11/11/2020 11:44

Steps to Make Favorite Hand Kneaded and Very Useful Standard Bread

by Bertha Fitzgerald

Hand Kneaded and Very Useful Standard Bread
Hand Kneaded and Very Useful Standard Bread

Hello everybody, it is me, Dave, welcome to my recipe page. Today, I will show you a way to make a special dish, hand kneaded and very useful standard bread. It is one of my favorites. For mine, I will make it a bit tasty. This will be really delicious.

Hand Kneaded and Very Useful Standard Bread is one of the most popular of recent trending foods on earth. It’s appreciated by millions daily. It’s easy, it is quick, it tastes delicious. They are nice and they look fantastic. Hand Kneaded and Very Useful Standard Bread is something that I have loved my whole life.

Tessa shows you How to KNEAD dough by hand without an electric mixer, so you can create perfect bread rolls and loaves of bread! Kneading bread dough can be a very enjoyable step of bread baking. If you are kneading by hand, it's nearly impossible to over-knead because you'll tire yourself out long before it happens If the dough feels very dense and tough when you knead it against the counter, that is a Bread-baking is a learning process. As frustrating and disappointing as it can be to pull a.

To begin with this particular recipe, we must prepare a few ingredients. You can have hand kneaded and very useful standard bread using 10 ingredients and 29 steps. Here is how you cook that.

The ingredients needed to make Hand Kneaded and Very Useful Standard Bread:
  1. Make ready 300 grams ●Bread flour
  2. Get 10 grams ●Skim milk powder
  3. Make ready 4 grams ●Salt
  4. Make ready 15 grams ☆Raw sugar (or caster sugar or light brown sugar)
  5. Make ready 40 grams ☆Egg
  6. Take 170 grams ☆Water: Use lukewarm water during winter
  7. Make ready 5 grams ☆Dry yeast
  8. Take 20 grams ◎Butter
  9. Make ready 1 Egg or milk for eggwash/glaze: Use whichever depending on the type of bread you are making
  10. Take 1 Topping: Depends on the type of bread you are making

Keep in mind that bread rising time is affected by weather and seasons. In winter, cold kitchens will lengthen the rising time. Kneaded bread vs. no-knead bread is a false dichotomy. Bread-making, it's assumed, is arcane and unrewarding, punishing minor lapses in technique with dispiritingly thorough failure.

Steps to make Hand Kneaded and Very Useful Standard Bread:
  1. Place the ingredients marked with ☆ in a bowl and mix with a whisk.
  2. Place the ingredients marked with ● in a separate, large bowl and mix well with a dry whisk.
  3. Using either your hand or a rubber spatula, make a depression in the middle of Step 2, then pour the Step 1 ingredients into it.
  4. Combine the flour and the liquid by mixing from the middle and outward using either your hands or a rubber spatula.
  5. Turn out onto a working surface once the dough has more or less come together. Use a dough scraper to get all of the flour that is stuck on the sides of the bowl.
  6. The dough will still be quite sticky at this point, but that is okay. Knead the dough onto the surface, then combine again with a dough scraper; do this several times.
  7. If you repeat Step 6 several times, the dough will become easier to handle and will stick less to the surface.
  8. Grab an edge of the dough and slam it onto the surface.
  9. Once you slam the dough, fold it over, and…
  10. Hold an edge of the dough, rotate it 90 degrees so that it faces the same direction as in Step 8, and slam again. Repeat several times.
  11. When the dough is no longer sticky, fold it toward you, stretching out the surface of the dough, and…
  12. Push down with the heel of your palm. Repeat for about 10 minutes, occasionally using the motions from Steps 8~10.
  13. Once the dough has become glossy, cut a part of it with a dough scraper and stretch it out carefully. You will be able to see your fingers through the dough without it tearing if gluten has formed.
  14. Once the gluten has formed, spread the dough out. Place room-temperature butter in the middle, and wrap the dough around it.
  15. Combine the butter with the dough with a tearing motion. The dough will come apart, but it will come back together soon since gluten has been formed (Step 13).
  16. Repeat Steps 8~12 for about 10 more minutes until the surface is springy and shiny. Form into a ball by stretching the surface of the dough and pinching it at the bottom.
  17. Place the dough ball in a greased bowl and let it rise. If your oven has a proofing setting, then put it in there at 30℃ for about 45 minutes. You could also cover the bowl with plastic and leave it at a warm place.
  18. It has doubled in size. The time is just a guideline, so you should check the dough to see if it is done. Put some flour on your finger and poke a hole in the dough. If the dough does not spring back, then it is ready.
  19. Once the dough has risen, turn out onto a working surface and punch out the gas by pushing down the whole thing. You could put extra flour on it if it is sticky, but I almost never do.
  20. Divide into portions depending on your liking and the type of bread you are making.
  21. Form the divided portions into a ball by folding it in on itself, then let them rest for 10~15 minutes. Leave them at room temperature, but cover with plastic wrap or damp cloth to keep them from drying.
  22. After resting the dough, shape them into the shape you like. Then let the dough rise again, in the same way as the first time for 35~45 minutes. It will become 1.5~2x the original size.
  23. Let the shaped dough rise on the baking sheet with which you will be baking. When they have risen…
  24. If you like, brush on the egg wash to add gloss and color to the bread. In which case, the egg left over from the dough making process should be more than enough.
  25. Bake in an oven oven that has been preheated to 200℃ for about 12 minutes. Please adjust oven temperature and baking time depending on your oven and the shape of your bread.
  26. The amount of liquid that is needed depends on the type of flour you use as well as the temperature and season. Until you get used to it, it would be good to leave out 1 tablespoonful of water in the beginning to see if you need it when you start kneading.
  27. I used the Haruyutaka brand and the Golden Yacht brand flours this time at a 1:1 ratio.
  28. Even if you are using a bread maker, wait until the gluten has formed before you add the butter. I really like to knead by hand.
  29. Little Anpan Made with Standard Bread - - https://cookpad.com/us/recipes/144812-mini-anpan-with-hand-kneaded-classic-bread-dough

Kneaded bread vs. no-knead bread is a false dichotomy. Bread-making, it's assumed, is arcane and unrewarding, punishing minor lapses in technique with dispiritingly thorough failure. Then dust the dough with flour and gently lift it out of the bowl with floured hands. The purpose of kneading a bread dough is to form gluten. Gluten, as we have discussed many times This is very important for bread, because the gluten meshes will hold the gasses that the yeast produce The theory behind a no-knead bread is that there is more than one way to make gluten.

So that is going to wrap this up for this exceptional food hand kneaded and very useful standard bread recipe. Thank you very much for reading. I’m confident you can make this at home. There is gonna be more interesting food at home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to bookmark this page in your browser, and share it to your family, friends and colleague. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!


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