#1
Posted 04 June 2004 - 01:25 AM
The ingredients are as follows:
2 C. lukewarm Water
3 pkg. dry Yeast
8 C. unbleached Flour (or more)
1-1/2 C. Sugar
1-1/2 tsp. Salt
1/2 lb. Butter or Margarine
4 beaten Eggs
1 beaten Egg for glaze
BTW - I use the 3-braid method.
#2
Posted 04 June 2004 - 07:57 AM
What kind of flour are you using? Your recipe may have been developed using American hard wheat, which may have more gluten than the four avaiable in eretz Yisrael. (I don't know this for a fact, I'm just guessing.) Try adding a few tablespoons of wheat gluten with the flour and see if this improves the dough.
Also, 3 packages of yeast seems like a little much to me. IT could be that you have too much yeast, which can affect structure. Have you ever made it using 2 packages? It would definitely work, you can trust me on this, but it might also affect your rising times, so I wouldn't try it for the first time on eruv Shabbat in the winter, when days are short!
I'm really amazed by the 1/2 pound of butter! I'm not an expert, like some here, so maybe someone else can confirm or debunk my thinking that the high fat content could also affect the shape.
If asked which I think is most likely, I'd say the flour, since the recipe worked for you before you moved. Oh -- another question: Are you in Jerusalem? Elevation also affects breads.
Let me know what happens and what you figure out.
I'm also going to make the recipe -- I'm curious about the 1/2 pound of butter! It sounds so yummy!
Shabbat Shalom!
"Ess! Ess! It's a mitzvah!"
#3
Posted 05 June 2004 - 12:37 PM
I live in Tel Aviv. I make mine with butter flavored margarine, unless I am going to have a dairy meal.
I will try the recipe with two packets of yeast and let you know. Unfortunately, my oven stopped working and I have to get it fixed. So, it make be a couple of weeks before I can make another batch.
#4
Posted 05 June 2004 - 01:46 PM
Best results are usually obtained with longer, cooler fermentations. If there is no preferment involved ( i.e. dough made from scratch in one step) , the bulk fermentation of the dough should be three hours or so, folding the dough gently over itself about halfway through. Certainly, if the dough seems weak and sluggish, it would be best to let things ferment more before shaping.
Look into the amount of yeast, which does seem on the high side, but also the temperature of your kitchen. If things are warmer and more humid than you're used to, than the dough will rise much more quickly, too quickly to gain the structure which is the result of longer fermentations.
Another thing is that besides the possibility that the flour has lower gluten, or in fact as a result of this if it is the case, the amount of egg and liquids you are using might be too much for the flour and the dough too wet . The more gluten in a flour ( and, relatively speaking, North American flours have lots....)
Thanks and good luck
James
#5
Posted 17 June 2004 - 01:43 PM
Aidan
"Ess! Ess! It's a mitzvah!"
#6
Posted 17 June 2004 - 01:49 PM
I have a very good recipe for challah, but since I moved to Israel I am having problems with the bread holding its shape. This recipe has two risings and I braid the bread after the first rising. Everytime I make it the dough spreads out and the braiding is lost. What am I doing wrong?
Braid the bread on the second rising and do not let it rise out, oil the surface, this will hopefully hold its shape
stove
#7
Posted 17 June 2004 - 04:05 PM
Stovetop, I do braid the bread on the second rise. I explained it incorrectly when I wrote the recipe. I have a feeling that James is correct in stating that it is probably the flour. I am going to try and see if the baking supply store near my house sells imported flour.
#8
Posted 17 June 2004 - 08:57 PM
stovetop
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