quote:No. Just mix. Lots of experience with it. One of my children has Coeliac (Celiac) Disease (gluten is toxic). It is very difficult to get texture just right, and the quality of bread is less than anything wheaten or glutenish. When she was visiting from the UK 2 weeks ago, we had to fumigate the kitchen, I made bread in advance to avoid glutenizing her. It is like kosher, except that the slip-ups would make her ill for several days to several weeks.
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
Do you not knead gluten free doughs ?
quote:It's much easier with an electric knife.
Originally posted by Firenze:
... if you wanted a loaf fresh and quivering first thing, you could have it (though it's a bit difficult to slice).
quote:That was what put us off doing our own for a while, but you can put it in the oven with just the oven-light on, or if you've got an airing-cupboard that would probably work.
Originally posted by Firenze:
... the lack (in winter) of a reliably warm place for proving ...
quote:I don't find the time-intervals too bad: the machine takes an hour and a half to mix and knead the dough (during which I quite often doze off
Originally posted by Jane R:
... you can go off and do something else while the dough is rising but you have to keep going back to it ...
quote:My bread machine is cheaper to run (because a lot smaller!) than my elec oven, and holds the right temp for proving and cooking with a thermostat controlling the element in a feedback loop, as they all will. Power for one med-size loaf (3 cups flour) comes in at about 9p or 1/3 kWH over a 3hr cycle. Using 45p/1.5kg bread flour I used to be able to get, the bread was ~30p a loaf - better than anything except occasional 'end of life' supermarket bread. Now bread flour price has doubled, so maybe we're more like 45p per loaf. Main thing for me is it cuts down 'emergency' trips to the shops, especially now I keep UHT for when I run out of milk. I live in the city - if I had my brother-in-law's 6 mile round trip to the corner shop, this would be an even bigger advantage.
My concern would be that it would bump up electricity bills having a device running for several hours.
quote:There's a whole category of exchange goods, as the anthropologists would say - toasted sandwich makers and cheap espresso machines and heated hostess trays. We used always to nip to the big Sunday car boot sale any time we wanted Martini glasses...
Originally posted by mark_in_manchester:
Oh - and ETA that bread machines, like slow cookers, and things people fail to bond with and then sell on ebay. When paddle bearing in my bread pan finally dies completely, that's where the next one is coming from.
quote:The gluten content is also affected. Coeliac granddaughter can eat slow rise bread and sour dough where both have over 20 hours rising. Quickrise bread affects her.
Chorleywood method, in which the dough was gently shaken to promote rising in a quarter the time for a traditionally made bread. Flavour and texture both vanish.
quote:Thought by whom I wonder - my acid reflux started after we got a breadmaker and mostly stopped eating Chorleywood process commercially produced bread.
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
I don't know anything about the gluten issue, but the Chorleywood method is also thought* to be responsible for a big increase in numbers of people suffering with IBS and acid reflux in recent years (and a number of other things that escape me at the moment because they don't have a personal impact).
*Disputed by the industry, but the repeated experience of someone close to me supports the idea.
quote:Googling turns up a vast number of articles in newspapers (Guardian, Telegraph, Independent), all quoting different people. This article from the Telegraph says that research is not being done because there is no-one to fund it. The only interested party with the necessary money is the baking industry, and they really don't want to.
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Thought by whom I wonder - my acid reflux started after we got a breadmaker and mostly stopped eating Chorleywood process commercially produced bread.
quote:Have you taken it out yet? How was it?
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
First batch goes in the oven in 15 min ....
quote:I did, I did - ended up being a cup ful !
Originally posted by Jane R:
Keep adding flour until the dough is the right consistency. It should still work.
(Chocolate bread?! Eww...)
quote:Very patchy net access here after last night's storm, but I have seen articles on this and know that granddaughter is fine with very slow rise bread. Some years ago, she was hospitalised several times before coeliac disease was suspected. I am not saying the quick rise causes stomach problems. They are an entirely different matter whether it's IBS or coeliac problems.
