Today’s Bread: Country Wheat Boule with Walnuts

I have a shelf full of bread cookbooks and a bulging folder of clipped recipes. Recently I’ve been happy with this Country Wheat Boule from Kathleen Weber’s Della Fattoria Bread.

It’s made with a biga starter that can be made in bulk and then used over time (I’ve used some for up to a couple of weeks later).

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There are many possible variations to the basic recipe. This one is just whole wheat with added walnuts. I’ve tried with seven-grain cereal, rosemary, cracked wheat, and other ingredients.

Many breads like this are baked in a hot, covered Dutch oven to retain the moisture and create a nice crust. I’ve found success with the clay pot baker that’s hiding in the cupboard above the fridge for years. Heat the pot with the oven, add the loaf, cover and bake about 30 minutes covered, then another 20-30 minutes uncovered until the internal bread temperature is 190-200 degrees.

Today’s result:

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Art Museum of the Americas

Date of Sojourn: January 26, 2018

Location: 201 18 St NW, Washington, https://www.google.com/maps/@38.8950269,-77.0470261,15.8z

For nearly forty years I worked for the U.S. Department of the Interior in the Main Interior Building at 1849 C St, NW (now known as the Stuart Lee Udall Department of the Interior Building). Across the street is the Organization of American States in buildings originally built for the the Pan American Union in the early 20th Century. In one of those buildings is the Art Museum of the Americas. In those four decades I never ventured inside the museum that for many years I could see from my office window.

One recent afternoon Janet and I visited the museum. We found a building built circa 1908 as the home for the Director General of the Pan American Union. (Adjacent to this building in the same complex is the main Pan American Union Building, built at the same time.) We toured the two floors of exhibits at the museum and then walked through the surrounding grounds, including a sculpture garden. There we met the museum director and had a fascinating impromptu conversation about the buildings, the history of the area, the art collection, and the challenges he faces. We learned that the Pan American Union buildings sit on the site of the Van Ness House, bounded by 18th St, F St, 17th St, and Constitution Ave., circa 1813-1816. The house was torn down for the construction of the Pan American Buildings but the carriage house was moved to the NW corner of the site and houses the offices of the museum.