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Excellent. Ça se mange tout seul.
En plus, c'est un pain rapide à faire car il n'y a qu'une seule levée.
Très bonne recette de pains à hamburger. La texture est moelleuse, ce qui permet de garder le contenu du sandwich à l'intérieur.
À refaire!
Ingrédients
- 100 ml + 20 ml d’eau tiède
- 180 ml de lait
- 1 œuf battu
- 30 g de beurre mou ou d’huile d’olive
- 2 cc de sel
- 500 g de farine (si vous voulez aller à fond dans le trip burger sain, vous pouvez utiliser de la farine bio T80 « bise » en ajoutant alors 10 cl d’eau)
- 1 cs de sucre
- 1 sachet de levure déshydratée de type Briochin
- 1 cs de vinaigre de vin blanc
- 3 cs de graines de sésame
Instructions
- Délayez la levure dans 20 ml d’eau tiède et laissez-la reposer pendant 15 minutes environ. Attention : l’eau doit être tiède mais pas chaude afin de ne pas tuer la levure.
- Mettez la farine dans un saladier puis versez-y la levure, le lait, l’œuf, le beurre, le sucre, le sel le vinaigre.
- Malaxez en ajoutant les 100 ml d’eau, puis pétrissez la pâte pendant environ 5 minutes. Laissez-la lever pendant une heure dans un endroit tempéré.
- Si vous possédez une machine à pain, versez tous les ingrédients dans la cuve dans l’ordre préconisé par le fabricant et lancez le programme « pâte ».
- Farinez-vous les mains et dégazez la pâte en appuyant dessus avec le poing afin de faire sortir l’air.
- Façonnez 10 boules, aplatissez-les en disques d’1 cm de hauteur, humectez-les et parsemez-les de graines de sésame ou de lin.
- Laissez-les lever pendant 1 heure supplémentaire dans un endroit tiède (par exemple dans le four chauffé à 30°C).
- Préchauffez le four à 210° C (th. 7) et enfournez-les pendant 20 minutes environ. Les pains doivent être bien dorés.
- Coupez chaque pain en 2 après refroidissement et garnissez-les avec les ingrédients de votre choix.
C'est intéressant mais pas exceptionnel.
Je n'en referais pas.
Un pain très moelleux. Parfait pour le petit déjeuner ou pour faire des sandwiches.
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon active dry yeast
- 2 teaspoons sugar
- 1¼ cups warm water
- 2 cups bread flour (see instructions)
- 2 cups all-purpose flour (see instructions)
- 2 teaspoons salt
- ¼ cup lard (melted in microwave)
- 2 tablespoons warm water (to brush on loaves before baking)
Instructions
- Grease a large bowl, and set aside.
- Take a small bowl and dissolve the yeast and sugar in 1/4 cup of warm (110 degrees F) water. Place the bowl in a warm place and let it stand until it starts to foam and double in volume, about 10 minutes. If it doesn't foam and bubble, you have some bad yeast!
- Meanwhile, measure out 1/4 cup of lard and place the lard in a Pyrex measuring cup or other suitable container. Heat in the microwave on high for about 90 seconds until melted.
- Place the water/yeast/sugar mixture in the mixing bowl of a stand mixer. Add the rest of the warm water and the salt. Using the dough hook, mix on low speed until blended.
- Take your measuring cup and dig in to the flour bag, scooping out two whole cups of each flour. Now the important part: in a separate bowl, sift together the two flours. Sifted flour has more volume than un-sifted flour, so you will use approximately 3 1/4 cups of sifted flour in the following steps.
- Gradually add the flour mixture, a little at a time, to the wet ingredients in your mixer -- mixing constantly. At the same time you are adding flour, gradually pour in the melted lard. Keep adding a little flour and a little lard until all of the lard is added.
- Continue adding more flour -- A LITTLE AT A TIME -- until you make a smooth and pliable dough. Try to add just enough flour to make the dough elastic -- just as much as necessary so that the dough hook barely cleans the sides of the bowl. Too much flour and your bread will be too dense! You will use approximately 3 1/4 cups of sifted flour to bring the dough to this point. (More or less, this is where the art of baking comes in!) Save any leftover flour mixture for rolling out the dough.
