The Fresh Loaf

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Troubleshooting swirl breads

Loafer's picture
Loafer

Troubleshooting swirl breads

So, I think that my droopy swirls are from failing to pinch my seams, and from not having enough tension on the dough surface when I proof it.  Is that right?  If not, what caused it? This was a really slack dough and got so soft I couldn't get the tension on it when I shaped my loaf.

 

-Loafer

droopy cranberry cinnamon swirl

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

If this happens often, try taking a wet toothpick to your shaped loaf half way through the final rise.  Dock or poke it many times so large pockets of trapped air can escape before baking. 

Mini

Big Brick House Bakery's picture
Big Brick House...

I make a honey oatmeal Cin Swirl, I found that if the internal temp doesn't hit 190, if falls.  I also found that if I over proofed it I got the same result.  I don't know what your temp should be, but you might try it.

 

Good Luck

clazar123's picture
clazar123

I have tried making cinnamon swirl bread and had similar problems. When I posted on it, I was advised to wet the rectangle of dough with either water or egg white before sprinkling the cinnamon over it. ALso, try to roll firmly and evenly.It did seem to work on my next loaf but I want to see if it consistently works.

pmccool's picture
pmccool

but it has given me consistently good results.  It's a recipe for making the cinnamon-swirl filling for a single loaf of bread (sized for a 9x5 inch pan) from the King Arthur Flour Whole Grain Baking book.

Ingredients

1 large egg white

2/3 cup (5 ounces) packed light brown sugar

2 tablespoons (5/8 ounce) unbleached AP flour

1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Mix all ingredients.  Spread over bread dough rolled out to an 8x24 inch rectangle.  Roll dough from the short end, tucking in edges as you go.  Seal the seam.  Place dough in a greased pan, let rise, and bake according to your bread's directions.

From what I see, the egg white and flour help bind the mixture to the dough, preventing separation between the layers, plus the filling develops an almost "cakey" texture of its own, rather than running all over during baking.  Note that there is no fat, either, which could cause the layers to delaminate.

It's been my favorite since finding it.

Paul

Paddyscake's picture
Paddyscake

Paul ?

Thanks, Betty

pmccool's picture
pmccool

Depends on the bread, Betty.  This is just a filling.  So, whatever recipe/formula you are using for the bread itself should give you the baking time and temperature.

Does that help?

Paul