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Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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"Bob Benton" > wrote: > I used a new recipe to bake my first loaf of ciabatta in months. All went > seemingly well and it rose nicely in the oven but when I cut into it there > was a single, huge void running along almost the entire upper half of the > loaf. What I want, of course, is a nice, open-textured ciabatta, with > something like a third to a half of the loaf consisting of > pea-to-marble-sized voids evenly disbursed throughout. You know, like what > you buy in the store. I've had the same problem once or twice with plain > French bread as well. What causes this? I was just wondering about this myself. I made pain levain the other day and ended up with lots of regular size, desirable holes but one BIG hole along the top where the "spine" would be if a long loaf of bread had a spine. I think that I've lost something I once knew about forming the loaves. Or I'm not pressing down the dough enough when folding it so it's got some air pocket in it. I hope other people have ideas about this. The bread was very tasty, but it would be hard to use for say, tuna sandwiches! :-) -- Mary Beth Orientation::Quilter http://www.quiltr.com http://www.fruitcakesociety.org http://homepage.mac.com/mbgoodman/bread05/ |
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