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Default Weekend Baking Adventures

I have been given a large amount of fresh yeast and so will celebrate
Labor Day weekend with croissants and brioche.

At this point, I plan on sticking pretty much to Julia Child/Esther
McManus for the croissants (I do not wing it on croissants), but would
love to look at anyone else's recommendations. No almond ones this
time, but I will probably toss in a few of Jacques Torres' chocolate
discs into part of a batch.

Brioche recipes are also welcome, as I always get benefit out of
reading a good recipe, even if I toss caution to the winds and proceed
on my own.

There is home made freezer jam of many varieties to go with all of it.

I wish a wonderful weekend to everyone.

Boron
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Default Weekend Baking Adventures


"Boron Elgar" > wrote in message
...
> I have been given a large amount of fresh yeast and so will celebrate
> Labor Day weekend with croissants and brioche.
>
> At this point, I plan on sticking pretty much to Julia Child/Esther
> McManus for the croissants (I do not wing it on croissants), but would
> love to look at anyone else's recommendations. No almond ones this
> time, but I will probably toss in a few of Jacques Torres' chocolate
> discs into part of a batch.
>
> Brioche recipes are also welcome, as I always get benefit out of
> reading a good recipe, even if I toss caution to the winds and proceed
> on my own.
>
> There is home made freezer jam of many varieties to go with all of it.
>
> I wish a wonderful weekend to everyone.


I would wish you the same but it sounds as though your is wonderful
already)

Share your recipe for croissants, please?

--
http://www.shop.helpforheros.org.uk

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Default Weekend Baking Adventures

On Sat, 3 Sep 2011 13:08:19 +0100, "Ophelia" >
wrote:

>Share your recipe for croissants, please?


Gladly. Although I have this in book form, I found it online, too.
Easier to cut and paste than scan and TinyPic, or re-type by hand.

Also, be sure to watch these videos. Not every single thing is the
same as the recipe (the recipe was done after the videos, I believe,
and in Julia's book, written with Dorrie Greenspan).

Croissants are not difficult to make. They are time consuming, there
is no question about it, and I don't recommend them for a warm kitchen
or weekend, as working with butter can get tricky then, but the
instructions are clear, the videos of great help, and I am sure the
nearest kindly doctor will prescribe some medication for lowering your
cholesterol.

A few years ago, one of the posters here (Nancy, perhaps?) recorded a
series of adventures making croissants with different recipes. It was
a marvelous set of postings. Quite helpful and interesting.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3S-tTTz7zUM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wIFq1...eature=related

CROISSANT RECIPE
Recipe from "Baking with Julia: Savor the Joys of Baking with
America's Best Bakers"

Ingredients
For 20-24 croissants
For the dough:
" 1 ounce compressed fresh yeast
" 3 3/4 cups unbleached all purpose flour
" 1/3 cup sugar
" 2 tsp salt
" 1 cup milk
For the butter:
" 4 1/2 sticks (1 pound 2 ounces) cold unsalted butter, cut into
1/2 inch cubes
" 2 tbsp unbleached all purpose flour
For the egg wash:
" 1 large egg beaten with 1 tbsp cold water
Method

Preparing the dough:

Put the yeast, flour sugar, salt and 1 cup of milk into the bowl of a
mixer fitted with a dough hook. With the machine on its lowest speed,
mix for 1 to 2 minutes, until a soft, moist dough forms on the hook.
If the dough is to dry, add more milk, 1 tablespoon at a time. In most
cases if the dough does need more liquid, it won't need more than
about 3 tablespoons, but check carefully as you want all the flour to
be moistened. Stop the mixer and look into the bowl. If the hook has
not picked up all the flour from the bottom of the bowl, add a few
more drops of milk.

Set the mixer to its highest speed and work the dough until it is
smooth and elastic, no longer sticky and close to the consistency of
soft butter, about 4 minutes. To make certain that all the ingredients
are perfectly blended you can remove the dough from the mixer after 3
minutes, and then with the mixer on high speed, return plum size
pieces to the bowl. The pieces will remain separate for a short while,
then come together, at which time the dough is ready.
Remove the dough from the mixer, wrap it in plastic and put it in a
plastic bag, leaving a little room for expansion. Keep the dough at
room temperature for 30 minutes to give the gluten time to relax; then
refrigerate the dough for 8 hours or overnight.

Preparing the butter:

Attach the paddle to your mixer and beat the butter and flour on the
highest speed until smooth and the same consistency as the croissant
dough, about 2 minutes. Reach into the bowl and poke around in the
butter to make sure that its evenly blended - if you find any lumps,
just squeeze them between your fingers. Scrape the butter onto a large
piece of plastic wrap and give it a few slaps to knock the air out of
it. Mold it into an oval 5 to 6 inches long and 1 inch thick. Wrap it
tightly and refrigerate until needed. At this point the dough and the
butter can be frozen; defrost overnight in the refrigerator before
proceeding with the recipe.

