Snowballing out of control

I woke up at noon this morning. 

Noon. 

I haven't done that since college!

And no, I was not out raging, I was actually up until 4 AM crafting my little heart out last night, but more on that in a later post.

So back to my story, I woke up and was hungry so I went to make myself a salad and remembered an amazing Seafood Cobb Salad that I had at Chadwick's in Old Town a few weeks ago.

And what made it so amazing was the dressing. I decided it was some sort of Pesto-job, so I whisked some extra olive oil and some rice vinegar (wtsm) with some store bought pesto and voila! It was perfect. Who doesn't love pesto? It just makes sense.

I drizzled it over a salad of romaine, corn, black beans, green onions, carrots, Turkish feta and tuna.

And then I had another helping.

And then I roasted a spaghetti squash and my usual smorgasbord of veggies and set myself up for some lunch success for a week.

And then I decided to try making Challah Bread with Rosh Hashanah just around the bend. 

I followed Smitten Kitchen's recipe and attempted the six-braided challah... 

and I definitely recommend using a YouTube video to learn how to weave these strands into a loaf of bread. Smitten Kitchen gives really good directions, but I'm more of a visual learner.

I made one long loaf...

and one round loaf (you simply braid a long loaf and connect the ends)

The thing about the dough is that you let it proof three different times and by the end of the process, I was getting a little impatient, so I gave it the ol' "it's good enough!" and stuck it in the oven.

I should have definitely let it proof more.

Meh, you live and you learn.

So basically all I did today was sleep, make food, and eat. Oh, I also wrote this blog post.

Yeah... I'm going to need another day off to make up for the one I wasted today.

Comments

Leslie said…
That challah looks amazing. But I've only had challah a few times (loved it). What is "proof"?
Joann said…
I'll make sure to bring you a loaf when I finally get it right. Proofing is another way of saying "wait for it to rise" and it gives the yeast time to do its thang and make the bread all nice and fluffy.

I'm not patient enough to wait an hour or more, but that challah basically gave me the finger and told me I have no choice. -_____-

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