
For those who have no way of checking it out, here is the way it is (or was) made at Essential Bakery in Seattle – the bakery which contributed the recipe to the book :

(photo scanned from the book, frame and text added by me)

When I make it again though, I may skip the cinnamon as we are not huge fans of that particular spice (maybe because the taste of cinnamon as we know it in the United States is more assertive than the one we grew up with in Europe).
Save this restriction, the bread is truly lovely. The raw pear bakes inside the bread and when you bite into it, it yields an explosion of sweet and fragrant juice in your mouth. The hazelnuts add a welcome crunch. The figs contribute a marvelous depth of flavor. The cracked rye gives the crumb a chewy texture and the white whole wheat and high-extraction flour make it tastier and more wholesome. A good bread for the Man to bring to the office as a snack, which is why I made it!
Ingredients:
For the pre-ferment
- 175 g unbleached bread flour
- 175 g water
- 1 tiny pinch of instant yeast
For the soaker
- 17 g cracked rye
- 17 g water
For the final dough
- 300 g hi-extraction flour or unbleached bread flour
- 40 g white whole wheat flour
- 1/4 tsp instant yeast
all of the pre-ferment
all of the soaked rye - 120 g water (I had 34 g leftover)
- 80 g pear baby food or pureed steamed or canned pears (if canned, preferably with no added sugar)
- 12 g salt
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp allspice
- 115 g very hard crisp pear such as Bosc or Anjou, peeled, cored and cut in 1/2-inch cubes
- 60 g dried figs, stemmed and cut in 1/2-inch pieces (the recipe calls for Calimyrna figs but I used the regular Trader Joe’s ones as it was all we had on hand)
- 60 g hazelnuts (lightly toasted and skinned) (to toast the hazelnuts, put them in a small baking pan in a 350 F/177 F oven for about 15 minutes, then rub the warm nuts in a paper towel to remove the skins)
Method: (Glezer gives instructions for 3 different mixing methods, by hand, by stand mixer and by food processor. I used a mixer with a dough hook). This bread is made over 2 days.
- The day before, scale the yeast and the flour for the pre-ferment, add water and stir well. Cover and let ferment overnight or about 12 hours (Glezer says to use instant yeast and to mix it in water before adding it to the flour/water mixture but I wonder if that’s not a typo as, from what I understood, only fresh and active dry yeast should be added to water. So I just proceeded as usual and mixed the instant yeast with the flour before adding the water)
- Also the day before, combine the cracked rye and the water in a small bowl until well combined , cover well with plastic wrap and let soak overnight for 12 hours
- The day of the baking, combine the flours and yeast in the mixing bowl, add the pre-ferment, soaked rye, water (I saved about 20%, some of which I managed to add later in the mixing and some of it I just couldn’t use as the dough looked already very hydrated. Of course the raw pear made it even wetter. If I had used all the water indicated in the recipe, I probably wouldn’t have been able to give the loaf the shape I wanted) and pear puree and mix just until smooth
- Cover with plastic wrap and let rest (autolyse) for 20 to 30 minutes
- Add the salt and the spices to the dough and knead on medium speed until very smooth (about 5 minutes)
- Remove the dough from the mixer and incorporate the figs and hazelnuts by hand until evenly distributed
- Incorporate the raw pear pieces (I did that last as the dough becomes very wet and pretty tricky to handle once you do it. Maybe the pear I used was too juicy even though it felt really hard to the touch)
- Place the dough in a bowl as least 3 times its size and cover tightly with plastic wrap. Let it ferment until airy and well expanded (but not yet doubled in bulk), about 3 hours
- Flour the surface of the dough and the worktable and turn the dough out
- Pre-shape lightly in a ball (Glezer says that at this point, you should cut the dough in half and make two loaves but I had drawn a rather large pear stencil, so I didn’t divide the dough for fear that my stencil would end up being too big)
- Let the dough relax about 15 minutes
- Give it a pear shape (click here to see a photo tutorial of the shaping method)
- Let proof about 1 1/2 hour minutes in a large well-sealed clear plastic bag, or until the dough is well expanded but still springs back when gently pressed with a finger
- At least 45 minutes before the dough is fully proofed, arrange a rack onto the oven’s second-to-top shelf and place a baking stone on it as well as a shallow metal pan on the shelf below
- Preheat the oven to 375 F/190 C at least 45 minutes before baking time
- Remove the loaf from the bag, and stencil it if/as desired
- Make small vertical cuts all around it
- Just before baking, pour a cup of water in the baking pan (taking care to protect your face and hands)
- Put the loaf in the oven, spray the oven walls with water to create more steam
- Bake until the bread is evenly browned, about 40 minutes, rotating it halfway into the bake
- Let cool on a rack.