I don't understand how a slow rising could somehow affect the gluten content of the bread. After all, it's the manner in which the gluten traps the gases that enables the dough to rise.
quote:Hope your storm situation settles! One of my adult children was diagnosed with Coeliac/Celiac Disease after a GI infection, there are several different reactions and they test for response to different molecules. I suspect in your grandchild, she reacts to one/some and not the others. And the slow rise nonreactivity means she digests the long molecules okay but not the shorter ones. Some would call her 'gluten sensitive' versus coeliac. We were pretty upset with the diagnosis with my child, particularly because baking together has always been a father-child activity. We're merely moving on though, mostly to things that don't look like loaves. (If you can imagine cooking together over skype, while she is in England and I'm on the Canadian prairies)
Originally posted by Lothlorien:
Very patchy net access here after last night's storm, but I have seen articles on this and know that granddaughter is fine with very slow rise bread. Some years ago, she was hospitalised several times before coeliac disease was suspected. I am not saying the quick rise causes stomach problems. They are an entirely different matter whether it's IBS or coeliac problems.
Hope this goes through. Access drops out frequently.
quote:Sorry, canola is another of these mystery words. Is it what we call oil seed rape? Or is it something different that we don't have?
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:
... Crisco, the common one I use is solidified canola and palm oil extracts. ...
quote:Please take and post some photos of your bread! Being a baking voyeur, photos please!!
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
They look incredible![]()
quote:Canola is a created word from Canada and oil, because the oil from canola plants is rather different from ancestral rape seed plants due to conventional breeding ("rape" comes from rapine, which means related rivers). The main issues are disease resistance as the plants grow, and lowering of the eurcic acid. Erucic acid is linked to some suggested health problems with cancers and the heart. The name change was also stimulated by the word "rape" in the name, a false friend but identical word. Canola and rape seed are relatives of mustard. Canola is a good frying oil, doesn't smoke at high temps.
Originally posted by Enoch:
quote:Sorry, canola is another of these mystery words. Is it what we call oil seed rape? Or is it something different that we don't have?
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:
... Crisco, the common one I use is solidified canola and palm oil extracts. ...
Palm oil is rather controversial here at the moment.
It sounds, by the way, as though shortening is a sort of vegetarian lard, rather in the way one can get vegetarian suet. Is that right?
quote:Add coarse flakes of sea salt to the bread just before baking. It will enhance the chocolate flavour.
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
Twas good![]()
Now I must make chocolate bread ...
quote:Not downunder. It's not a new term by any means in baking. Not just for bread, but biscuits etc. I can remember reading it when I first started cooking and that was a long time ago. Here it was some form of fat, butter, lard, dripping etc. It gave flavour and increased keeping quality of baked goods. Very few people used margarine when I was young. There was social disapproval of it as being lower class and it tasted even worse than it does now.
Originally posted by Enoch:
quote:Sorry, canola is another of these mystery words. Is it what we call oil seed rape? Or is it something different that we don't have?
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:
... Crisco, the common one I use is solidified canola and palm oil extracts. ...
Palm oil is rather controversial here at the moment.
It sounds, by the way, as though shortening is a sort of vegetarian lard, rather in the way one can get vegetarian suet. Is that right?
quote:Yes, and use hotter temperatures. I bake most loaves and buns for half the time at about 450°F (230°C, gas mark 8) depending on the oven. Pitas, which go directly on to an oven rack start at 575°F (about 300°C or as hot as the oven will go, gas mark 9.
Originally posted by Gee D:
Olive oil is marvellous in bread - good flavour and the crust is excellent in flavour, crustiness* and colour.
*Why, oh why, is bread on a menu and so forth always described as crusty when almost invariably it is not? An easy way to get steam into the oven and thus a good crust is to place a shallow pan of boiling water on a lower shelf just as you put the loaves in.
quote:I took a photograph of it on my mobile, but because I'm a complete technomoron I don't know how to get it from there to the computer - I don't think my charging-cable does anything except charge the batteries. Will look into it.
Originally posted by no prophet's flag is set so...:
Pictures please people!!
quote:I sometimes substitute atta as part of flour in flatbread recipes.
Originally posted by Gee D:
We can buy atta in supermarkets here, in the same sort of canisters as the 1 kg bread flour. Madame uses it in place of wholemeal flour in all sorts of recipes. Works well.
quote:Yes, we have this problem. Ordinary shops don't sell flour in decent quantities, rather than the standard 2kg bags.