- Now let the machine and the dough hook go to work kneading the dough. Set the mixer on a low speed and knead for about 3 to 4 minutes, no more! Your dough will be fairly sticky at this point.
- Shape the dough into a ball and place it into that bowl you originally greased in the first step of this recipe, what was that, something like a week ago now? We know, we know -- bread making is a long and involved process!
- Flip the dough ball a few times to grease it up on all sides. Cover the bowl with a damp cloth and place in a warm place. (We like to pre-heat our oven to 160 degrees F and then turn it off, thus creating a perfectly warm environment for our rising bread.) Let the dough rise until it doubles in size -- about 45 minutes to 1 hour.
- It's at this point in the process that you can usually find three guys, covered in flour, sitting by the pool with their feet up and enjoying a cold beverage. It's also about now when Raúl always asks, "Why didn't we just pick up a loaf of bread at the bakery?"
- When you return from the pool, turn the dough out onto a lightly floured board, using the leftover flour you have in the bowl. Sprinkle some flour on the dough and use a rolling pin to roll it out. We like to make a large loaf, shaped to fit our longest baking sheet diagonally -- about 20 inches long. So we try to roll out a 12 x 20-inch rectangle. Sprinkle more flour on the dough and turn it over a few times as you roll it out, to keep it from sticking to the rolling pin. The added flour at this rolling stage should take care of most of the stickiness of the dough.
- Roll the dough up into a tightly rolled long cylinder, with a slight taper at both ends. Wet your fingers and pinch the loose flap of the rolled dough into the loaf, making a tight seam.
- Grease a baking sheet and sprinkle lightly with cornmeal.
- Place the loaf diagonally onto the baking sheet, seam side down. Dust the top with a little extra flour and cover very loosely with plastic wrap. (You don't want the rising dough to dry out or stick to the plastic wrap.)
- Place in a warm spot and allow the loaf to stand and rise once again until it is about 2 1/2 times it's original size, about 45 minutes to 1 hour. Cuban bread is wider than French bread, so expect your loaf to spread out quite a bit as it rises.
- Preheat oven to 450º F. Place a pan of water on the lowest rack of the oven.
- Use a sharp knife to cut a shallow seam down the middle of the top of the bread, leaving about two inches of uncut top on each end of the loaf.
- Brush the top of the loaf with water and place in your preheated oven on the middle shelf. After about 5 minutes of baking, brush some more water on top of the bread.
- Bake the loaf until it is light brown and crusty -- about 12 to 18 minutes total baking time.
Facile à faire, très bon et très moelleux.
Cependant, je trouve que le gout d'ail n'est pas assez prononcé malgré la dose que j'ai augmentée par rapport à la recette originale.
Ingredients for the breadsticks
- 1 cup + 2 tablespoons warm water
- 1¼ teaspoons dry yeast
- 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
- 3 – 3¼ cups all-purpose flour
- 1¾ teaspoons salt
- 3 tablespoons vegetable oil
Ingredients for the topping
- 2 tablespoons margarine or butter
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ¼ teaspoon garlic powder
- Optional: ¼ teaspoon chopped rosemary or thyme (with or instead of garlic powder)
Instructions
- In the bowl of an electric stand mixer, whisk together warm water, yeast and ½ teaspoon granulated sugar, until yeast has dissolved; rest 10 minutes. Add 1½ cups flour, remaining sugar, salt, and vegetable oil, then fit mixer with paddle attachment and blend until combined. Switch to dough hook attachment, add in remaining 1½ cups flour and knead mixture on low speed, adding up to ¼ cup additional flour as needed, and knead until dough is smooth and elastic (dough should pull away from sides of the bowl but should still be slightly sticky). Transfer dough to a large buttered mixing bowl, cover with plastic wrap and allow to rest in a warm place free from draft, or in oven on ‘proof’, for about 1½ hours.
