Jump to content

Home Bread Making


sharktooth

Recommended Posts

4 minutes ago, steve73 said:

What - No sugar?  I always add a teaspoon of sugar which is much easier for the yeast to digest than relying on it "eating" the starch in the flour.  For a multi-kneaded bread you might even want to add a little more for the last 2 kneads.

But if you're saying it didn't rise at all (or hardly at all), it could be if you're using tap water (which can have too much chlorine here).  Always fresh use bottled water.

If you've only just started, check your yeast supply.. it could be a old batch, that's not as active as fresh stuff.. or it's been poorly stored before you bought it.  Even the freeze-dried stuff can get damaged if its stored for a short period at too hot a temperature.  I had problems occasionally with the small bottles that I used when I started making bread.  Now I use the 500mg packs from Makro and once opened keep them in a jar in the fridge..  usually lasts around 6 months before getting a bit "lazy".  

You can "test" your yeast by mixing it with water and sugar in a bottle and make sure it froths up in an hour or so.. (then add some ginger, and make your own ginger beer!!!)

 

I think it is against the law in France to use sugar to bake bread. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 239
  • Created
  • Last Reply
13 minutes ago, steve73 said:

What - No sugar?  I always add a teaspoon of sugar which is much easier for the yeast to digest than relying on it "eating" the starch in the flour. 

I used to put sugar in but I dont any more. It works fine without when I use my recipe.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, wgdanson said:

No sorry, 4 times. But there are some recipes which say leave for 24 hours without kneading. Very confusing.

I am a beginner at this bread making lark. ! Obviously.

No knead bread with a long rise time may be the way to go in Thailand as the dough is put in the refrigerator for up to 24 hours,I think the ambient temperature must mean a long learning curve to get it right.the only additive allowed in France is ascorbic acid=vitamin c.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, adammike said:

No knead bread with a long rise time may be the way to go in Thailand as the dough is put in the refrigerator for up to 24 hours,I think the ambient temperature must mean a long learning curve to get it right.the only additive allowed in France is ascorbic acid=vitamin c.

My Morries breadmaker makes a perfect loaf every time.

You chuck everything in, turn it on, 3hrs 20mins later you remove the finished loaf.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, marcusarelus said:

Best bread in the world comes from France and the best beer from Germany.  No sugar.  I don't care about French law either but as far as cooking goes the rest of the world is centuries behind the French.  French hand made butter is great also. 

The French know how to cook crap food, the food in France is very poor quality and very expensive, any country that thinks a cows head is a delicasy is very suspect to say the least. Best beer is from Belgium, French bread is ok, but doesn't last two minutes, bread is personal taste, so to suggest that french bread is the best in the world is total crass, I prefer Italian bread.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, BritManToo said:

My Morries breadmaker makes a perfect loaf every time.

You chuck everything in, turn it on, 3hrs 20mins later you remove the finished loaf.

 

I assume those are mostly white lightweight loaves?

 

You couldn't use such a machine for "heavy duty" bread?

Mostly coarse spelt, some oat, some sunflower, some rye, some whole grains, or could you?

 

am not a fan of dry yeast,

can not find fresh yeast in BKK

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, vogie said:

The French know how to cook crap food, the food in France is very poor quality and very expensive, any country that thinks a cows head is a delicasy is very suspect to say the least.

They may know how to cook crap food also, but most food in France is both good quality and good value. What wouldn't I give for French supermarket here selling food at French prices?

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, BritManToo said:

My Morries breadmaker makes a perfect loaf every time.

You chuck everything in, turn it on, 3hrs 20mins later you remove the finished loaf.

Bread machines do work. The drawback is that you are limited to one particular shape of loaf, and I've yet to see one that can produce something like this:

tartine-country-loaf-008.jpg?w=764&h=510

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, vogie said:

But as I said earlier that the french bread goes stale very quickly, but in France that is not usually a problem as they bake bread all day,

Factory bread lasts for weeks only because it is full of anti-oxidants and preservatives. But French-style crusty loaves are not designed to be kept: they are designed to be consumed on the same day or the next day. That's how the French like it and I can see why. My home-baked bread (not French-style) has only the same four basic ingredients in and it does last for several days.

But it isnt illegal to sell factory bread in French supermarkets, and there is a small market for it with people who want something they can keep for a long time. It just isnt very popular and by law it cant be sold in a proper baker's shop (boulangerie).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I bought a bread machine a few years back. I was not overly impressed with the loaves produced and failed to shed a tear when the bloody thing launched itself off the worktop. 

Give me an electric oven every time and let me be creative.

Today was baking day and time to stock the freezer with a few fruit cakes, crumbles (Apple & Blackberry). Quiche and some soft burger buns.

Happy days ..............but getting to the stage where I need a bigger freezer

IMG_1089 (1).JPG

IMG_1087.JPG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, chickenslegs said:

You shouldn't post pictures like this without a recipe.

That was a picture I found, but the recipe I have quoted a couple of times on this thread will produce a loaf like that if it is baked in an oven with additional steam or a Dutch oven. I've done them in my own oven in a Pyrex bowl with a lid.

The problem with a bread machine is that you simply cant make a loaf like that in one, regardless of what recipe you follow.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, KittenKong said:

That was a picture I found, but the recipe I have quoted a couple of times on this thread will produce a loaf like that if it is baked in an oven with additional steam or a Dutch oven. I've done them in my own oven in a Pyrex bowl with a lid.

The problem with a bread machine is that you simply cant make a loaf like that in one, regardless of what recipe you follow.

I have been using a cast iron pot in the oven with some success. I haven't tried pyrex but I do have a few different shapes and sizes that I can try.

