort.
Next, the recipe called for two tablespoons of sea salt. This seemed too much, but I went with it anyway. Big mistake.
Third, the heaviness of the dough totally threw out the cooking times. The recipe said 20 minutes at 190C. At that time the buns were still raw dough. It was only after 40 minutes that they approached a bread like consistency.
Needless to say, one bite and into the bin. Oh well, live and learn. On to the next thing.
3 Comments:
Hi, just browsing your archives. You might have figured this out already but the English (and the Americans, and the French ... in fact, the whole world) use a different tablespoon to Australians - so unless the Jamie Oliver book is updated/rewritten for Australia, it will use a 15mL tablespoon whereas we use a 20mL tablespoon. Might explain the deadly saltiness.
I thought it was just me but, I made that same recipe and got the same result. It was a big waste of lotsa bananas. They came out really dense and were hard as rocks, I could have used them as baseballs. So don't feel too bad, you weren't the only one.
Thanks Anna, I think you are right.
Hi jenjen. It's always a relief to know that you are not alone.
Thanks for dropping by.
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