JAPANESE MILK BREAD OR ROLLS WITH SOURDOUGH
I love the Tangzhong or water roux method for bread. It produces the softest bread or rolls with excellent flavor. I've added sourdough to this, but a poolish would work well, too. Just use 1/2 cup water and 1 scant cup of flour and add 1/8 teaspoon of yeast. In a few hours at room temperature, covered, you'll have a flavorful base for the bread to go along with the water roux. The poolish will rise and be bubbly with a nice aroma.
Provided by Red_Apple_Guy
Categories Yeast Breads
Time 20h15m
Yield 1 medium loaf, 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Refresh your sourdough starter with a cup of flour and 1/2 cup of water to make a thick starter and let double in volume.
- To make roux, mix flour and water and heat slowly until it begins to thicken and trails can be seen as it's stirred. Take off heat and continue to stir for about a minute.
- Drop the cold butter pats onto the roux to keep the roux from forming a film.
- When the roux is lukewarm, mix it with the sourdough starter and the rest of the ingredients in a mixer. Cover and let sit for 10 minutes.
- Knead well, for about 8 to 10 minutes and tip out onto a floured counter.
- Stretch the dough into a rectangle and fold letter-style, top to bottom and side to side. Place in an oiled, clear straight sided container and cover. after 15 minutes, stretch and fold again. Put back into container.
- Let rise until doubled in volume from the original volume.
- Preheat oven to 350°F.
- After the rise, shape a loaf and place in an 8 inch by 4.5 inch pan that's well oiled. Cover with oiled plastic wrap and let rise until 1 inch above the walls of the pan. Brush the loaves lightly with an egg, beaten with 1 teaspoon of water and bake for 30 minutes, turning after 15 minutes for even baking.
- If making rolls, divide risen dough into 12 pieces (56 to 57g each). Shape as desired and place on parchment paper, cover and let rise until puffed and about 50% larger in size. A piece of dough in a straight sided juice glass to judge when the dough is 1.5 times its original volume.
- Brush the loaves lightly with an egg, beaten with 1 teaspoon of water and bake in 350F oven for 6 minutes, turn and bake for 7 minutes until browned and 200F internally.
- Cool on rack before serving.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 157.2, Fat 2.7, SaturatedFat 1.4, Cholesterol 18.3, Sodium 154.6, Carbohydrate 28.6, Fiber 1, Sugar 4.5, Protein 4.2
JAPANESE TANGZHONG MILK BREAD (WATER ROUX)
Really soft, fluffy bread that stays soft for days. This bread is amazing! Recipe is adapted from Yvonne Chen's "The 65 degree Bread Doctor". This recipe is best made in a mixer or bread machine because the dough is quite soft and sticky.
Provided by Donna M.
Categories Yeast Breads
Time 3h30m
Yield 1 loaf, 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Make tangzhong (water roux) by wisking together the 25 g flour with the 125 ml of water in a small saucepan.
- Heat mixture over medium-low heat while stirring constantly until it thickens enough that your stirring leaves 'lines' or 'trails' on the surface, and then remove from heat immediately and scrape into a small bowl.
- Cover bowl with plastic wrap to prevent it from drying on the surface and cool to room temperature.
- Put milk, egg and cooled tangzhong in mixer bowl or bread machine pan.
- Add remaining ingredients except butter and turn on machine to begin mixing.
- Mix until ingredients just come together and then add butter.
- Knead until dough is smooth and elastic and will form a windowpane when stretched.
- Proof dough, covered, until it doubles.
- Deflate dough and divide into 4 equal portions, trying to make them as equal as possible (weighing is the best way).
- Cover and rest 15 minutes.
- Roll out each portion into an oval shape.
- Fold each side of the oval to the middle and roll again to flatten the seam.
- By hand, roll up each portion of folded dough starting at the unfolded end, so it resembles a swiss roll.
- Place all four rolls into a greased 9" x 5" bread pan with the ends of the rolls facing the long sides of the pan.
- Cover and proof until doubled.
- At this point you can apply an egg-wash by beating an egg and lightly brushing it over the top of the dough (optional).
- Bake in preheated 350 degree F oven for about 30 minutes, until a deep golden brown.
- Remove from pan and cool on wire rack.
- If you didn't use an egg wash, you can brush tops of hot bread with melted butter if desired.