Incorporating the butter:

Place the croissant dough on a generously floured large work surface
(marble is ideal) and sprinkle the top of the dough lightly with
flour. Using a long rolling pin, roll the dough into an oval
approximately 10 inches wide and 17 inches long. Brush the excess
flour from the dough. Center the oval of chilled butter across the
oval of dough and fold the top and bottom of the dough over the butter
to make a tidy package. Gently and evenly stretch the folded layers of
dough out to the sides and press the edges down firmly with your
fingertips to create a neatly sealed rectangle.

If you own a French rolling pin (one without handles) now is the time
to use it. Hold one side of the dough steady with your hand and strike
the other side gently but firmly with the rolling pin to distribute
the butter evenly. As you hit the dough you will see the butter moving
out into the crevices. Strike the other side of the dough the same
way. After pounding you should have a 1 inch thick rectangle about
about 14 inches long and 6 inches wide.

Keeping the work surface and the top of the dough well floured, roll
out the dough. If this your first time working with croissant dough,
you may want to roll out the dough just a little to distribute the
butter, put it on a baking sheet lined with flour-dusted parchment
paper, cover it with plastic and chill it for 1 to 2 hours first; this
way you wont risk having the dough go soft or the butter seep out.
(Each time you wrap the dough, make sure its well covered - even a
little air will cause the dough to form an unwanted skin.) If you are
experienced, feeling courageous or have dough that is still well
chilled, go on to make your first turn.

Rolling and folding:

Roll the dough into a rectangle 24 to 26 inches long and about 14
inches wide, with the long side facing you. (You may feel as though
your rolling the dough sideways-and you are.) Brush off the excess
flour and, working from the left and right sides, fold the dough
inward into thirds, as you would a brochure, so that you have a
package thats about 8 inches wide by 14 inches long.
Carefully transfer the dough to a parchment- lined baking sheet, mark
the parchment "1 turn" so you'll know what you've done, cover and
refrigerate for at least 2 hours. You can freeze the dough after this
or any other turn. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before
proceeding.

Second turn:

Place the dough so that the 14 inch side runs left to right. (The
dough needs 2 more turns; you've given it one quarter-turn already.)
Making sure the work surface is well floured at all times, roll the
dough as you did before into a rectangle 24 to 26 inches long by about
14 inches wide . (When doing the second and third turns, you may find
that the dough has cracked a little. That's natural; its a result of
the yeast. Don't worry, just flour the dough and work surface and keep
going.)

As you did before, fold the dough in thirds. Place it on the
parchment, mark the paper "2 turns", cover and refrigerate continued
in part 2 for at least 2 hours.

Third turn:

Start again with a 14 inch side running from your left side to your
right. Roll the dough into a rectangle 24 to 26 inches long by 14
inches wide. Fold the left and right sides of the dough into the
center, leaving a little space in the center, and then fold one side
over the other as though you were closing a book. This is the famous
double turn, also known as "the wallet".

Chilling the dough:

Brush off the flour, wrap the dough in plastic and refrigerate for 2
hours. At this point the dough is ready to be rolled, cut and shaped
into croissants. Storing: The dough can be frozen for up to 1 month.
Thaw overnight, still wrapped, in the refrigerator.

Rolling the dough:

Generously flour a work surface. Position the dough so that it
resembles a book, with the spine to your left and the opening to your
right. For easy handling, cut the dough in half horizontally so that
you have two pieces about 7 inches long and about 6 1/2 inches wide:
wrap and chill one half while you work with the other half.
Flour the dough and roll it into a rectangle thats 24 to 26 inches
long and 15 to 18 inches wide. This takes a lot of rolling. Keep the
work surface and the dough well floured and have patience. If
necessary turn the dough so that the long side runs from left to right
along the counter. Carefully fold the top half of the dough down to
the bottom. The dough is now ready for cutting.

Cutting the dough:

Working with a pizza cutter or a large, very sharp knife, cut
triangles from the dough. This is done most easily by making a
diagonal cut on the left hand side to get the pattern started; save
the uneven piece of dough. Measure off a 3 to 4 inch base and begin
cutting the triangles, always cutting from bottom to top. You'll have
another scrap when you reach the other end-you'll use these scraps
when you shape the croissants. Unfold each pair of triangles and cut
them in half to separate. You should have 10 to 12 maybe 14 triangles;
set them aside while you clear the work surface of all flour. Line two
large baking sheets with parchment paper.