- Punch down risen dough and divide into 12 equal portions, keeping them covered with plastic wrap as you work. On a lightly floured surface, roll each piece into a 9-inch rope then transfer to one to two parchment paper lined baking sheets. Cover and let rise for 1 more hour.
- Preheat oven to 425°F during the last 10 minutes of rising, then bake for 11-13 minutes, until golden. Meanwhile, in a small bowl/cup whisk together topping ingridents. Remove breadsticks from oven and run a stick of margarine or butter over hot breadsticks and immediately sprinkle with topping mixture. Serve warm or allow to cool and store in an airtight container. Enjoy!
Le pain est très bon.
La pâte était très molle. Je ne sais pas si ça vient de la recette ou de moi.
En tout cas, c'est une belle réussite :)
Ce pain est intéressant. Le goût de la canelle est prononcé et cache celui de la farine de pois chiche.
La texture est un peu lourde à cause de cette même farine mais la mie est tout de même tendre.
Après passage au congélateur, la mie devient granuleuse.
Excellent ! Attention à mettre assez de sel pour que ça ne soit pas trop fade.
Très bon pain, moelleux à souhait. À refaire.
Attention à faire les pâtons de la même taille pour avoir une cuisson uniforme. Quand je l'ai faite, je me suis retrouvé avec 95% du pain qui avait une cuisson parfaite et le reste qui était légèrement cru.
Edit : je suis un peu sceptique. On dirait que le pain devient caoutchouteux. À confirmer.
Edit : en fait, ce n'était que la partie moins cuite qui avait cette texture.
Ingredients
- 540 gm bread flour
- 86 gm caster sugar
- 8 gm salt
- 9 gm full cream milk power(original recipe calls for a kind of natural milk essence,
- 11 gm instant dried yeast
- 86 gm whisked egg
- 59 gm whipping cream
- 54 gm milk
- 184 gm tangzhong (method of making tangzhong)
- 49 gm unsalted butter, melted
Instructions
- Add all ingredients (except butter) into a breadmaker, first the wet ingredients (milk, cream, egg, tangzhong), then followed by the dry ingredients (salt, sugar, milk powder, bread flour, yeast). (Note: I used to make a small well in the bread flour, then add the yeast into it.) Select the “dough” mode (refer to the menu of your breadmaker to select the kneading dough programme). When all ingredients come together, pour in the melted butter, continue kneading until the dough is smooth and elastic. The time of kneading in the breadmaker is about 30 minutes. Then let the dough complete the 1st round of proofing, about 40 minutes, best temperature for proofing is 28C, humidity 75%, until double in size.
- Transfer the dough to a clean floured surface. Deflate and divide into 3 equal portions (see picture 1). Cover with cling wrap, let rest for 15 minutes at room temperature.
- Roll out each portion of the dough with a rolling pin into an oval shape (See picture 2). Fold 1/3 from top edge to the middle and press (see picture 3). Then fold 1/3 from bottom to the middle and press (see picture 4). Turn seal downward. Roll flat and stretch to about 30cm in length (see picture 5). With seal upward, roll into a cylinder (see picture 6). With seal facing down (see picture 7), place in the loaf tins to have the 2nd round of proofing (see picture 8), until double in size. The best temperature for 2nd round proofing is 38C, humidity 85%.
- Brush whisked egg on surface. Bake in a pre-heated 180C (356F) oven for 30 to 35 minutes, until turns brown. Remove from the oven and transfer onto a wire rack. Let cool completely.
Je l'ai fait en réduisant la quantité de cardamome (une demi cuillère à café au lieu d'une demi cuillère à soupe) car je trouvais que ça sentait fort quand je l'ai moulue.
Après l'avoir gouté, je pense que la proportion est la bonne dans la recette car ça ne sentait pas du tout une fois cuit.
C'est excellent mais attention aux odeurs. La cuisson révèle toute la force du fromage.
En bouche, le gout est plus délicat !
À refaire sans hésiter.
