Back in November I started thinking about the Christmas season and making contingency plans if I wasn't able to spend it with family. I thought about what treats I enjoyed that I might want to stock up on if I had to face a solo Christmas. Most years my parents make an effort to buy Stollen for me (they buy a yule log for my sister who doesn't eat Christmas pudding and wanted to do something special for me to). I started wondering whether I might be able to make Stollen for myself. Then Melinda suggested a festive #ConfinedCookalong and it was the prompt I needed to experiment.
Having bought all the ingredients (or believing that to be the case) I reread the recipe and almost had second thoughts. It seemed so time consuming while also trying to do the usual weekend housework, write Christmas cards, and do various other chores. However I felt committed so decided to persevere.
Saturday morning after a cup of tea to start the day, and an online yoga session I assembled the ingredients. It was at this point I realised I was missing ground cinnamon, but decided to make a quick #ConfinedSubstitution with nutmeg. I also had cheap dried fruit without peel, but having dried a few satsuma skins earlier in the week I decided to supplement the dried fruit with some of that. I was rather cautious in my use of the peel as I wasn't sure if it had dried sufficiently.
The first task was to cover the dried fruit and added peel with hot water and put to one side to soak. I then gently warmed the apple juice and added dried yeast. While the yeast was activating I made a start on the housework, before returning to the kitchen and adding the apple juice and yeast mixture to the flour. Once these were fully combined, the bowl was covered, moved to the living room, and left for a couple of hours. I also put the heating on for the first hour or so to ensure the space was sufficiently warm. I'm always a little unsure about proofing dough in winter. After continuing with the housework I decided to squeeze in an #UnconfinedWalks which resulted in the dough being left to proof for slightly longer than intended (2.5-3 hours rather than the recommended 1-2 hours).
Currently I'm still hoping to spend Christmas in a bubble with my parents, and am taking steps to reduce my risks over the next couple of weeks. You can never have too many seasonal treats though, especially after the year 2020 has been!
Definitely a time for seasonal treats - it sounds like we're in similar positions regarding pre-Christmas risk, so it's good to have something tasty for company.
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