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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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![]() "djs0302" > wrote in message ups.com... > > Dee Randall wrote: >> >> See above wherein I stated: >> I let it proof for maybe 3 hours (when it >> > called for 30-45 minutes) and finally gave up the ghost about 11pm last >> > night and put it in the frig. >> >> It sure got a lot of rising and proofing. 6-7 hours rising, 3 hours >> proofing, then overnight! >> I never had any trouble with raisin bread in a bread-maker, but then, the >> recipe I used only called for 3 TB of sugar or honey. When I made that >> recipe I used 3T of just about any kind of sweetener I wanted: carob >> molasses, date molasses, briar rabbit, any organic sugar or honey on >> hand. >> Thanks for your response, I appreciate it. >> Dee Dee > > Have you ever tried using your microwave oven as a proof box? You > place a cup of water in the microwave and bring it to a boil. Then you > move the cup of water off to the side and place the bread dough inside > the oven and shut the door. The dough itself does not get microwaved. > I've also done the same thing using a large pot on the stove. I place > a rack inside the pot. Then I add a tiny bit of water and bring the > water to a boil. After the water has boiled a few seconds I remove the > pot from the stove and place the loaf of bread inside the pot on top of > the rack. The rack is to keep the bread out of the water. I then > cover the pot with a lid. I remember proofing a loaf of raisin bread > this way and it seemed to work out well. I don't remember the recipe > because it was quite a while back and I haven't made it since. I don't > like raisin bread myself, but I knew someone who did and made some for > them for either their birthday or Christmas. Thanks for your proof box ideas. Yes, I've tried so many my head swims. I've concocted some of my own. Mostly what I do nowadays is put it in a container, cover it and let it sit in a room that is in the winter months consistenly 80-82º. I could turn that room up a little more, but for some reason I've decided on those figures. (Go figure -- ha ha!) For the first rise, I put it in this same room in a straight-sided see-thru plastic container marked in steps (in quarts and half quarts) and write down where it started and where I expect it to rise to. I like the straight side because there are no considerations as to how much it actually did rise. I could be wrong on rising and proofing at 80-82 for these types of bread. If it is a artisanal bread, I don't care how long it takes to rise (perhaps I should); but I just look-see. If it hasn't moved, I will put it in the refrigerator overnight. Thanks, Happy bread-making, Dee Dee |
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