Attention ! En suivant le temps indiqué, il manque légèrement de cuisson au centre du pain. Cependant, il était déjà bien bruni sur le dessus. Il faudra le couvrir de papier aluminium pour continuer la cuisson sans brûler le dessus.
Ingredients for the dough
- 1 pkg. Red Star Platinum yeast
- ¼ Cup warm water
- 1 Cup warm milk
- 3 ¼- ½ Cup unbleached, all-purpose flour
- 1 tsp. salt
- ¼ tsp. coarse ground pepper
- 2 Tbsp. butter, softened
- 1¼ Cup finely shredded Asiago cheese
Ingredients for the topping
- 1 egg, well-beaten
- ¼ Cup finely shredded Asiago cheese
Instructions
- Place warm water and yeast in EZ DOH bucket and stir to dissolve yeast. Let rest 1 minute.
- Add one cup of flour, then additional dough ingredients.
- EZ DOH-it for 2-3 minutes, or until dough is smooth and soft and all ingredients are incorporated, adding additional flour, as necessary, if the dough is too sticky.
- Remove dough from bucket, spray bucket with cooking spray, “smooth” dough and replace in bucket.
- Cover and let rise until doubled.
- Punch down the dough and remove it from the bucket.
- Form into one large French-style loaf, or two smaller loaves.
- Place on a lightly-greased baking sheet or in two smaller lightly-greased loaf pans.
- Cover with a clean dishtowel and let rise until doubled, usually 30-45 minutes.
- Preheat oven to 375°F.
- Lightly “slash” the tops of the loaves with a sharp serrated knife.
- Brush the tops with the beaten egg, then sprinkle with the cheese.
- Bake for 30-35 minutes, or until lightly browned.
- Remove from pan and let cool on a wire rack. ENJOY!!!
- 3 cups flour
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon cayenne
- 1 teaspoon cumin
- 1 teaspoon jalapeno powder (substitute with smoked paprika)
- 2 tablespoons sugar
- 2 1/4 cups grated sharp cheddar cheese
- 12 ounces beer (dark ale or porter/stout. No lager) (1 bottle)
- 1/4 cup melted butter
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit
- Mix all ingredients except butter and 1/4 cup of cheese in a big bowl
- Mix well. Grease 9x5 bread pan and place dough in the pan
- Cover top with melted butter and remaining cheese
- Bake for 50 minutes to an hour and enjoy.
I will be adding fresh diced jalapenos to the next batch for some extra flavor and texture.
Edit : c'est vraiment très bon. Malheureusement, c'est aussi addictif.
Pour utiliser le pain rassis.
Edit : c'est très bon et très facile à faire. Comme le pain était sec et non pas rassis, j'ai du ajouter plus de lait et laisser tremper le pain plus longtemps.
Ingrédients
- 500 g de pain rassis
- 1 litre de lait
- 150g de sucre de vergeoise ou de cassonade
- 3 œufs
- Un peu de beurre pour le moule
- 2 poignées de raisins secs qui ont macéré 1h dans le rhum
Instructions
- Faire chauffer le lait et le sucre.
- Coupez le pain en morceaux, le mettre dans un saladier et verser le lait bouillant dessus. Bien mélanger et laisser reposer 1 h.
- Une fois le pain bien reposé et tiédi, ajouter les œufs. Bien mélanger. Ajouter enfin les raisins.
- Versez ma pâte dans un moule beurré. Préchauffez le four à 180°C et cuire le pudding 1h.
- Servir froid.
C'est bon, c'est facile mais je ne trouve pas cette recette exceptionnelle. Je ne pense pas la refaire.
Je lui préfère d'autres recettes.
Ingrédients
- 300 g de farine
- 3 œufs
- 200 g de beurre mou, pas fondu
- ½ cube de levure de boulanger (délayée dans un peu d'eau tiède avec une noisette de beurre)
- 1 càs de sucre
- 1 pincée de sel
Instructions
- Tout mélanger (facile, surtout si on a un robot)
- Couvrir et mettre au réfrigérateur pour la nuit
- le lendemain, l'étaler comme une pâte à tarte puis la rouler comme un biscuit roulé. Découper des grandes tranches et les disposer debout dans un moule (à soufflé ou à kouglof par exemple).
