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how much dough (Read 4737 times)
 
Nov 29th, 2010 at 6:59pm

69conroy   Offline
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hi
  i have 9inch x4inch round bread tin
is there any easy way to work out how much
dough i need to make loaf / or is it a matter of
trial & error  Huh Huh Huh
same size as round JIs
thanks
Daryl
 
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Reply #1 - Nov 30th, 2010 at 4:55am

Cactus   Offline
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Daryl
I would use 4 cups and see what happens, that's part of the fun, bread and dampers are very cheap to make, practice makes perfect.
Muzz
 

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Reply #2 - Nov 30th, 2010 at 6:18am

Carolyn™   Offline
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I would use 3-5 cups flour.  Most of the ones I have in the Healthy Bread In Five Minutes a Day I have been playing with make a batch using around 7 cups of flour which is supposed to make 3-4 loaves but these are a bit small IMHO.

This recipe comes from Joanne at camp-cook.  The shaping is for a round loaf but there would be no reason you couldnt put it in your tin.  

Quote:
This recipe assumes that you are cooking in your oven, so it says to remove the lid and let the bread brown. Of course you can't do that when cooking outdoors, so just watch the bread then remove it when it's done. You'll still get a nice crust.

Make up the dough before you go to bed, and the next morning you'll be ready to bake some fresh bread.



No Knead Bread

3 cups bread flour
1/4 teaspoon instant yeast
1 teaspoon table salt
1 1/2 cups warm water

1. Mix dough: The night before, combine all ingredients in a big bowl with a wooden spoon until the dough just comes together. It will be a shaggy, doughy mess. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit 12-20 hours on countertop. Dough is ready when its surface is dotted with bubbles.

2. Shape & preheat: The dough will now be wet, sticky and bubbly. With a wet spatula, dump the dough on a floured surface. Fold ends of dough over a few times with the spatula and nudge it into a ball shape. You can use your hands if you like, just keep your hands wet so that the dough does not stick. Generously dust a cotton towel (not terrycloth) with flour. Set dough seam side down on top of towel. Fold towel over the dough. Let it nap for 2 hours. When you've got about a half hour left, slip your covered pot into the oven and preheat to 450º F.

3. Bake: Your dough should have doubled in size. Remove pot from oven. Holding towel, dump wobbly dough into pot. Doesn't matter which way it lands. Shake to even dough out. Cover. Bake 30 minutes. Uncover, bake another 15-20 minutes or until the crust is beautifully golden and middle of loaf is 210º F. Remove and let cool on wired rack. If not eating right away, you can re-crisp crust in 350º F oven for 10 minutes.

Yield: one 1½ lb loaf



Here is another set of ingredients:

Quote:
Cooks Illustrated Almost No Knead Bread
Use a mild-flavored lager, such as Budweiser (mild non-alcoholic lager also works). The bread is best eaten the day it is baked but can be wrapped in aluminum foil and stored in a cool, dry place for up to 2 days.

INGREDIENTS

3 cups unbleached all-purpose flour (15 ounces), plus additional for dusting work surface
1/4 teaspoon instant or rapid-rise yeast
1 1/2 teaspoons table salt
3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons water (7 ounces), at room temperature
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons mild-flavored lager (3 ounces)
1 tablespoon white vinegar



Procedure

1. Whisk flour, yeast, and salt in large bowl. Add water, beer, and vinegar. Using rubber spatula, fold mixture, scraping up dry flour from bottom of bowl until shaggy ball forms. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature for 8 to 18 hours.

2. Lay 12- by 18-inch sheet of parchment paper inside 10-inch skillet and spray with nonstick cooking spray. Transfer dough to lightly floured work surface and knead 10 to 15 times. Shape dough into ball by pulling edges into middle. Transfer dough to y, seam-side down, to parchment-lined skillet and spray surface of dough with nonstick cooking spray. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and let rise at room temperature until dough has doubled in size and does not readily spring back when poked with finger, about 2 hours.


3. About 30 minutes before baking, adjust oven rack to lowest position, place 6- to 8-quart heavy-bottomed Dutch oven (with lid) on rack, and heat oven to 500 degrees. Lightly flour top of dough and, using razor blade or sharp knife, make one 6-inch-long, 1/2-inch-deep slit along top of dough. Carefully remove pot from oven and remove lid. Pick up dough by lifting parchment overhang and lower into pot (let any excess parchment hang over pot edge). Cover pot and place in oven. Reduce oven temperature to 425 degrees and bake covered for 30 minutes. Remove lid and continue to bake until loaf is deep brown and instant-read thermometer inserted into center registers 210 degrees, 20 to 30 minutes longer. Carefully remove bread from pot; transfer to wire rack and cool to room temperature, about 2 hours.



This one used 4 3/4 cups of flour.  The recipe is under the drop down arrows.


 

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Reply #3 - Nov 30th, 2010 at 11:49am

69conroy   Offline
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THANKS
           will give me a good base to start from  Smiley

Daryl
 
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Reply #4 - Dec 4th, 2010 at 3:22pm

Carolyn™   Offline
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About two years ago I was sent some dried sour dough starter and an instruction book, I have procrastinated a long time before giving it a try.  I have now started two sour dough starters.  One from here http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/233/wild-yeast-sourdough-starter and the dried one from Tassie.

I made a loaf after l week today using 1/2 cup starter, 4 cups flour, 2 cups water, 2 tablespoons malt powder and 2 teaspoons salt in the usual no knead way.

The dough seemed to rise fine but I sat it on flour sprinkled on a peel (I mostly use baking paper or corn meal or straight into the camp oven) and it stuck.  Cool   I scraped it up and plopped it onto a heated stone.  I have never had such an open loaf before although many seem to get this result.

I used about a cup of it and made myself two gozleme for lunch and all went well with that, I didnt bother photographing them.

The rest of the dough I divided into six and then three and rolled them in parmesan and grated tasty cheese.  Shape wise they are better and we will have them for dinner.

The great containers I paid $1 for at the local op shop and they are just right for my starters.  I will in a few days make something with my "wild starter" and see if that works.

http://s513.photobucket.com/albums/t331/VIRTUALCOG/DECEMBER/?albumview=slideshow
 

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Reply #5 - Dec 4th, 2010 at 7:10pm

Saltbush Bill   Offline
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Thanks for that link Carolyn.......I just managed to waste about an hour looking at bread recipes when I should be doing other things Grin...some very interesting stuff in there.
SBB
 
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