 

Just yesterday, I made some nice bread rolls by just using two deep aluminium baking trays from Makro (one inverted on top of the other, and secured with a couple of bulldog clips). The results were far better than just normal oven baking, even though I used the exact same recipe.

 

The other thing that has improved my baking recently is buying an oven thermometer. I found that my oven was incorrect by about 10-15 degrees C (too cool). Since making some adjustments I found that my bread and, especially, my pastry and Yorkshire pudding has improved a lot.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Like the idea of using the two trays and will give it a try,

With regards to temperature the values are no longer visible on my oven. However i have learnt roughly where the values are but I do have a hot spot at the front of the oven. The two trays idea might minimise the hot spot problem. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 1/29/2019 at 8:00 AM, wgdanson said:

Thanks for advice. I used a French recipe, 500 flour, 300 room temp water, 1 tsp each yeast & salt. Mix, leave 45 mins then knead a bit, leave 45 mins and knead again ...4 times. Shape and bake. Will try again tomorrow when I have struggled thru eating the tough ones!

My take: First of all you use a French recipe. I guess this is not a recipe for fluffy rolls but more for crispy ones or baguettes. You do not knead the dough as you state, but you stretch and fold the dough. So you should do that and not knead the dough, you destroy the sponteneous gluten that develop during those waiting times. Do you use bread flour?
Use ice cold water 2 degr. C.; you are not in France but in this climate; A little more water can do as you have 60% to the flour and that's ok for whole loaves but not for this use.

Best is if you have all your ingredients cooled. The end goal for the dough is at least lower than 28 C.

 

If you didn't use a pre dough like a poolish, i guess the yeast is way to low. You use 3 grams of yeast to half a kilo flour. That's only 0.6%!! Totally insufficient!! You will be much better of with at least double that weight.

 

But, I have a feeling that you are using a method that you are not familiar with. Am I right?

 

Hope this helps.

 

BTW, mixing the yeast with the salt is more of a fairy tale. Ok, don't just mix them up as such, but in a 1 kilo dough it doesn't make much sense. Once the dough is mixed/kneaded, salt and yeast are still at least another 2 hours in the dough while rising. Debunked.

You don't put salt in a pre dough as that sits normally overnight to develop.

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 2/4/2019 at 6:57 PM, hugocnx said:

TW, mixing the yeast with the salt is more of a fairy tale. Ok, don't just mix them up as such, but in a 1 kilo dough it doesn't make much sense. Once the dough is mixed/kneaded, salt and yeast are still at least another 2 hours in the dough while rising. Debunked.

Salt on yeast will kill it stone dead. The "fairy tale" is all about not letting concentrated salt get into contact with the yeast. So all you need to do is to mix the salt well with the flour before it is put in contact with the yeast, or at least spread the salt and the flour about well in the bowl and mix immediately. Bread machines usually recommend putting the yeast on one side and the salt on the other for this reason.

 

Either way, it is not a myth.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, KittenKong said:

Salt on yeast will kill it stone dead. The "fairy tale" is all about not letting concentrated salt get into contact with the yeast. So all you need to do is to mix the salt well with the flour before it is put in contact with the yeast, or at least spread the salt and the flour about well in the bowl and mix immediately. Bread machines usually recommend putting the yeast on one side and the salt on the other for this reason.

 

Either way, it is not a myth.

Did I say anything different?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I make bread I use a stand mixer.

 

I chuck the bread flour and rye or wholewheat flour in the bowl, sprinkle the yeast, sugar, bread improver powder and salt, put it on the mixer straight away and mix t for 2 or 3 minutes.

 

Take it off the mixer, add olive oil and warm water, change to the dough hook then set the mixer off again for a few minutes and check the consistency of the dough using more water or flour as required. 

 

When it is ready I put it in a plastic bowl for a hour or so to let the first rise take place. When that is done I take it out of the bowl, cut it into 2 for loaves and put it in a couple of loaf tins, or cut each half into 6 and make a dozen bread rolls. Let it rise again for a hour or so.

 

Then bake the rolls 6 at a time 160c (fan oven) for 40 minutes or the loaves for 50 minutes to an hour.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, KittenKong said:

To me you appeared to be saying the opposite.

I said >don't just mix them up as such<

Maybe that wasn't perfect English, but it meant that you do not put them on top of each other in your kneading bowl. Anyways, 10 seconds later salt and yeast are in bed together whether they like it or not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

55 minutes ago, hugocnx said:

Maybe that wasn't perfect English, but it meant that you do not put them on top of each other in your kneading bowl.

I see. I thought you were saying the opposite. Yes, as long as you dont put one right on top of the other then it will be fine. All bread recipes I have seen say to avoid putting them together in concentrated form.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just done three large bread cakes, is there a name for this type of bread, can't find anything like them on the internet.

I just use my basic recipe, but have started adding two eggs which gives the crust a lovely brown colour.

IMG_20190209_160125.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

58 minutes ago, vogie said:

Just done three large bread cakes, is there a name for this type of bread, can't find anything like them on the internet.

I just use my basic recipe, but have started adding two eggs which gives the crust a lovely brown colour.

IMG_20190209_160125.jpg

I haven't put eggs in my bread dough for a long time. I might give that a try sometime.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 2/9/2019 at 4:18 PM, vogie said:

Just done three large bread cakes, is there a name for this type of bread, can't find anything like them on the internet.

I just use my basic recipe, but have started adding two eggs which gives the crust a lovely brown colour.

IMG_20190209_160125.jpg

English Mega Rolls. English stands for the faint color.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.





×
×
  • Create New...