- faire bouillir une casserole d'eau. Eteindre le feu. Poser une volette (grille) sur la casserole, et poser le moule sur la volette. Laisser lever.
- quand elle est bien gonflée, enfourner la brioche (départ four froid) et cuire pendant 25 minutes à 210°C (mettre du papier alu quand vous trouvez la brioche suffisamment dorée).
Je n'ai pas fait le pain dans un moule. Je l'ai tressé avec 4 brins.
Ce pain n'a pas beaucoup de tenue et aurait mérité un passage au moule. La tresse s'est un peu étalée.
Mais le résultat est très bon et très intéressant par rapport aux ingrédients utilisés.
Ingredients
- 500 g King Arthur All-Purpose Flour
- 205 g Unsweetened Coconut Milk
- 70 g (1 large) Egg
- 10 g Osmotolerant Instant Dried Yeast
- 5 g Salt
- 120 g Light Agave Nectar
- 55 g Virgin Unrefined Coconut Oil
- 4 tsp. Vanilla Extract
- Egg wash, as needed
Instructions
- Into the bowl of a stand mixer is placed the flour, yeast and salt.
- In a separate bowl is placed the egg, agave nectar, vanilla extract and coconut milk.
- The liquid mixture is then beat with a whisk until smooth.
- This liquid is then added to the flour mixture and the combined ingredients are mixed using the stand mixer on speed 2 until all the ingredients are incorporated, about 2 minutes.
- The mixer speed is then increased to speed 3 and the dough is given an intensive mix until a smooth windowpane can be drawn, about 10 minutes.
- The mixer speed is then reduced to speed 2 and the coconut oil is added.
- The mixing is continued until all the coconut oil has been incorporated into the dough, about 10 minutes.
- During this time, it may be necessary to stop the mixing and fold the dough over a few times by hand to facilitate the coconut oil incorporation.
- The dough is then placed in a lightly coconut oil-greased container, covered and allowed to ferment at 76ºF for 1 hour.
- The dough is then divided into 4 pieces, each piece pre-shaped into short logs and the pieces then allowed to rest at room temperature, covered, for 10 minutes.
- The dough pieces are then shaped into 10 inch long strands.
- Two strands are twisted around each other and then placed in a lightly coconut oil-greased 8½”x4½” bread pan.
- The second two dough strands are treated in the same way. Both pans are then covered with Saran QuickCovers and allowed a second fermentation of 1 hour at 76ºF.
- The pans are then uncovered, the loaves brushed with egg wash, and the pans loaded into a 375ºF oven.
- The loaves are allowed to bake for 30 minutes until mahogany brown, the first 10 minutes being under steam.
- When the loaves have finished baking, they are immediately removed from their pans and allowed to cool on a wire rack before slicing.
J'ai omis le glaçage et je n'ai fait qu'une demi recette.
