Club Breadmakers
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LKVM:
So the name of the brand is KitchenAid?
Yep, mine is the KitchenAid Artisan mixer. -
Funz:
Interesting. Thanks for sharing.I used 250ml water and 50g bread flour.
Mix flour and water till it is smooth in a small saucepan.
Cook over medium heat and stirring constantly with a hand whisk to prevent burning. You will see lots of small bubbles forming on the top. Keep stirring and when the bubbles disappear, you will see streaks in the mixture for every stir you make with your whisk. Stop at this stage and you will have the 65°C TangZhong.
Pour the hot TangZhong into a bowl and cover it with a piece of glad wrap with the wrap touching the surface of the mixture. This is to prevent a film from forming on the TangZhong.
Leave the 65°C TangZhong to cool till room temperature before using it. Leftover TangZhong can be kept refrigerated and should be used within 3 days. All chilled TangZhong must return to room temperature before using. If your chilled TangZhong has turned greyish in colour, you should discard it.
Different types of breads call for different amounts of water roux. There are many water roux dough recipes available. Or you can experiment until you get the texture that you like. Well actually these days, just go phoon haut and get the bread improver. This is one of my experiments. The texture of the bread is more moist and you can see like fibrous strands in the bread when you break it apart, if you know what I mean. Sorry picture not that clear cos I was experimenting with my camera as well.
http://postimage.org/image/152kkl95w/ -
Funz:
I find the tang zhong method too tedious. I'm going to try this recipe next.You guys are bad influence. Make me wanna go get a breadmaker now. So far I have been using manual power to make my breads and have kinda stopped for a while. Somehow the breads turn out a bit too yeasty for my liking.
Anyways, I use the water roux or Tang Zhong trick to get softer fluffier breads.
Been over a year since I last baked any bread.
Should I or shouldn't I.... yes, no, yes, no, useful, white elephant, ........
http://schneiderchen.de/237Hokkaido-Milky-Loaf.html
I feel that if u are the baking type of person, u may want to invest in heavy duty mixer instead. Just as simple, only thing is u need to remove from bowl and transfer to tin or tray to bake. -
i remembered someone has a pullman tin. Can u share where u get it, price and roughly what size of bread to bake in? 1.5lb, 2lb?
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25hourmaid, I have started my thread
so don't :spank: me..... :rotflmao: :rotflmao: -
autumnbronze:
Ya, and now besides bread, we still have a cakes & cookies thread to follow up...Adoi, I lost touch with this thread just by a day or two, so much to catch up ....:oops: :oops:
To all those baking cheese bread/bread .... all the best.
Funz, the bread looks absolutely :drool: :drool:
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My cheese loaf didn’t rise properly again. It’s in the baking stage now so I don’t know if it’s edible.
I followed the recipe to the T this time round so I don’t know what went wrong. I suspect it could be insufficient water because the recipe only calls for 1/2 a cup of water.
Has anyone tried this Zoji cheese recipe with success? -
jtoh:
ops! don't gan jiong, it's still baking..so let's wait :xedfingers:My cheese loaf didn't rise properly again. It's in the baking stage now so I don't know if it's edible.
I followed the recipe to the T this time round so I don't know what went wrong. I suspect it could be insufficient water because the recipe only calls for 1/2 a cup of water.
Has anyone tried this Zoji cheese recipe with success? -
jtoh:
Oh dear....My cheese loaf didn't rise properly again. It's in the baking stage now so I don't know if it's edible.
I followed the recipe to the T this time round so I don't know what went wrong. I suspect it could be insufficient water because the recipe only calls for 1/2 a cup of water.
Has anyone tried this Zoji cheese recipe with success? -
twinklejoy:
Hopefully it's ugly but edible.
ops! don't gan jiong, it's still baking..so let's wait :xedfingers:jtoh:
My cheese loaf didn't rise properly again. It's in the baking stage now so I don't know if it's edible.
I followed the recipe to the T this time round so I don't know what went wrong. I suspect it could be insufficient water because the recipe only calls for 1/2 a cup of water.
Has anyone tried this Zoji cheese recipe with success?
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