My chicken pie recipe!! esp. for Azalia !!
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- chahira daoud's Blog
http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/3149/soft-white-ish-sandwich-bread
I tried this recipe for our bread during the week and had a hard time with it crubling later on. After eating a sandwich I would have a lap covered in crumbs! The taste is alright, and the texture stayed pretty soft (minus the crumbs!) so it's something I would like to continue to try.
I used this link for my cinnamon rolls this past weekend and wanted to comment on what I experienced.
http://www.thefreshloaf.com/recipes/cinnamonrolls
Everything turned out very well except the filling was so much like a liquid that it wouldn't stay put while rolling up, so most of that ended up on the counter top. I think my problem was that the butter was too soft and warm after mixing in the sugar and the cinnamon. Next time I will try to keep it firmer.
I have been considering buying a flour mill does anybody have any suggestions on which on is the best to buy for a home baker? I don't have too much money to spend.
It's been quite a long time since I've actively participated on this forum, but I have the flu this week and am cooped up inside with plenty of time to bake and web surf, so thought I'd provide an update on how I think I've improved on some of my old sourdough techniques, as well as show some fun results with brioche.
French Fold on Sourdough
I made cinnamon rolls for the second time today. I used the recipe from SusanFNP's "Wild Yeast" blog, a wonderful site for bakers. The recipe is adapted from Michael Suas, with whom Susan has taken classes at the San Francisco Baking Institute, I believe. The link to Susan's recipe is:
http://www.wildyeastblog.com/2008/10/13/cinnamon-sticky-buns/
I haven't blogged about this bread for a while. We have lots of new members, and they should be aware of this wonderful bread. The recipe is in Jeffrey Hamelman's "Bread." Like Poilâne's Miche, it is an attempt to replicate the bread of the common folk in the 17th and 18th century in France and Quebec. A "Miche" is a very large boule. This recipe makes 3.6 lbs of dough.
This is my first attempt at Howard's formula for Petiti Pain/Check out holds99's Blog for Bernard Clayton's S.S France Petite Pain - Revisited and Revised ....Thank you so much Howard for posting the recipe and especially for adding a poolish to it!! These are just out of the oven and hot! Sorry no crumb post! They smell deliteful. I placed these on parchment and put them on a preheated stone under a cover and steamed. I overproofed them a little to much....they deflated a little when I sliced them! I know you warned me...Howard! We will enjoy
This is another recipe from Beth Hensperger...This bread is intoxicating! I love it and I can't believe how wonderful light and airy it is with a crisp to the thin crust...I baked it under cover for 30 min. steamed it about 5 seconds, uncovered and baked another 20 min...registered 200 done!
We had invited friends for brunch the weekend after New Year's day and I had already decided to make zolablue's cinnamon rolls. It seemed, though, that something else would be good to have with the quiches that my wife was making; something not quite so sweet as the cinnamon rolls (which were fabulous, by the way). It occurred to me that a croissant's buttery, flaky lightness would be a perfect accompaniment for the richness of the quiche. There was one minor problem: I'd never made a croissant in my life.