Originally posted by no prophet's flag is set so...:
The problem with buying flour is that if it isn't white, unbleached or whole wheat flour, it is sold in very small quantities here, usually 2 kg or if lucky 5, and at rather high prices. The gluten-free flours are 4× the cost
I prefer 20 kg bags of flour (~44 lbs) which are about $12. I have a line on some organic Red Fife and Marquis (a variety of Red Fife) which should be really fun to try, and tasty.
quote:Holy crap ! I could *never* eat that much bread. I made two loaves and I am having to do radical things to finish them.
Originally posted by no prophet's flag is set so...:
The problem with buying flour is that if it isn't white, unbleached or whole wheat flour, it is sold in very small quantities here, usually 2 kg or if lucky 5, and at rather high prices. The gluten-free flours are 4× the cost
I prefer 20 kg bags of flour (~44 lbs) which are about $12. I have a line on some organic Red Fife and Marquis (a variety of Red Fife) which should be really fun to try, and tasty.
quote:I have started using sesame oil - it is amazingly smooooth and has a beautiful aroma...
Originally posted by Gee D:
Olive oil is marvellous in bread - good flavour and the crust is excellent in flavour, crustiness* and colour.
quote:Is chapati flour strong or weak? Can you make bread that will rise properly with it?
Originally posted by Pomona:
Enoch, you should be able to find big bags of atta (chapati) flour in most UK supermarkets, in the world food aisle with the Indian food.
quote:It was bread Jim, but not as we know it... Much of medieval England, for example, subsisted on spelt bread, which seems to have been the consistency of set porridge. Not all bread was leavened, and when it was, yeast was not the only raising agent.
Originally posted by Enoch:
If so, what did people make bread with back when all flour was local?
quote:Spelt is a wheat relative. I've made bread with it. Not enough taste difference to warrant the expense I felt.
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:It was bread Jim, but not as we know it... Much of medieval England, for example, subsisted on spelt bread, which seems to have been the consistency of set porridge. Not all bread was leavened, and when it was, yeast was not the only raising agent.
Originally posted by Enoch:
If so, what did people make bread with back when all flour was local?
quote:In Tudor times the bakhous was often placed next to the brewhus for this very reason.
Originally posted by Enoch:
It may well be possible to use beer yeast. It's certainly possible to make beer using the sludge in the bottom of a bottle conditioned beer.
quote:I used to make a coffee and date loaf which was good. I used coffee but from memory, it did not make bread very dark or flavourful. I also added some of the coffee essence available down here in a bottle. This may need a bit of experimenting for flavour and colour. Old fashioned stuff which my parents drank many, many years ago before they discovered good coffee. Coffee with chicory.
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
What happens if you make coffee, and use that instead of the water in the recipe ? Will it flavour the bread effectively ?
quote:This may sound like a daft question, but beer being beer, does that negate the need for yeast?
Originally posted by Gee D:
... an interesting variation is to substitute beer for any water in the dough ...
quote:Piglet how can 8 oz of butter, which is a measure of weight, be 1 cup, which is a measure of volume, or is that just a happy accident. Presumably 8 oz of anything else will come out as a different fraction of cups?
Originally posted by Piglet:
... However, a cup is a standard measure: a cup of butter, for instance is 8 oz. (or half a packet). ...
quote:A cup is half a pint, or 8 fluid ounces. Note that a fluid ounce is a measure of volume, not weight. A fluid ounce of water should weigh about one ounce.
Originally posted by Enoch:
Piglet how can 8 oz of butter, which is a measure of weight, be 1 cup, which is a measure of volume, or is that just a happy accident.
code:an egg
half an egg shell of water
enough flour
butter the size of a filbert
...
quote:If your machine comes from the far east, its literature is probably targetted to US measures. Hence th cup.
Originally posted by Enoch:
quote:Piglet how can 8 oz of butter, which is a measure of weight, be 1 cup, which is a measure of volume, or is that just a happy accident. Presumably 8 oz of anything else will come out as a different fraction of cups?
Originally posted by Piglet:
... However, a cup is a standard measure: a cup of butter, for instance is 8 oz. (or half a packet). ...
I don't know whether this cup is a standard cup or the manufacturer's, or the manufacturer's dear old mum's, pet cup. I think the bread machine may have come from somewhere in the far east. If it is a standard cup, what volume actually would it be in fractions of a pint or mills? The conversion site you've linked to doesn't include a simple conversion table.
quote:Good pictures. Thanks for posting. The first one has a silky look to it from the outside.