Ingredients for the dough:
- 1 cup raisins and enough water to cover the raisins
- 1 cup warm water
- 1 tablespoon active dry yeast
- 1 cup 1% milk
- ¼ cup unsalted butter, melted
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt
- 6 cups all-purpose flour (plus more if needed)
Ingredients for the filling:
- ¾ cup granulated white sugar
- 2¼ tablespoons cinnamon
- 1 large eggs beaten with 2 teaspoons water
Instructions
- Put the raisins in a small bowl and cover with warm water and let rest for at least 10 minutes
- Drain the raisins (I patted them with a paper towel to remove the extra moisture), toss with a small amount of flour to coat, and set aside
- Place 1 cup warm water into the bowl of a standing mixer fitted with a dough hook
- Sprinkle the yeast over the water
- Stir to dissolve the yeast
- Let stand for about 10 minutes or until foamy
- Stir the milk, butter, and salt into the water and mix on low for a few seconds to combine
- Add the flour and stir to form a loose dough
- Knead with the mixer on low speed for about 8-10 minutes to form a smooth (but still slightly sticky dough)
- If it's very sticky or wet, add a little more flour until it starts to form a ball of dough
- Gradually add the raisins to the dough with the mixer on low and continue needing until they are evenly combined into the dough
- Cover the dough with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm place until doubled in size, about 1 hour
- Line two loaf pans with parchment paper and butter the parchment
- Combine the sugar and cinnamon in a small bowl
- Divide the dough into two pieces and set one aside
- Roll the first piece out on a cutting board or your (clean) counter
- It should be a little less wide than your baking pan and as long as possible
- Brush the surface of the dough with egg wash
- Sprinkle evenly with half of the cinnamon sugar
- Roll up the dough, starting with the end closest to you
- Transfer to one of the pans, seam side down
- Repeat with the other half of the dough
- Brush the tops of both loaves with egg wash and sprinkle additional cinnamon sugar over the top
- While you preheat the oven to 375 degrees, let the loaves rise for 45 minutes
- When the loaves have risen and the oven is preheated, bake the loaves for 40-45 minutes until golden brown
- Allow to cool and then remove the loaves from the pan
Je n'ai pas suivi exactement la recette.
D'abord, j'ai divisé la quantité de sel dans la pâte par deux. Ensuite, j'ai omis le glaçage au beurre et à l'oeuf ainsi que le saupoudrage de sel.
Le résultat est très satisfaisant. La pâte est élastique et dense. Ça rappelle un peu les bagels.
C'est à refaire !
La technique de mise en forme est expliquée ici
Ingredients
- 1 Tablespoon Sugar
- 2 Teaspoons Kosher Salt
- Sea-salt or Pretzel Salt (for sprinkling on top of pretzels)
- ⅔ Cup Baking Soda
- 1 Packet of Active Dry Yeast
- 4 cups of Bread Flour
- 6 Ounces of Unsalted Butter
- Olive Oil
- 1½ cups milk
- 10 Cups Water
- 1 Egg
Instructions
- Get your saucepan out. Measure and pour into the saucepan 1½ cups of milk (note you can use water instead but I think the milk makes tastier dough). Put it on your gas/electric stove top on medium low heat. Heat the milk until it reaches about 110°F (about when milk starts to steam), but turn off the heat right away so the milk does not boil over and move it off the burner. Its important to not have the milk too hot because it will kill the yeast but at the same time it needs to be warm enough to activate the yeast.
- Next get a big bowl out. Add 1 tablespoon of sugar and 2 teaspoons kosher salt to the bowl. Next pour in the milk. Now cut open the dry yeast packet and sprinkle the contents on top of the mixture. Let it sit for about 5 minutes, you will see it start to foam up.
- While you are waiting for the yeast milk mixture cut out 2 ounces butter and melt it. I used the same saucepan from before to melt the butter but you can just microwave it for 30 seconds or so instead if you prefer that method.
- After the 5 minutes are up then add the melted butter to the yeast milk mixture. Next measure and add the 4 cups of bread flour to the mixture as well. Now take a mixing spoon and start mixing.
- Mix the dough until it becomes well combined, smooth and begins to pull away from the side of the bowl, about 4 minutes. If the dough feels too dry then add a splash of water and continue mixing until it becomes smooth, it should look somewhat like the picture above. Note if you have a stand mixer then you can use that to mix the dough with the dough hook attachment at medium speed instead, but I had no problem doing it by hand.
- Next use your mixing spoon to push the dough from the large bowl into another bowl. I just used the saucepan I used to melt the butter from before. Now either get a new large bowl or clean the one the dough was created in, I just cleaned out the large dough bowl from before and dried it with a paper towel. Now take your olive oil (vegetable oil works too) and pour some on a paper towel then oil up the inside of your bowl.
- Remove and return the dough from the saucepan to the well oiled big bowl.