Shaping the croissants:

Moisten your hands with a wet towel. Working with one triangle at a
time, gently stretch the base to widen it slightly, then, holding the
base of the triangle in one hand, run the fingers of the other hand
down to the point of the triangle. Use your thumb to pull and stretch
the dough until its almost twice the original length-have courage and
tug; the extra length is what allows you to make a large croissant
with sufficient rolls to show off its layers of dough.

Place the triangle, point toward you, at arm distance on the work
table this will give enough space to roll the croissant into shape
with-out having to lift it in mid-roll) Pull off a little piece of the
reserved scrap dough, mold it into a small football shape and center
it on the wide top part of the triangle-this will help make the
"belly" of the croissant plump. Fold about 1/2 inch of this wide end
over itself and press the ends down once to secure. With your palms
and fingers positioned over the flattened ends of the croissant and
the heels of your hands on the flat work surface, roll the croissant
toward you-try to keep your hands moving down and out to the sides as
you roll- ending with the point of the triangle tucked under the
croissant. A well shaped croissant-and it takes practice to achieve
one-will sport at least six clearly accountable sections, or ridges,
from rolling. Place the croissants on one of the baking sheets,
leaving room for them to triple in size without touching one another.
Repeat with the other half of the dough.

Glazing and rising:

Give the croissants a last gentle plumping, carefully turning the ends
down and toward the center to produce the classic croissant shape.
Brush the croissants with egg wash and allow them to rise, uncovered,
at room temperature for 3 to 4 hours, until tripled in size and
spongy. (Reserve egg wash, covered in the refrigerator.) The ideal
place for rising is a turned off oven (one with a pilot light is fine)
containing a pan of hot steamy water. To test that they are properly
risen, wet your fingers and squeeze the end of a croissant:It should
offer no resistance and feel almost hollow.

Baking the croissants:

Arrange the oven racks to divide the oven into thirds, and preheat the
oven to 350 f. Brush the croissants once again with egg wash and bake
for 12 minutes. Rotate front to back and bake another 4 to 6 minutes,
until the croissants are deeply bronzed. Cool on racks. As tempting as
they are croissants should not be eaten as soon as they come from the
oven. The dough-and the layers within need time to set.

Storing:

The croissants are best eaten the day they are made. If you must keep
them, freeze them, wrapped airtight. Thaw the croissants overnight in
the refrigerator or at room temperature and reheat in a 350F oven for
about 8 minutes.


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Default Weekend Baking Adventures


"Boron Elgar" > wrote in message
...
> On Sat, 3 Sep 2011 13:08:19 +0100, "Ophelia" >
> wrote:
>
>>Share your recipe for croissants, please?

>
> Gladly. Although I have this in book form, I found it online, too.
> Easier to cut and paste than scan and TinyPic, or re-type by hand.


Phew I am very glad you were able to copy from online!!!


> Also, be sure to watch these videos. Not every single thing is the
> same as the recipe (the recipe was done after the videos, I believe,
> and in Julia's book, written with Dorrie Greenspan).



I will certainly do that!!

This is just the thing on a cold day when I am in the mood for bread
making and fiddly stuff)



> Croissants are not difficult to make. They are time consuming, there
> is no question about it, and I don't recommend them for a warm kitchen
> or weekend, as working with butter can get tricky then, but the
> instructions are clear, the videos of great help, and I am sure the
> nearest kindly doctor will prescribe some medication for lowering your
> cholesterol.
>
> A few years ago, one of the posters here (Nancy, perhaps?) recorded a
> series of adventures making croissants with different recipes. It was
> a marvelous set of postings. Quite helpful and interesting.
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3S-tTTz7zUM
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wIFq1...eature=related
>
> CROISSANT RECIPE
> Recipe from "Baking with Julia: Savor the Joys of Baking with
> America's Best Bakers"


Many thanks, <copied and saved>

--
http://www.shop.helpforheros.org.uk
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Default Weekend Baking Adventures

On Sat, 03 Sep 2011 07:49:12 -0400, Boron Elgar
> wrote:

> I have been given a large amount of fresh yeast and so will celebrate
> Labor Day weekend with croissants and brioche.
>
> At this point, I plan on sticking pretty much to Julia Child/Esther
> McManus for the croissants (I do not wing it on croissants), but would
> love to look at anyone else's recommendations. No almond ones this
> time, but I will probably toss in a few of Jacques Torres' chocolate
> discs into part of a batch.
>
> Brioche recipes are also welcome, as I always get benefit out of
> reading a good recipe, even if I toss caution to the winds and proceed
> on my own.
>
> There is home made freezer jam of many varieties to go with all of it.
>
> I wish a wonderful weekend to everyone.
>

Sounds like a busy weekend! I should get off the dime and make some
cinnamon rolls.


