As the
Great British Bake Off returns to our screens on September 13, the new
contestants will no doubt be desperate to get a Hollywood handshake. Paul
Hollywood, 56, has been the steely-eyed judge of the show since it started back
in 2010, and if bakers want to impress him, they might want to make some of his
favourite bakes – including a lemon drizzle cake.
These are
Hollywood’s all-time favourite bakes, plus his top tips for newbies…
Lemon
drizzle cake
Hollywood
might be known for his breads, but his number one bake is a sweet classic:
lemon drizzle cake.
“I love
citrus,” he confesses. “You want that zing on the tongue when you bite into it.
And you get that softness which comes from the lemon drizzle sitting on the
top, then that hint of sugar in the crust. It’s an all-rounder for me. “Just
having that with a cup of tea – just talking about it, now I’m going to go and
make one. Lemon drizzle is a beautiful cake, it’s so clean, and it’s quite easy
to make.”
Sausage
rolls
“You can’t
go wrong with a sausage roll,” says Hollywood. “I’ve got a Stilton one [in his
most recent cookbook, Bake]. You can serve it with caramelised onions, which is
fantastic.”
Pizza
Hollywood
admits to using his pizza oven at home all the time. “Actually, a lot of people
have bought pizza ovens now – the little ones, not a three grand pizza oven,”
he says. “You can spend 70 quid and get a decent pizza oven and feed the family
for cheap, using decent tomatoes, good cheese, and you end up with a beautiful
pizza.”
Scones
Hollywood
also loves “basic things”, like a scone.
“These
things are rudimentary, and have been around for years,” he says. “Make a scone
with strong bread flour, which I do – everyone makes it with plain. Don’t. Try
it with a strong [bread flour] – I used to use that in the Dorchester. Try it
at home and all of a sudden you get a lift from the strong flour, and people
go, ‘Wow’.”
Hollywood’s
top tips for novice bakers
Want to
bake bread like Hollywood? Firstly, the baking pro suggests starting with a
simple flatbread.
“You need a
good flour, a good set of scales, and make sure your oven’s nice and clean – so
it’s attaining the temperature it’s saying it’s trying to attain,” Hollywood
advises.
“Start with
a frying pan, make a flatbread in a frying pan and understand what’s going on
with the dough, so you get your dough mastered. And that’s all to do with the
manipulation of the flour, how you mix it – I knead a flatbread. It’s one of
the ancient breads – you put it in a frying pan as they would have done on a
hot plate years ago, and watch it bubble up.
“And then
cut it into strips and dip it into guacamole and eat it. It’s stunning. You
want that caramelisation; you want those dark spots as well.
“It comes
down to a good recipe and good equipment, leading you up to making a good dough
– and then obviously, the actual bake itself.”
Once you’ve
mastered flatbreads, Hollywood recommends trying a tin bread – “because there’s
only one way it can go, which is straight up”.
This will
give you “some great toasted bread, which you can slice up in the morning, drop
it in the toaster,” he adds. “It stays in the toaster a little bit longer,
because there’s no sugar in it, and lots of fat – so it becomes really crispy.
That with butter on its own. I love tea and toast, it’s one of my favourite
things. So simple, but highly effective.”
Bake: My Best Ever Recipes For The Classics by Paul Hollywood is published by Bloomsbury Publishing. Photography by Haarala Hamilton.
I wish this self-satisfied twerp would shut up. Sick of seeing his smug face. Still, the ladies love him. Well, not his ex-wives, obviously.
By Lance Boyle from Algarve on 07 Sep 2022, 23:21