- Get your plastic saran wrap out and cover/seal the top of the bowl. Place the dough and the bowl in a warm dry place while the dough rises. I put mine by the radiator. Now set a timer and wait 55 minutes, it should at least double in size.
- While waiting for the dough to rise get out a medium pot. Measure and add 10 cups of water to the medium pot. Also measure out ⅔ a cup of baking soda but do not add it yet to the pot of water, just put it aside for now.
- When there is about 5 minutes left until the dough completely rises move the pot to the stove and turn on the burner on high. Then pour in the baking soda and grab a mixing spoon to combine it with the water. It should become a cloudy mixture. Leave the burner on for now and cover the pot with a lid because we will need it later for dunking the pretzels when the water reaches a rolling boil.
- When the pretzel dough has finished rising for its 55 minutes and has doubled in size then remove the plastic wrap and bring over to your kitchen work surface. Also bring over your olive oil and a large cutting board. Use the olive oil and a paper towel to oil the surface of your cutting board. Then simply plop out the dough onto the oiled surface of the board.
- I know it is really tempting to start playing with dough but before you start shaping the dough and creating the iconic pretzel shape first get out two cookie sheet pans then lightly oil them up with olive oil, Pam, vegetable oil or your preferred cooking method to prevent dough from sticking during the baking process. I actually used a Silpat mat on one pan and oiled the other with a quick spray of Pam. You will need the pans to hold the pretzels for the next few steps as well as for the baking process.
- Now here comes the fun part. Take the olive oil and pour some in your hands and rub them together. Now take your big mound of dough and split it up into about fist sized balls, I got 9 balls out of my dough. Next return all but one of the dough balls to your oiled bowl because unless you have a really large cutting board you will not be able to roll out all the pretzels. Be sure to look at the pictures if you are feeling confused because I tried to make it as easy as possible visually to follow each step in making the dough into the pretzel shape.
- Take that ball of dough left on the cutting boards and start rolling out into a long strip/rope of dough. Work and roll the dough back and forth from the center out to push the dough evenly across both ends. Stop when you have a piece about 2 feet long.
- Take the 2 ends of the dough strip and create a large U-shape. Then take the ends and curl them inward so they meet at the center.
- Then take the two ends of the strip and cross them over each other. Then pull them up and over the bottom of the U-shape curling the ends over the top and pressing them up into the bottom of the dough that makes the lower part of the U-shape.
- Congratulations you've made a ball of dough into the shape of a pretzel. Now move that dough pretzel onto one of the pans and do the same for the rest of the balls of dough.
- By the time you finish transforming all the dough balls into pretzel form the water should have reached a rolling boil. If not then wait until the water comes to a boil before doing anything else. Once boiling, preheat the oven to 450°F.
- Bring your pans of uncooked pretzels over by your boiling baking soda water and get out the spatula (the bigger the spatula the better). Scoop up one pretzel with the spatula and carefully lower it into the boiling water for 30 seconds. I set a timer for this part because if you leave the pretzels in the bath for too long then they will get soggy and will taste funny. Remove your spatula and use it to dunk the pretzel below the surface to make sure all of it gets covered with the water. When the 30 seconds is about to run up then take the spatula, position it underneath the pretzel and lift it out gently at the 30 second mark. Place the pretzel down on the pan it came from and repeat the process for each unbaked pretzel.
- Note if while you are bathing your pretzels you happen to drop it while taking it out of the pot and it breaks apart into bits inside the boiling water then use tongs to pull out the broken pieces. Then use your hands to shape the bits into bite size balls. Then use tongs to dunk the little balls back into the boiling baking soda water bath for five seconds and place each nugget on the pan. Now you turned a ruined pretzel into yummy pretzel bites.
- Melt another 2 ounces of butter in a bowl. Add 1 tablespoon of water. Then crack and drop an egg into the bowl. Now use the whisk to combine the whole mixture and use the brush to paint a generous coat on each pretzel. Next sprinkle either sea salt or pretzel salt over each of the pretzels, the coat will help the salt stick.