--
I take life with a grain of salt, a slice of lemon and a shot of tequila


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Default Weekend Baking Adventures

On Sat, 03 Sep 2011 10:59:00 -0700, sf > arranged
random neurons and said:

>Sounds like a busy weekend! I should get off the dime and make some
>cinnamon rolls.


I like the following one from Alton Brown, as it takes too long to
whip the cinnamon rolls up in time for breakfast otherwise (and I do a
"cheat" and make monkey bread when the grandkids are here overnight).

@@@@@ Now You're Cooking! Export Format

Overnight Cinnamon Rolls

breads

dough:
4 large egg yolks; room temperature
1 large whole egg; room temperature
1/4 cup sugar
6 tablespoons Butter; melted
6 ounces buttermilk; room temperature
4 cups all-purpose flour; additional for dusting
1 package dry yeast
1 1/4 teaspoons kosher salt
vegetable oil or cooking spray
filling:
1 cup light brown sugar; packed
1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
pinch salt
1 1/2 tablespoons Butter; melted
icing:
1/4 cup cream cheese; softened
3 tablespoons milk
1 1/2 cups powdered sugar

For the dough: in the bowl of a stand mixer with the whisk attachment,
whisk the egg yolks, whole egg, sugar, butter, and buttermilk. Add
approximately 2 cups of the flour along with the yeast and salt; whisk
until moistened and combined. Remove the whisk attachment and replace
with a dough hook. Add all but 3/4 cup of the remaining flour and
knead on low speed for 5 minutes. Check the consistency of the dough,
add more flour if necessary; the dough should feel soft and moist but
not sticky. Knead on low speed 5 minutes more or until the dough
clears the sides of the bowl. Turn the dough out onto a lightly
floured work surface; knead by hand about 30 seconds. Lightly oil a
large bowl. Transfer the dough to the bowl, lightly oil the top of the
dough, cover and let double in volume, 2 to 2 1/2 hours.

Combine the brown sugar, cinnamon and salt in a medium bowl. Mix until
well incorporated. Set aside until ready to use.

Butter a 9 by 13-inch glass baking dish. Turn the dough out onto a
lightly floured work surface. Gently shape the dough into a rectangle
with the long side nearest you. Roll into an 18 by 12-inch rectangle.
Brush the dough with the 3/4-ounce of melted butter, leaving 1/2-inch
border along the top edge. Sprinkle the filling mixture over the
dough, leaving a 3/4-inch border along the top edge; gently press the
filling into the dough. Beginning with the long edge nearest you, roll
the dough into a tight cylinder. Firmly pinch the seam to seal
and roll the cylinder seam side down. Very gently squeeze the cylinder
to create even thickness. Using a serrated knife, slice the cylinder
into 1 1/2-inch rolls; yielding 12 rolls. Arrange rolls cut side down
in the baking dish; cover tightly with plastic wrap and store in the
refrigerator overnight or up to 16 hours.

Remove the rolls from the refrigerator and place in an oven that is
turned off. Fill a shallow pan 2/3-full of boiling water and set on
the rack below the rolls. Close the oven door and let the rolls rise
until they look slightly puffy; approximately 30 minutes. Remove the
rolls and the shallow pan of water from the oven.

Preheat the oven to 350° F.

When the oven is ready, place the rolls on the middle rack and bake
until golden brown, or until the internal temperature reaches 190° F
on an instant-read thermometer, approximately 30 minutes.

While the rolls are cooling slightly, make the icing by whisking the
cream cheese in the bowl of a stand mixer until creamy. Add the milk
and whisk until combined. Sift in the powdered sugar, and whisk until
smooth. Spread over the rolls and serve immediately.

Notes: Alton Brown, 2006

Yield: serves: 12 roll

Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd

--

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On Sat, 03 Sep 2011 18:29:22 -0700, Terry Pulliam Burd
> wrote:

> On Sat, 03 Sep 2011 10:59:00 -0700, sf > arranged
> random neurons and said:
>
> >Sounds like a busy weekend! I should get off the dime and make some
> >cinnamon rolls.

>
> I like the following one from Alton Brown, as it takes too long to
> whip the cinnamon rolls up in time for breakfast otherwise (and I do a
> "cheat" and make monkey bread when the grandkids are here overnight).
>
> @@@@@ Now You're Cooking! Export Format
>
> Overnight Cinnamon Rolls


Thanks Terry! Copied and saved.

--
I take life with a grain of salt, a slice of lemon and a shot of tequila
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Default Weekend Baking Adventures

On 09/03/2011 04:49 AM, Boron Elgar wrote:
> I have been given a large amount of fresh yeast and so will celebrate
> Labor Day weekend with croissants and brioche.


Lovely!

I am thinking of making challah this weekend. I love the stuff, and
rarely eat it. It also makes SUCH good French toast.

Serene

--
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