© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
Nothing says spring quite like that unmistakable scent of Bärlauch or bear leek in English, aka wild garlic or ramson, in the woods! According to folklore, when bears break hibernation, they will gorge themselves on wild garlic to help detoxify their bodies and regain their strength. In this wild garlic bread, I’ve combined it with a moist yeast dough. Crispy on the outside, soft and moist on the inside – that’s exactly how bread should taste. The wonderful aroma when the bread comes fresh out of the oven is simply amazing.
| | |
- 60 g Wild garlic without the stalk, chopped
- 500 g All purpose flour
- 7 g Instant dry yeast
- 1 tsp Sugar
- 1 tsp Sea salt
- 300 ml Water, lukewarm
- 50 ml Olive oil
- 1 Small egg, beaten
- 1 tbsp Sesame seeds
|
- Wash the wild garlic leaves and thoroughly and dry them. Finely chop the wild garlic and set aside.
- Mix the flour, dry yeast, sugar and salt in the bowl of your mixer. Add in chopped wild garlic and toss together. This ensures the wild garlic is evenly distributed throughout the dough. Add in water and olive oil. Mix with a dough hook until you have a smooth dough, 8-10 minutes. Cover and leave the dough to rise in the bowl for an hour until doubled in volumn.
- Turn the dough out on a lightly floured work surface and divide the dough into 7-9 pieces. Shape each piece into a ball. Place them on a large baking tray lined parchment paper. Cover with a clean tea towel. Set aside on your kitchen counter and proof for 45 minutes.
- Preheat the oven to 200C/400. Place a heatproof tray filled with water at the bottom of the oven.
- Brush the buns with beaten egg and sprinkle some sesame seeds on top. Bake on the middle shelf of the preheated oven for 28-32 minutes until golden brown.
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
Gracias por la receta. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDeleteThey look scrumptious, Angie!!!
ReplyDeleteBet those are so good!
ReplyDeleteOh my, these looks excellent Angie :)
ReplyDeleteMy mouth is watering!
ReplyDeleteAnother wild garlic recipe. The buns look so good. And by the way I tried the creamy wild garlic chicken. It was good. I used spinach :)
ReplyDeleteThat's such an interesting fact about the bears. I will gorge on these anytime.
ReplyDeleteTandy (Lavender and Lime) https://tandysinclair.com
They do look good, Angie.
ReplyDeleteThey look terrific
ReplyDeleteEsos bollos se ven exquisitos, el sabor a ajo me gusta en todas sus variedades y dentro del pan es un bocado delicioso.
ReplyDeleteThey look stunning!
ReplyDeletewow buonissimi!
ReplyDeleteThey look so good, Angie. I bet they taste wonderful.
ReplyDeleteThey look amazing and I'm sure they smell and taste delicious.
ReplyDeleteLove your quotes today too.
Hello Angie,
ReplyDeleteThe buns look delicious, thanks for sharing. Take care, enjoy your day!
So gorgeous, golden und fluffy! I would feast on them until I eat the whole basket. I did buy some scallions this morgen at the green market, but I mostly have to go downtown to big shops to buy food, because the prices at the local green market and grocers have gone insanely high, like I can buy two batches of radishes downtown for the price I pay for one here near my house. It drives me insane.
ReplyDeleteThese look so good :-D
ReplyDeleteThey look amazing!
ReplyDelete...a wonderful treat!
ReplyDeleteThey look delicious!
ReplyDeletehow beautiful! can you use something apart from wild garlic? not something we have here I think in Queensland :)
ReplyDeleteThese are such beautiful buns Angie!
ReplyDeleteYou got a gorgeous brown bake to those buns. They look amazing!
ReplyDelete