Friday, April 11, 2008

The Logde Goes 'Down Under'

As a resident of the Gorging Lodge, albeit an absent one, I felt obliged to contribute a share of my gastronomical adventures in exotic places. Let me begin with a short story about breadmaking.

Despite a different sky above, bread-making in Australia is more or less the same as anywhere else. However, two facts are worth relating. First, the supply of fresh yeast is scarce. In fact, so scarce that I have not yet managed to find a monger in Melbourne willing to trade an ounce for any amount of Australian dollars. For that reason, all my breads have been the product of dried yeast, which anyone passionate about their bread knows well to be of lesser merit.

Secondly, my oven is a charming artefact of the early twentieth century. Regrettably, although abundant in aesthetics, our piece of machinery falls short functionally. Yes, not only are its controls foul to master, it also lacks all means of thermometrics. Indeed, my first few baking attempts resembled my tragic efforts to get the better of certain fretless string instruments. However, once I had procured a remarkable little gizmo of oven thermometery, those obstacles became none of consequence whatsoever.

The result, a classic garlic bread ...



The wonderful wee gadget that brought it all about, an oven thermometer ...

2 comments:

laugelina said...

Hey! How nice to read your post!

Did that bread taste as wonderfully as the garlic bread you use to make here in the lodge? I have yet to taste a better garlic bread...

Guðmundur Andri Hjálmarsson said...

Thank you.

Well, to tell the truth, no, not quite. I was not overstating anything, the oven I got here is a foul creature. I cannot get it up to more than 180°C, no matter how hard I try. The distribution of heat is also most mysterious: the bread bakes faster on one side than the other so I have to take it out half way through and turn it around. Actually, the loaf on the picture was made before I realised that, you can see that it is slightly burned on the left-hand side.