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
Bread Porn !
quote:Then you need to watch out for Aussie tablespoons which hold 20 ml, not 15ml like others.
Teaspoons, tablespoons and so forth are alright,
quote:And an American pint is 16 fluid ounces, which is why there are 2 cups to the pint. (Assuming we are using the same type of ounces...)
Originally posted by John Holding:
... A UK pint is 20 fluid ounces...
John
quote:The 2 ounce difference in a cup is 25% -- hardly "relatively the same size." It's that 2 oz per cup difference that leads to the 4 oz difference in the pint, the 8 oz difference (one cup) in the quart and leads to 5ish Imperial gallons equallying 6ish US gallons.
Originally posted by Carex:
quote:And an American pint is 16 fluid ounces, which is why there are 2 cups to the pint. (Assuming we are using the same type of ounces...)
Originally posted by John Holding:
... A UK pint is 20 fluid ounces...
John
It is good to know that the cups are relatively the same size in the US as in the Empire, however, even if the pints, quarts and gallons aren't.
Another useful conversion: 1/3 cup = 5 tablespoons + 1 teaspoon (unless, apparently, you are Australian.)
quote:That's a serving spoon in our Canadian kitchen.
Originally posted by Lothlorien:
quote:Then you need to watch out for Aussie tablespoons which hold 20 ml, not 15ml like others.
Teaspoons, tablespoons and so forth are alright,
quote:No - I just never go on camping trips.
Originally posted by no prophet's flag is set so...:
... I suspect none of you weighing bakers take scales on camping trips.
quote:One word:
Probably this is a foolish question, but I suspect none of you weighing bakers take scales on camping trips.
quote:I didn't realise maida was the equivalent of plain flour, that's handy to know. It should help! You can definitely get big bags of maida in UK supermarkets in reasonably diverse areas - I think my local area may not be diverse enough but there are plenty of online sellers like Spices of India.
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
That bush bread recipe looks fabulous!
If atta is low in gluten it explains why I had problems when I tried it some years ago - if I use half atta and half maida - the equivalent of plain flour here - do you think I will get a better result?
quote:It was a dessert spoon, hence the full ones and the quarter ones, of both a particular yeast he uses and then of sugar. He did the salt in rather generous pinches.
Originally posted by Piglet:
That bloke clearly doesn't give a stuff about cup sizes, lbs or kgs.![]()
I didn't have the sound on - I'm at w*rk - what on earth were the ingredients that he put what looked like eight tablespoons of into the mix?
![]()
quote:As far as I know a kneading trough is something that holds dough in as it rises, to give it a shape before baking it. If they were going to make bread in the future, it makes sense to take one along, except if you're in a hurry, so maybe it is a mistranslation. Most people who aren't using loaf pans these days, use a bread shaping basket (bread basket), which you line with a towel covered in flour. Let the dough rise, transfer gently to a baking stone, and bake.
Originally posted by Enoch:
Since there seem to be some quite knowledgeable people on this thread, can anyone answer the following?
When the people leave Egypt at the Exodus, they take with them, Ex 12:34, their kneading-troughs. The Hebrew, apparently is mishereth. Does anyone know whether kneading-troughs were a piece of basic domestic equipment from late Bronze/early Iron Age Egypt or an attempt to translate what mishereth was thought to mean into something familiar to people in C17 England?
quote:I like hardwood and bamboo boards. The bamboo are less porous, but don't seem to last as long. Plastic hold more bacteria, but are easier to sanitise.
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
Any views on bread boards and breadknives ? I am looking to replace mine as I think the board is harbouring more bacteria than a small sea.
quote:I have proved dough on a rack over the laundry tub half-filled with
Originally posted by Piglet:
quote:That was what put us off doing our own for a while, but you can put it in the oven with just the oven-light on, or if you've got an airing-cupboard that would probably work.
Originally posted by Firenze:
... the lack (in winter) of a reliably warm place for proving ...
quote:Seconded. There are some excellent recipes in that book. It's worth working through it as breads you don't recognise are good too.
Originally posted by Ferijen:
Beethoven - i'd recommend the Paul Hollywood baking bread book for a Christmas present. Just to 'encourage' her, you know!