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Antica Pizza Dolce Romana di Fabriziana

Il Pane della Ninna Nanna (Lullaby Bread). Neither very sweet nor pizzalike in the flat, savory pie sort of way, this is a gold-fleshed, orange-perfumed cakelike bread that, if baked with care, will be tall and elegant, its crumb coarse yet light and full of the consoling scents of yeast and butter. Fabriziana is one of the several “middle” names of the Roman countess with whom I learned to bake the confection in the cavernous old kitchen of her villa that looks to the gardens of the Borghese. Ours were clandestine appointments, with our yeast and our candied orange peels and the tattered recipe book of her mother’s cook. You see, Fabriziana had never cooked or baked in her life, had never made anything from a pile of flour and a few crumbles of yeast. Forbidden in the kitchen as a girl, her adulthood has been always too fraught with obligations to permit interludes in front of the flames. But in the years we have been friends, she has always demonstrated more than a kind interest in my cooking, sitting once in a while, rapt as a fox, on an old wrought-iron chair in my kitchen as I dance about. And one day when I told her I was searching for a formula for an ancient, orange-perfumed Roman bread, she knew precisely where to find the recipe. Trailing off in some Proustian dream, she said she hadn’t thought of the bread in too many years, it having been her favorite sweet at Christmas and Easter. Once she even requested that it—rather than some grand, creamy torta—be her birthday cake. She told of poaching slices of it from a silver tray during parties and receptions, stuffing them deep into the pockets of her silk dresses to eat later in bed, after her sister was safely asleep, so she might share them only with her puppy. So it was that we decided to make the bread together. Wishing to avoid the chiding of her family and, most of all, her cook, we chose to do the deed on mornings when the house would be safe from them. It was wonderful to see Fabriziana at play. Flour and butter were forced under her long, mother-of-pearled nails, and her blond-streaked coif, mounted to resist tempests, soon fell into girlish ringlets over her noble brow. With a few mornings’ worth of trial, we baked Fabriziana’s lullaby bread, the bread of her memories. And once, on a birthday of mine, the countess came fairly racing through my doorway proffering a curiously wrapped parcel that gave up the telltale perfumes of our bread. The countess had learned to bake indeed.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    for 2 beautiful breads

Ingredients

The Starter

1 tablespoon active dry yeast or 1 1/2 small cakes of fresh yeast
1/2 cup warm water
1/2 cup all-purpose flour

The Dough

4 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons fine sea salt
3 tablespoons sugar
6 large eggs, lightly beaten
2-inch stick cinnamon, grated
Finely grated zest of 2 large oranges
2 tablespoons aniseeds
1/3 cup plus 2 tablespoons Cointreau
10 tablespoons sweet butter, slightly softened, plus additional for molds
1 cup candied orange peel, finely chopped
Juice of 1 large orange
2 cups confectioners’ sugar

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    To make the starter, place the yeast in a small bowl, add the water, stirring, permitting the yeast to soften and activate for 15 minutes. Stir in the flour, forming a smooth batter. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap, until the contents double.

    Step 2

    In a large bowl, using an electric mixer or a wooden spoon, beat the flour, salt, sugar, and eggs. Add the rested, risen starter and beat the batter hard for 5 minutes with the mixer or for 7 minutes by hand.

    Step 3

    In a small bowl, combine the cinnamon, orange zest, aniseeds, and 1/3 cup of Cointreau and incorporate them into the batter. Cover with plastic wrap and permit its mass to double—about 1 1/2 hours—at which point the batter will have transformed itself into a rather stringy and elastic but still very soft dough. Beat in the softened butter with your hands, breaking down the fiber of the dough and urging it to smoothness. Last, beat in the candied peel.

    Step 4

    Butter the surfaces of two molds—Kugelhopf tins, Bundt cake tins, high-sided charlotte molds, or soufflé dishes, or, perhaps best of all, those very deep aluminum tins with removable bottoms often used to bake angel food cakes—and pour or spoon in the dough evenly between the two. Cover the molds with clean kitchen towels and permit the pizze to rise for an hour or so or until they have reached the tops of the molds. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

    Step 5

    Bake the breads for 7 minutes, adjusting the temperature to 350 degrees and continuing the bake for 50 to 60 minutes or until the breads have taken on a dark, gold skin and are risen well above the rims of their molds. Permit the pizze to cool slightly, then turn them out of their molds, setting them upright to cool thoroughly on wire racks.

    Step 6

    Meanwhile, make a simple glaze by beating 2 tablespoons of the Cointreau and the orange juice into the confectioners’ sugar. Cover the glaze and beat it again after about thirty minutes. When the breads are fully cooled, spoon the glaze over the domes of the bread, permitting it to drip, as it will, down their sides. Let the glaze dry and repeat the process once or twice more, using it up.

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