- The oven should be at 450°F by now, but if not then just wait until it is finished preheating. Once the proper temperature as been reached then put the two pans of pretzels into the oven. Now bake for about 12 to 15 minutes. While the pretzels are baking melt the final 2 ounces of butter. When the 12 minute mark has been reached check the color of the pretzels, if they are golden brown in color then they are perfect and transfer to them to a cooling rack. If they are still a light tan color then cook them for another 2 minutes and continue cooking until the color pretzels is that nice golden brown before transferring to a cooling rack. While on the cooling racks use a brush to paint on a second coat of butter. Be careful taking the pans out of the oven and be sure to use oven mitts, remember hot things are hot.
Excellent pain. Une technique originale pour un résultat vraiment intéressant. En plus, ça permet d'utiliser la cannelle.
Ingredients for the Dough
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- ¼ cup granulated sugar
- 2¼ teaspoons (1 envelope) active dry yeast
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 2 ounces unsalted butter
- ⅓ cup whole milk
- ¼ cup water
- 2 large eggs, at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
Ingredients for the Filling:
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon fresh ground nutmeg
- 2 ounces unsalted butter, melted until browned
Instructions
- In a large mixing bowl (I used just the bowl of my stand mixer) whisk together 2 cups flour, sugar, yeast, and salt. Set aside.
- Whisk together eggs and set aside.
- In a small saucepan, melt together milk and butter until butter has just melted. Remove from the heat and add water and vanilla extract. Let mixture stand for a minute or two, or until the mixture registers 115°F to 125°F.
- Pour the milk mixture into the dry ingredients and mix with a spatula. Add the eggs and stir the mixture until the eggs are incorporated into the batter. The eggs will feel soupy and it’ll seem like the dough and the eggs are never going to come together. Keep stirring. Add the remaining ¾ cup of flour and stir with the spatula for about 2 minutes. The mixture will be sticky. That’s just right.
- Place the dough is a large, greased bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and a clean kitchen towel. Place in a warm space and allow to rest until doubled in size, about 1 hour. *The dough can be risen until doubled in size, then refrigerated overnight for use in the morning. If you’re using this method, just let the dough rest on the counter for 30 minutes before following the roll-out directions below.
- While the dough rises, whisk together the sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg for the filling. Set aside. Melt 2 ounces of butter until browned. Set aside. Grease and flour a 9x5x3-inch loaf pan. Set that aside too.
- Deflate the risen dough and knead about 2 tablespoons of flour into the dough. Cover with a clean kitchen towel and let rest for 5 minutes. On a lightly floured work surface, use a rolling pin to roll the dough out. The dough should be 12-inches tall and about 20-inches long. If you can’t get the dough to 20-inches long… that’s okay. Just roll it as large as the dough will go. Use a pastry brush to spread melted butter across all of the dough. Sprinkle with all of the sugar and cinnamon mixture. It might seem like a lot of sugar. Seriously? Just go for it.
- Slice the dough vertically, into six equal-sized strips. Stack the strips on top of one another and slice the stack into six equal slices once again. You’ll have six stacks of six squares. Layer the dough squares in the loaf pan like a flip-book. Place a kitchen towel over the loaf pan and allow in a warm place for 30 to 45 minutes or until almost doubled in size.
- Place a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 350°F. Place loaf in the oven and bake for 30 to 35 minutes, until the top is very golden brown. The top may be lightly browned, but the center may still be raw. A nice, dark, golden brown will ensure that the center is cooked as well.
- Remove from the oven and allow to rest for 20 to 30 minutes. Run a butter knife around the edges of the pan to loosen the bread and invert onto a clean board. Place a cake stand or cake plate on top of the upside down loaf, and carefully invert so it’s right side up. Serve warm with coffee or tea.
Le pain est intéressant mais il ne goute pas du tout le wasabi. Par contre, lors de la réalisation, l'odeur est intense.
Pratique pour finir de la pâte de wasabi.
Une spécialité argentine qui à l'air vraiment intéressante. À essayer.
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