- NOTE: for those of you who do not have a scale, the measured ingredients would be: tangzhong=2 Tbsp + 2 tsp flour, 1/2 c water, Recipe=2 1/2 c bread flour, 2 tsp instant yeast, 4 T sugar, 1 tsp salt, 4 tsp milk powder, 1 egg, 1/2 c milk, 3 T butter.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 194.7, Fat 3.4, SaturatedFat 1.8, Cholesterol 22.8, Sodium 193.7, Carbohydrate 35.3, Fiber 1.2, Sugar 4.9, Protein 5.3
JAPANESE MILK BREAD (SHOKUPAN)
This pillowy soft, subtly sweet sandwich bread is a beloved breakfast staple in Japan and is typically eaten sliced very thick, lightly toasted, and served with accompaniments like butter and jam.
Provided by Martha Stewart
Categories Food & Cooking Breakfast & Brunch Recipes Bread Recipes
Time 4h
Yield Makes two 9-by-5-inch loaves
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Starter:Whisk together milk, 1/2 cup water, and flour in a small saucepan until smooth. Cook over medium-low heat, whisking frequently, until thickened slightly but still pourable (it should have the consistency of loose pudding), 3 to 4 minutes. Transfer to a small bowl; let cool until warm to the touch but no longer hot, about 10 minutes.
- Dough: In a large bowl, whisk together flour, milk powder, sugar, salt, and yeast. Make a well in center of mixture. Add milk, melted butter, and starter to well; stir until a dough forms. Transfer to a lightly floured work surface and knead until dough is smooth and elastic and springs back when lightly pressed, 8 to 10 minutes. Transfer to a bowl brushed with butter; brush top of dough with more butter. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let rise until doubled in volume, 45 minutes to 1 hour.
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Brush two standard 9-by-5-inch loaf pans with butter. Punch down dough. Transfer to a clean work surface and divide in half. Roll each half into an approximately 9-inch log; transfer to prepared pans. Loosely cover with plastic wrap and let rise until more than doubled in volume (doughs should rise about 1 1/2 inches above tops of pans), 45 minutes to 1 hour.
- Whisk egg white with 1 teaspoon water and gently brush onto tops of dough. Bake until puffed, golden brown, and a thermometer inserted in centers registers 200 degrees, 35 to 40 minutes. Let cool in pans on a wire rack 15 minutes. Flip loaves out onto rack; let cool completely before slicing and serving, or store, unsliced and wrapped in parchment-lined foil at room temperature up to 3 days, or sliced and frozen up to 3 months.
CHEF JOHN'S MILK BREAD
Japanese-style milk bread is easy to make and stays moist and fresh longer than your typical loaf of homemade bread thanks to a starter or "roux." It's light and soft with the perfect amount of sweetness. Try it with my Japanese Egg Salad Sandwich (Tamago Sando) or toast it and use it for a tuna salad sandwich.
Provided by Chef John
Time 4h20m
Yield 10
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Whisk bread flour, water, and milk for starter together in a small saucepan until very smooth. Place over medium-low heat and cook, stirring often, until very thick and just about to bubble. If you want to check, it should be at least 150 degrees F (65 degrees C). Pull off the heat and transfer into a measuring cup; you will need exactly 1/2 cup. Let cool to room temperature, about 30 minutes.
- Prepare dough: Combine bread flour, cooled starter, salt, sugar, yeast, warm milk, and egg in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook attachment. Beat on low speed until dough begins to form a ball and pull away from the sides of the bowl, scraping down the sides as needed, about 5 minutes.
- Stop the mixer and scrape dough off the hook and into the bowl. Add butter and knead on low speed until dough is slightly tacky but very smooth and elastic, scraping down the sides as needed, 10 to 12 more minutes.
- Remove dough from the bowl and shape into a smooth ball. Transfer into a lightly buttered bowl, cover, and let rise in a warm spot until doubled in size, about 1 to 1 1/2 hours.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Very generously butter a 9x5-inch loaf pan.
- Transfer dough to a work surface (you don't need flour.) Press and knead out all the air and shape into a 9-inch wide rectangle. Starting at one 9-inch side, roll dough lengthwise into a log. Transfer log into the prepared loaf pan with the seam down. Press on dough a bit to be sure it's evenly distributed. Cover the pan and let dough rise until it comes to just about the top of the pan, 35 to 45 minutes.
- Brush the top of the loaf with just enough milk to lightly coat the surface.
