This is my every day bread converted for Big Bertha. 462 grams bread flour15 grams salt (about 2 teaspoons table salt but I use Diamond Crystal Salt)1 teaspoon sugar 2 teaspoons instant yeast1 tablespoon olive oil300 ml (approx.) very warm waterPut dry ingredients into Thermomix jug and mix on speed 5 for 30 seconds. Add oil and water and mix again on speed 5 for 30 seconds. Add more water if needed to make sure dough balls and is not dry. You want the dough to pull away from the sides of the jug. Knead on interval setting for 3 minutes. Turn out into a lightly oiled bowl and turn in the bowl to lightly coat all surfaces with the oil. Cover tightly and let rise until doubled - about 40 mins but will depend on your ambient temperature. Punch down. Shape into 2 boules, 2 batards or 1 large of either. Cover with a barely damp cloth and let rise again for another 40 minutes or so. Slash, spray with warm water and bake on stone at 450 for 12 minutes, reduce to 375 F and bake until done - about another 8-10 minutes. Internal temp should read between 195F and 200F.
Quote from: sargo on December 19, 2009, 06:18:41 pmThis is my every day bread converted for Big Bertha. . . . Hi sargo. I've been looking for a better recipe than what I have ... and yours looks great (beautiful images!!). Thermomix causes me to think you're using a TM21. True? It would be good to know because my Bimby is a TM21.
This is my every day bread converted for Big Bertha. . . .
I've currently got this on the first rise, nearly time to hit down and leave for 2nd rise. My question is where you say to shape and let rise under damp cloth then put on stones into oven to bake etc, do you let rise on the stone for the second rise, otherwise surely it would be difficult not to deflate it when moving (after sitting for 2nd rise?) Or do you need the stone to be hot before putting it on?Your help would be appreciated. Julie.
Thanks Sargo, I have it covered, sitting on baking paper on a tray at the moment, and the stone is heating in the oven, so I've done the right thing. Just wanted to be sure as I don't always have the best result with bread made by hand.
Looks very good, do you add other grains? How do you test the internal temp?
. . . .(Think I need to go to a kitchen place or maybe a tile place to find something to cook this type of thing on. What about pizza - anyone find something like a travertine tile cheaper than going to a kitchen shop and buying a pizza stone from??)