Do you really knead, uh, need bread? Here are some useful hints to get the most from your bread machine.
October 15, 2014
Do you really knead, uh, need bread? Here are some useful hints to get the most from your bread machine.
If you believe that bread is the staff of life, then your bread machine will be the cornerstone of your kitchen appliances.
Bread maker recipes abound on the Internet—everything from cheese and onion loaves to gooey cinnamon buns to calzones. But to make sure your loaf of choice is fresh, chewy and perfect, heed these steps.
This is the only way you can tell if the combination of ingredients you have chosen are working.
Before you rise to more elaborate recipes, it’s best to start with a simple grocery-store bread mix or a foolproof recipe like the ones for pizza dough.
The yeast that works best in bread machines, as far as timing and how it is mixed with other ingredients, is called rapid-rise yeast or “bread machine yeast.”
Sometimes you’ll want to use your machine to make dough but finish the baking in your regular oven.
Since yeast likes to grow in a warm environment, all ingredients should be room temperature when you add them (including the yeast).
You can use your microwave to gently warm milk from the refrigerator.
Different machines offer different loaf sizes, ranging from one- to three-pound loaves. A 1.5- to two-pound loaf is sufficient for most people.
At first follow the ingredient list of recipes as closely as possible for the greatest chance of success. One-to-one substitutions don’t always work.
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