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diff --git a/02-16-mixing-and-dough-development.md b/02-16-mixing-and-dough-development.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c2bc96f --- /dev/null +++ b/02-16-mixing-and-dough-development.md @@ -0,0 +1,214 @@ +#### Mixing and Dough Development + +This is the part of baking that is intimidating to many new bakers, +and it doesn't need to be. Please take a few minutes to read this +section and begin to learn what the dough should feel like and how to +get it feeling like it is well developed. Many of us started baking by +using a bread machine or a Kitchen Aid stand mixer to mix and knead +the dough. While this works reasonably well, and other methods are +described below, you will learn more quickly how the dough should feel +in the different stages of development if you use the tools god gives +us, our hands. For thousands of years humans have made good bread +using only a crude bowl and their hands as tools. While commercial +bakeries don't have the time to hand mix and shape thousands of loaves +daily, much of what is wrong with commercial bread starts here in the +first phase of bread making. + +**Mixing:** Start by gathering all of the needed ingredients for the +recipe. If you are making a basic French style bread that uses +just the basic four ingredients (flour, water, salt and yeast), +measure or better, weigh each item carefully ahead of time and +have it in front of you ready to use. This might seem like over +simplifying this procedure but I can tell you from experience you +will forget the salt or pour all the water in without having +measured it or can't remember some additional ingredient, if you +don't get organized, first. + +In a large bowl, add all of the dry ingredients first and stir or mix +them together well. This means that Instant Dry Yeast and salt are +added to the flour and any other dry ingredients you may be using with +your recipe. + +If you are using Active Dry Yeast, the directions for re activating +this type of yeast call for adding the yeast to a cup or so of the +water (warmed) needed for the recipe 5 or 10 minutes ahead of mixing +the dough. If you are using Cake Yeast, crumble it with and into the +flour using your fingers. + +Continuing; Next, add all of the water and begin combining the flour +into the water. You can use your fingers, (yes it will be a mess but +it is supposed to be) or a spoon to accomplish this first mixing. +Wood, Stainless Steel, Plastic, any kind of spoon or bowl will do +fine. When the mixture is mostly a shaggy mass and looks like most of +the dry flour is combined into the mass, you can stop, clean your +hands over the bowl and cover the bowl with a plastic bag or a damp +towel or plastic wrap. Plastic grocery bags are my favorite. Wait at +least 15 minutes and as long as an hour for the flour to absorb the +water. When you come back to the mix, it won't feel anything like it +did after first mixing. Scrape everything you can onto a clean counter +and quickly clean and dry the mixing bowl. + +**Kneading or Developing:** This is the fun part of bread making. +You are starting with a mixture of flour, water, salt and yeast. +At the moment it is just those things put together in a bowl. We +need to develop these things into something more, a smooth dough. +The best way to show you or tell you how to accomplish this is +with a video. There are many video clips that show similar +techniques but this one I like the best. Richard Bertinet has +produced an excellent video with Gourmet Magazine that shows the +mixing technique above, and the slap and fold kneading technique +that many of us now use in some form or another. I urge you to +watch this video and learn to do this maneuver with the dough. As +you will see in the video, the dough gradually comes together and +becomes smooth and flexible. Bertinet is making a sweet dough +with eggs and sugar but the method works on any kind of dough or +bread type. Finish by rounding and putting tension on the outer +skin of the dough and forming a ball. + +Once the dough is well developed, smooth and rounded, lightly oil +the now clean mixing bowl with a few drops of oil on your fingers +(or lightly spray regular cooking oil into the bowl) and place +the dough into the bowl, seams down and roll the ball around to +coat all the surfaces. Cover the bowl as before during what is +called the Primary Ferment. During the primary ferment, the +dough will expand in volume as the yeast begins to eat the sugars +in the flour and create Carbon Dioxide. Your well developed dough +will trap those CO2 bubbles and form pockets that will become the +air pockets in the bread, making it lighter. + +NOTE: For Whole Grain and Multi-Grain breads, It is advisable to +not try and develop the dough entirely by kneading. The sharper +grains will cut the gluten strands and allow the CO2 gas to +escape. A Stretch and Fold will often work as well, done during +the primary ferment. A link to this procedure is provided below. + +You can always come back to using some appliance to mix and knead +your dough. In fact some doughs are somewhat better suited to +machine mixing, but not many. You can easily produce wonderful +bread in the manner of our ancestors. + +Once the dough has doubled in volume you are ready for the next +step, shaping. + +There are a number of ways to develop dough. The easiest is +probably to put it in a KitchenAid-type mixer. About 8 to 10 +minutes of mixing the ingredients in a KitchenAid on low speed +will generally do the trick. + +There's no need to buy a KitchenAid, though, to make good bread. +Here