- Bake in the center of the preheated oven until the top is golden brown and the load is beautifully puffed up, about 35 minutes. Remove from the oven and let rest in the pan for 10 minutes. Very carefully remove bread and place on a wire rack to cool all the way to room temperature before slicing, about 1 hour.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 201.4 calories, Carbohydrate 30.2 g, Cholesterol 33 mg, Fat 6.4 g, Fiber 0.9 g, Protein 5.6 g, SaturatedFat 3.6 g, Sodium 257.6 mg, Sugar 6.1 g
JAPANESE MILK BREAD
When panko, Japanese bread crumbs, first appeared here, American cooks leaped to embrace their spiky crunch. (The first article about it in the New York Times appeared in 1998.) But how could breadcrumbs arrive from Japan, a land without bread? The answer is here, in the lofty, feathery white bread that is a staple at bakeries in Asia - and in Asian bakery chains like Fay Da and Paris Baguette. (Panko is often made from the heels of the loaf, called the "ears" in Japanese.) Milk bread was developed in Japan in the 20th century, using tangzhong, a warm flour-and-water paste traditionally used in China to make buns with a soft, springy texture and tiny air bubbles. Surprisingly, milk bread with an incomparable crumb and buttery taste is a snap to make at home, using supermarket ingredients. Once the tanzhong is cooked and cooled - a matter of 10 minutes at the stove - you have an easy and immensely rewarding dough. It can be shaped into coils or round rolls, like pull-aparts, instead of loaves, or you can paint it with cinnamon sugar or dulce de leche or strawberry jam when you roll it out.
Provided by Julia Moskin
Categories project, appetizer, side dish
Time 1h30m
Yield 1 loaf
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Make the starter: In a small heavy pot, whisk flour, milk and 1/2 cup water (120 milliliters) together until smooth. Bring to a simmer over medium-low heat and cook, stirring often, until thickened but still pourable, about 10 minutes (it will thicken more as it cools). When it's ready, the spoon will leave tracks on the bottom of the pot. Scrape into a measuring cup and lightly cover the surface with plastic wrap. Set aside to cool to room temperature. (You will have about 1 cup starter; see note below.)
- Make the dough: In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook, combine the flour, sugar, yeast and salt and mix for a few seconds, just until evenly combined.
- Add egg, milk and 1/2 cup starter. Turn the mixer on low speed and knead 5 minutes.
- Add soft butter and knead another 10 to 12 minutes (it will take a few minutes for butter to be incorporated), until the dough is smooth and springy and just a bit tacky.
- Lightly butter the inside of a bowl. Use your hands to lift dough out of mixer bowl, shape into a ball and place in prepared bowl. Cover with a kitchen towel and let rise in a warm place until doubled in size, 40 to 60 minutes.
- Punch the dough down and use your hands to scoop it out onto a surface. Using a bench scraper or a large knife, cut dough in half. Lightly form each half into a ball, cover again and let rise 15 minutes.
- Heat the oven to 350 degrees. In the meantime, generously butter a 9-by-5-inch loaf pan.
- Using a rolling pin, gently roll out one dough ball into a thick oval. (By this time, the dough should be moist and no longer sticky. You probably will not need to flour the surface, but you may want to flour the pin.) First roll away from your body, then pull in, until the oval is about 12 inches long and 6 inches across.
- Fold the top 3 inches of the oval down, then fold the bottom 3 inches of the oval up, making a rough square. Starting from the right edge of the square, roll up the dough into a fat log, pick it up and smooth the top with your hands. Place the log in the buttered pan, seam side down and crosswise, nestling it near one end of the pan. Repeat with the other dough ball, placing it near the other end of the pan.
- Cover and let rest 30 to 40 minutes more, until the risen dough is peeking over the edge of the pan and the dough logs are meeting in the center. Brush the tops with milk and bake on the bottom shelf of the oven until golden brown and puffed, 35 to 40 minutes.
- Let cool in the pan 10 minutes, then remove to a wire rack and let cool at least 1 hour, to let the crust soften and keep the crumb lofty. (If cut too soon, the air bubbles trapped in the bread will deflate.)
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 279, UnsaturatedFat 3 grams, Carbohydrate 43 grams, Fat 8 grams, Fiber 1 gram, Protein 8 grams, SaturatedFat 5 grams, Sodium 217 milligrams, Sugar 9 grams, TransFat 0 grams
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- Weigh your flour; or measure it by gently spooning it into a cup, then sweeping off any excess. , To make the tangzhong: Combine all of the ingredients in a small saucepan, and whisk until no lumps remain.
- Place the saucepan over low heat, and cook the mixture, whisking constantly, until thick and the whisk leaves lines on the bottom of the pan, about 3 to 5 minutes., Transfer the tangzhong to a small mixing bowl or measuring cup and let it cool to room temperature., To make the dough: Combine the tangzhong with the remaining dough ingredients, then mix and knead — by hand, mixer, or bread machine — until a smooth, elastic dough forms.
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