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Default Who Knows About "Pain De Mie" Pans?

Lou Decruss > wrote:

> Anyone have experience with them and care to share dough recipes or
> toppings or any incite? I don't remember this ever being discussed
> here before.


Pain de mie, all crumb and no crust, is probably my least favourite
French bread. BTW, the Vietnamese "bánh mě" is said to be a corruption
of "pain de mie".

Here is a recipe by Denis Ruffel, a famous Parisian pastry chef. The
recipe is from _The Food Lover's Guide to Paris_, 3rd edition, by
Patricia Wells, complete with her introduction.

Victor

Pain de mie Denis Ruffel
Denis Ruffel's Sandwich Loaf

This is France's firm, fine-grained sandwich loaf: milky, just slightly
sweet, and delicious when fresh and toasted. Denis Ruffel, from
_Ptisserie Millet_, the Left Bank pastry shop, manages to turn a single
loaf of _pain de mie_ into an entire buffet, making dozens of tiny,
highly decorated, open-face sandwiches. He'll top some with caviar or
smoked salmon and lemon triangles, others with a blend of Roquefort,
walnuts and butter, and still others with thin slices of sausages topped
with piped butter rosettes. The _mie_, by the way, is the crumb, or
non-crusty portion of any bread, and since this bread has virtually no
crust, it's called _pain de mie_. Some Paris bakes advertise _pain de
mie au beurre_, to distinguish their bread from those made with
margarine. The loaf is usually made in a special pan fitted with a
sliding cover, which helps mold the bread into a tidy rectangle. The
molds are available at many cookware shops, although the bread can be
made in any straight-sided loaf pan. To obtain a neat rectangular loaf,
cove the dough-filled loaf pan with foil and a baking sheet, then weight
the sheet with a brick or other heavy object and bake.

1 cup (250 ml) lukewarm milk
3 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 1/2 oz; 45 g), at room temperature,
plus 1 tablespoon (1/2 oz; 15 g) for buttering the bowl and loaf
pan
1 tablespoon or 1 package active dry yeast
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons salt
2 1/4 cups (385 g) unbleached all-purpose flour

1. In a large bowl, combine the milk, the 3 tablespoons butter, yeast,
and sugar, stir, and set aside for 5 minutes to proof the yeast.

2. Once proofed, stir in the salt, then add the flour, cup by cup,
mixing well after each addition. Knead by hand for 2 or 3 minutes, or
until the dough forms a smooth ball. Place in a well-buttered, large
bowl (use some of the remaining 1 tablespoon butter) and cover securely
with plastic wrap. Let rise in a warm place until double in bulk,
approximately 1 to 1 1/2 hours.

3. Butter a 6-cup (1.5-liter) loaf pan, or the mold and cover of a
6-cup (1.5 liter) _pain de mie_ pan. If using a loaf pan, butter a
piece of aluminum foil to use as a lid. Punch down the dough, knead for
1 minute, then transfer it to the pan or mold. Press down the dough
smoothly, being sure it fills the corners, and cover. Let rise until
double in bulk, another 1 to 1 1/2 hours.

4. About 30 minutes before the dough is ready to be baked, preheat the
oven to 375°F (190°C).

5. Bake until the loaf is golden brown, about 45 minutes. (If using a
loaf pan cover with buttered foil and a baking sheet, then weight the
sheet with a brick or other heavy object.) Unmold immediately and cool
on a rack. The bread will stay fresh for several days, wrapped and
stored at room temperature. _Pain de mie_ also freezes well.

Yield: 1 loaf

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