are three ways of developing dough by hand. + +**Traditional Kneading:** Use this method when the dough will rise +fairly quickly (1-2 hours for the first rise) or if I’m in a +hurry to get it developed. + +First, mix the ingredients with a spoon until everything is hydrated. +Cover and wait about 15 to 20 minutes – this way, you’ll let the water +do most of your work for you (if you don’t have time for this step, +feel free to skip it – you may have knead just a little more, +though). After this waiting period is done, scrape the dough +out of the bowl onto a smooth surface, and push on the down +and forward with the heels of your hands. Fold it up back on +itself, give the dough a quarter turn, and repeat. + +Knead for about 4-5 minutes, and then cover it. Let it rest about +5 minutes, and then knead once again for 1-2 minutes. It should +be well developed at this point. + +One way to test dough development is to tear off a small chunk +and then gently stretch it. If the dough is ready, you should be +able to stretch it thin enough so that it becomes translucent. +This is called the “windowpane” test. + +**Stretch and Fold:** This method adds about an hour to the rise of +an ordinary yeasted loaf, but when you’re working with sourdoughs +or yeasted breads that have a long rise anyway, it doesn’t make +that much difference. And it takes hardly active time at all – +just a few minutes total. Really! + +Mix the ingredients with a spoon until hydrated. Cover and wait +30 minutes to 1 hour. After this rest, scrape the dough out of +the bowl and stretch it to about twice its length, if possible. +For the first fold, the dough will still be pretty shaggy, so +only go as far as you can without ripping. Fold the dough like a +letter, give it a quarter turn, and then stretch and fold once +again. Place it back in the bowl and cover. + +Repeat this folding process twice more with 20-30 minutes in +between each one. + +More information and a video may be found here: +<http://www.sourdoughhome.com/stretchandfold.html> + +**Stretching and Folding Illustrated:** Here is the Stretch and Fold +method illustrated by Mebake (Khalid). He has artfully depicted +the process of keeping the dough in the bowl while developing the +gluten and incorporating air into the dough. This easy to do +technique is employed by many members here and allows the baker +the opportunity to develop the gluten in a bowl during +fermentation with little effort and no mess. Once you understand +how this works, I'm sure you will use it every time. + +**French fold:** This is a great, quick method for developing dough, +but it requires a relatively long rest after everything is +hydrated, so it's most appropriate for doughs with a long bulk +rise. + +Once everything is hydrated, cover and let the dough rest for a +least an hour. Remove the dough from the bowl onto a smooth +surface. With one hand on either side of the dough and your +thumbs underneath, stretch the dough parallel to your body while +simultaneously folding it in half along its length with your +thumbs. + +Give the dough a quarter turn, pick it up, and then throw it down +onto the surface, smooth side down. Really, smack it down. +Stretch it again while simultaneously folding it over with your +thumbs, make another quarter turn, and give it yet another smack +with the smooth side down. + +Do this about 10 times, and you’ll have a well developed dough. +If it doesn't seem as developed as you'd like or if it starts to +tear, let it rest for 5 minutes, and repeat. + +A good video of this technique may be found here: +<http://www.gourmet.com/magazine/video/2008/03/bertinet_sweetdough> + +**An alternative method:** that keeps the dough in the bowl and all of the +kneading is done there. + +I use my fingers and scrape the dough into a single lump and flatten +it and then fold it in half, turn it a quarter turn and fold again and +flatten it. I continue this for about twenty folds. Often it gets +very stiff and needs to rest for a few minutes to relax. As noted the +dough will let you know when you have done enough. This stretches the +original surface a million times the size it was at the start and +assures a complete blending of the ingredients. I use this method +because it confines the mess and permits making bread in less than +ideal places. See the illustration mentioned above for a pictorial +that describes this process. + +There is no wrong way to knead bread but some ways are much +better than others. Some breads benefit from special kneading +and handling and some are very hard to get wrong. Before +kitchens and mechanical mixers and tables there were dough +troughs and all of the mixing and kneading was done there. +You could make bread in a dough trough and bake it on a hot +flat stone on an open fire. + +**No knead bread:** For bread mixes that use very little leavening +and are fairly wet, time provides the development. Simply mix +everything up until hydrated, cover and go to sleep. Anywhere +from 12 to 18 hours later, give the dough one stretch and +fold, shape as necessary, and then let it rise a couple of +hours until it’s ready to bake. Learning to use a plastic +scraper to handle dough in the mixing bowl, as described +below, is a big help. + +**Alternative video:** If you are just a little adventurous, Check +out this excellent video +(<http://www.thebackhomebakery.com/Tutorials/NoKnead.html>), provided +by Mark Sinclair of The Back Home Bakery. Mark demonstrates folding +in the bowl using a plastic scraper over a period of time to develop +strength in the dough. This and all of Marks videos are excellent +training aids. |
