I love the quote from Marian the author who says: "there are no bad foods, just bad diets". So true! I have never been much of a bread lover or maker, so I am not very au fait with yeast cookery, but I have given it a damn good go here, and I was pretty pleased with the result.
ingredients:
bread dough:
250g strong white flour
7g dried instant yeast
5g sugar
175 mls warm water (I just kept sticking my finger in till it felt bearable)
fatty dough:
75g strong white flour
4g salt
5g sugar
75g butter softened (not melted)
60g lard softened (this happened almost instantly as it was a warm day and the lard is very soft anyway)
method:
Place the flour, yeast and sugar in a medium bowl
Give it a stir with your hand
Add the warm water and mix it together with your hands till you have an elastic dough (this will happen very quickly) - no need to knead, but you may need to add a bit of flour to make a nice ball
Put it aside while you make the fatty dough
In a large bowl, place the flour, salt, and sugar and stir it together
Add in the diced butter and the lard and mix with a knife - the author suggests doing it with your hands but as I am not in Scotland, I used a knife as the dough was incredibly soft and melty
Now you are at the fun part -
throw some flour on your work surface
Roll out the bread dough till you have a 1cm thick rectangle
Put blobs of HALF the fatty dough on top of the rectangle
Fold over one third of the bread dough into the centre then fold the other third over the top so you have a fat squishy parcel of buttery, lardy dough
Roll out again to a 1 cm thick rectangle (in sunny Brisbane you can just pat it out with your hands)
Then dot the surface with the blobs of the other half of the fatty dough
Do the one third thing again - i.e. - fold it like a fitted sheet!
Roll out again to about 1 cm thick
Allow to rest for 10 minutes
Divide into 12 pieces (I used a ruler - I know crazy talk)
Place them on a tray coated with flour; squish them out a bit and create 4 dimples in each piece
Cover loosely with oiled cling film and let them prove for 30 minutes
Pre-heat your oven to 225C
Bake the butteries for about 20 mins or till golden
Serve warm
gather your ingredients |
add the luke warm water |
patting the bread dough into an elastic ball |
the bread dough after proving for 10 minutes |
ingredients for the fatty dough |
adding the butter and lard to the flour for the fatty dough |
mixing the butter and lard in with the flour |
patting out the dough |
blobbing the surface of the bread dough with half the fatty dough |
folding the doughs into an envelope shape (sort of) |
second layer of fatty dough incorporated and the combined doughs rolled out again |
once the second lot of blobs are patted in and rolled out, cut into 12 pieces |
give them some dimples:) |
cover them in oiled cling film for 30 minutes to prove |
bake till golden (these might be a bit too golden) |
enjoy warm out of the oven with a nice cup of tea |
These butteries are flaky and rich, and I think I need to try making them again to get the flakiness just right! I have a confession here - the smell of the lard was a wee bit offputting to me though it did not affect the taste. So folks, if you decide to try making these, do not fear the smelly pig fat, as it disappears into the dough and gives you a delightfully flaky, buttery treat. I suggest sprinkling on some dried herbs and some sea salt flakes, and perhaps even some grated Parmesan cheese before baking to give it an extra fillip. But these are not essential, as the buttery is a treat in itself.
Oh I think I have a block of it in my fridge although it's probably expired as I don't use it very much. Maybe I should use it in this so that it doesn't go to waste.
ReplyDeleteHi Lorraine
DeleteI have found another great recipe with lard so I can use it up:). Now that I have hunted it down I want to make use of it.
These look divine, I think I would probably resort to substituting butter for the lard. We wanted to try making our own dog biscuits and couldn't find lard but did find suet for them. The dogs thought they were the best biscuits ever!
ReplyDeletehi stella
Deletei think you could use all butter instead of lard and butter and it would probably taste much the same. i need to make them again to get it perfect:)
I wonder if the IGA up here has lard. I would love a pie crust with half lard and half butter for my French Canadian Tourtière pies. I've never heard of Aberdeen Butteries but I think I'm in love.
ReplyDeleteisn't it funny how things pop into your life? I was reading a Scottish crime novel and they mentioned eating "rowies" and sure enough this is another name for aberdeen butteries.
DeleteI love that you went on a great white lard hunt! I'm going to keep an eye out for it now too in Sydney. I don't think I've seen or tasted butteries before so thank you for sharing that Scottish delight.
ReplyDeleteHi vicki
ReplyDeleteYes I was astonished that lard was so hard to come by:). Trust a Scottish recipe for a heart warming (and stomach) treat.
These butteries look great. I haven't seen pig fat/lard around, but I do have some wagyu lard in the fridge of all things. I saw it at Coles the other day, grabbed it as I hadn't seen it before and have completely forgotten about it until I read your post.
ReplyDeletewagyu lard? that sounds interesting. maybe these old fashioned things will come back into fashion and we will all have a dripping bowl in the fridge just like our mums used to do. i saw one advertised for $100! just to keep dripping in. crumbs!
DeleteI bought it under the old guise of Allowrie so I didn't know it had been rebadged. Good to know for future reference. I have half a block in the freezer and to be honest, the other day when I needed a small amount of vegetable shortening, I just used a little lard and, of course the result was spectacular. I'd never heard of these and I can tell by the picture they would have been utterly, butterie delicious!
ReplyDeletehi fiona
Deleteyes the lard quest was a biggie.:) Lard is very interesting and adds a real richness to baked goods. Hard to believe it was THE shortening of choice not that long ago.
haha lard is huge in Germany! I just stare at it at the supermarket hehe
ReplyDeletehi cate
Deleteyes it is a bit hard to know what to do with it all! I just don't think pig fat is my thing really:)