You are on page 1of 6

Spice-Stuffed Sandworm Bread

SANDWORM DOUGH:
1 1/2 cups warm water
2 tbsp yeast
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 tsp vanilla
1 tbsp cinnamon
3 eggs
¼ cup slightly cooled melted butter
2 tsp salt
6 ½ – 7 cups bread flour
SPICE FILLING:
2 tbsp garam masala (or pumpkin pie spice, or Chinese five spice powder, as
preferred in your sietch)
2 tsp cinnamon
3/4 cup brown sugar (or 1/2 cup brown sugar and 1/4 cup white sugar if you want
it less sticky)
1/4 cup melted butter
sliced blanched almonds
1/2 cup raisins (optional)
GLAZE:
3/4 – 1 cup powdered sugar
¼ cup water (reduce to 1-2 tbsp for an extra thick glaze)
1 tsp cinnamon or garama masala
1 tsp vanilla extract
So many things went wrong with my first sandworm that the Fremen threw me out of the
sietch. Look at this monstrosity.
No. Just no. That looks like it should be stalking a desert town in Tremors.
I spent a little time in the city serving those soft, water-fat lords from Caladan. When I
couldn’t take that anymore, I wandered the desert in search of a vision. Shai Hulud himself
came to me and spoke with his spice scented breath, giving me visions of proper tributes to
him both in bread for the masses and pie for those cursed with the affliction of Celiac.
Behold and learn.

DIRECTIONS:
First, mix the yeast and warm water. Let the yeast blossom like a sand storm in the desert.
After ten minutes, add the brown sugar, vanilla, cinnamon, sietch spice, salt, and eggs.
Whisk it all together until your bowl starts to smell like stale spice wine.
Add half the flour. Top that off with the melted butter. You may think you want to add the
melted butter to the liquids, but you’re wrong. The heat will destroy your yeast as surely as
a spice mining platform attracts a worm. Top the butter off with the rest of the flour.
This part may seem dangerous, but if you own a stand mixer, set it to 2 and let it go for six
or seven minutes. Try to break the rhythmic thumping by pausing at random times to scrape
the sides. Technically, it’s far safer to mix everything up by hand then knead it for a good 10
minutes at a random, uneven pace, but practically, using the mixer is a lot easier.
Form the spice dough into a ball. Put it in a well greased bowl, cover it with a clean kitchen
towel, and let it rise for an hour, or until the size doubles.

When you come back, punch it like a fat Harkonen.


Spread some extra flour on a clean surface and roll the dough out into a large rectangle.
Paint the dough with your melted butter, leaving at least 1 inch of clear space around the
edges.
The last time I made a sandworm, I tried neatly pressing the almonds into a straight line of
teeth. It wasn’t awful, but once purified by the heat of the desert, that worm looked more
like it should be terrorizing a town in Tremors instead of riding majestically across the
desert. The problem was when the dough rose, it pushed all the teeth outwards and
upwards.
I learned from that mistake. This time, I spiked the first inch or so of my sandworm’s mouth
with almonds pointing up, but angled ever so slightly outwards.
Evenly anoint his back with your cinnamon, sietch spice, and sugar. You can pre-mix them if
you’d like, or you can just lightly massage it all into the butter using your fingertips.
If you like raisins, toss some on top. I usually make my sandworms half and half, with pure
spice up front and some raisins in the tail end.

In addition, instead of rolling the worm tight, make sure yours is loose, almost floppy. If you
roll a shaped bread too tight, when it rises, it’ll push outwards, malforming the shape. Give
it room to grow.
Once I had a fat, toothy sandworm, I put it on a pizza tray covered in parchment paper, gave
the body some slithery kinks, sliced ridges into its back, and let it grow. I also balled some
aluminum foil into a cone and kept that in the Great Maker’s mouth so he’d have an
intimidatingly toothy gape after being baked.
All that was left to do was whisk a teaspoon of vanilla with an egg (the vanilla makes your
kitchen smell amazing), paint the Great Maker’s back, and send him into the desert to bake
it at 350F for 25 minutes.

As soon as he emerged from the oven, I anointed his flesh in glaze so the flavor could
penetrate the outer skin.
Behold! The sleeper has awakened!
After your friends take their Pintrest shots, treat your effigy like a baby worm you’re
melting into the Water of Life. Wait, don’t. Soaking it in a puddle won’t help the flavor.
Instead, cut it into rings and drizzle a little more glaze on each slice.
If only fat, sugar, and carbs alone could extend life and broaden the mind without an
infusion of the spice melange!

You might also like