Brioche or pandoro? Something with a cake like honeycomb crumb
Hi fellow bakers,
I remember as a child (35 years ago or so) eating brioche from a Normandy village baker - charmingly a watermill where the bread happened to be baked in a wood fired oven and no fuss was made of it, before this became trendy...
They produced a brioche that was yellow and very buttery with a honeycomb crumb much more like a Madeira or pound cake than a tearable bread.
During the pandemic I was reading here and produced a brioche that was close but can't locate the recipe anymore. The writer focused on the need to hand knead the butter to get a more honeycomb structure to the crumb. I wondered if a pandoro recipe might also achieve something similar. I want there to be an overall slight sweetness but heavier.. pandoro always seems so light and I'd rather have something indulgent easy to toast as well as just eat as is with more butter and delicious preserves.... :) Any ideas folks? Many thanks
The recipe is from the Serious Eats site. While you could knead it by hand it will be much easier if kneaded with a mixer.
Paul
Thanks Paul. The crumb in this recipe is still very breast rather than cakey... I'm looking for something with a much more dense honeycomb crumb structure with small dense bubbles rather than super airy, light and tearable. I remember when I made my original brioche that was going in the right direction that it was made with only eggs and butter no milk or orange juice or such. That seems to make a big difference as I recall...
There are lots of brioche recipes on TFL, so this is a stab in the dark for the one you can't locate.
https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/20067/brioche-question
BTW, these posts can be edited, if you want to get rid of that Freudian slip in your answer to Paul. :) :)
Let's hope they keep abreast of the situation! Hahaha!
Sorry, couldn't resist!
Like this one: The $600 Brioche Loaf. | The Fresh Loaf ?
It's a denser type of brioche like you describe.
Sound like La Fallue
Novelty : traditional norman brioche La Fallue
A recipe:
Fallue - The Traditional Norman Brioche