The Century Cook Book Part 66
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[Sidenote: Making bread.]
In mixing bread, we put the yeast into warm (not hot) water; this we mix with flour, thus supplying the moisture and nourishment required. We put this mixture in a warm place to force the growth of the plant. When the dough has become sufficiently inflated we put it into the oven and raise the heat to a degree which kills the plant and fixes the air cells, and our bread is done.
[Sidenote: Yeast.]
In cities, where fresh compressed yeast can be obtained, it is not worth while to prepare one's own. Where this cannot be had, the dry yeast-cakes often give satisfactory results, but are not as reliable as a liquid yeast, which in the country it is often necessary as well as desirable to make.
=d.i.c.k BENNET'S RECEIPT FOR YEAST=
Peel nine good-sized potatoes, and boil them with a large handful of loose hops tied in a thin muslin bag. Use enough water to cover them well. When the potatoes are tender strain off the water. Mash the potatoes, return them to the water in which they were boiled, and mix them well together. Add two tablespoonfuls of flour, one half cupful of granulated sugar, and one tablespoonful of salt. Cook it for a few minutes, adding sufficient flour to make a thin batter. Set it aside until lukewarm; then add a yeast-cake, or a cupful of liquid yeast. Mix it well and place in a stone jar. Let it stand for twelve hours in a warm place. Stir it three times during this period. Place a weight on the lid of the jar, and set it in a cool place.
=YEAST RECEIPT No. 2=
6 grated raw potatoes.
1 cupful of brown sugar.
1/2 cupful of salt.
2 quarts of flour.
Mix these together, and add enough water to make a batter as thick as that used for griddle cakes.
Pour two quarts of boiling water on as many hops as one can hold in the hand. Let them boil for five minutes. Strain off the water, and while hot add it to the batter. When it is lukewarm add a cupful of yeast, or a yeast cake. Let it stand several hours in a warm place until it rises, or the top is covered with bubbles. Then place in gla.s.s preserve jars, and keep in a cool place. Use a granite-ware saucepan and a wooden spoon when making yeast, in order to keep a good color.
=WHAT TO DO WHEN YEAST IS NOT OBTAINABLE TO START THE FERMENTATION IN MAKING YEAST=
Mix a thin batter of flour and water, and let it stand in a warm place until it is full of bubbles. This ferment has only half the strength of yeast, so double the amount must be used.
=PROPORTIONS OF RAISING MATERIALS TO USE, AND OTHER ITEMS=
One cake of compressed yeast is equal to one cupful of liquid yeast.
Baking-powder is a mixture of soda, cream of tartar, and cornstarch, or rice flour.
Use one level teaspoonful of baking-powder to each cupful of flour.
Use one even teaspoonful of soda and two full teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar to a quart of flour.
When sour milk is used, take one even teaspoonful of soda to a pint of milk, and omit the cream of tartar.
When mola.s.ses is used, omit the cream of tartar, and use one teaspoonful of soda to each cupful of mola.s.ses.
Mix powders with the flour, and sift them together, so as to thoroughly mix them.
Mix dry materials in one bowl and liquids in another; combine them quickly, and put at once into the oven.
The oven for baking bread should be hot enough to brown a teaspoonful of flour in five minutes. For biscuits it should brown in one minute.
Rolls brushed with milk just before baking will have a brown crust.
Rubbing the crust with b.u.t.ter just before it is taken from the oven will make it crisp.
=GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING BREAD=
[Sidenote: Time required for making bread.]
Bread is often mixed the night before it is to be baked, and left to rise from eight to ten hours; but the whole process of bread-making, from the mixing to the serving, can be done in two and a half hours if sufficient yeast is used. In hot weather it is desirable to complete the work in a short time, in order to prevent fermentation or souring, which occurs if left too long a time. Four hours and a half is ample time for the whole process, using the ordinary amount of yeast; two hours for the mixing and rising of the sponge or dough; one half hour for the kneading and molding; one hour for the loaves to rise in the pans, and one hour for the baking.
[Sidenote: Raising the bread.]
A thin batter called a sponge may be made at night, and the rest of the flour added in the morning, or the dough may be mixed and kneaded at night and only molded into loaves in the morning; but a better way, especially in summer, is to set the bread early in the morning and have it baked by noon. It needs to rise twice, once either in the sponge or in the dough, and again after it is molded into loaves. The old way of letting it rise three times is unnecessary, and increases the danger of souring. If the dough gets very light before one is ready to work it, it should be cut away from the sides of the pan and pressed down in the center with the knife. This liberates some of the gas and r.e.t.a.r.ds the fermentation. This can be done several times. If it rises too high it will collapse, which means souring, but before that it loses its best flavor, and so should not be allowed to more than double its bulk.
[Sidenote: Proportions of materials.]
The proportions of flour, liquid, and yeast cannot be exactly given, as flour of different qualities and degrees of dryness will absorb more or less liquid, and the amount of yeast to be used depends both upon the time allowed and the temperature.
Two cupfuls of liquid will take six to seven cupfuls of sifted flour, and this will make two small loaves. One half a compressed yeast cake will raise this amount in two hours if kept in a warm place. The other ingredients for this quant.i.ty are one teaspoonful of salt, one tablespoonful of sugar, and one tablespoonful of b.u.t.ter, lard, or cottolene, if shortening is desired.
Bread made with milk instead of water, and with shortening, is more tender than when water alone is used. Boiled potatoes are sometimes added, and give a more moist bread.
[Sidenote: Mixing.]
Dissolve the yeast in a part of the tepid water; in the rest of the water mix the salt, sugar, and b.u.t.ter, add the dissolved yeast, and then stir in enough flour to make a soft dough which will not stick to the hands. If the flour is cold warm it. If milk is used, scald it, then allow it to become tepid before mixing it with the yeast. Place the pan in a warm place free from draughts. When the dough is to be made into rolls or fancy forms, it needs to be a little stiffer than for loaves.
[Sidenote: Making a sponge.]
A sponge is a thin batter made by mixing only a little flour with the other ingredients. This is left to stand until filled with large bubbles. The rest of the flour is then added, to make the dough.
When bread is to be made in a short time, it is better to set a sponge instead of making a dough at first; for in this way the second rising will be a little quicker.
[Sidenote: The crust on dough.]
When a dough is mixed and set aside to rise, cover the pan with several thicknesses of cloth to exclude the air and so prevent a crust forming on the top. It helps also to keep the dough at an even temperature. If a crust forms it is difficult to mix it in so thoroughly that it does not leave hard spots and lines in the bread. There is a bread-pan made with close-fitting cover, which is recommended.
[Sidenote: Kneading and molding.]
When the dough is made, it should be kneaded for twenty to thirty minutes. Turn it from the pan onto a board, and work it by drawing it forward with the fingers and pus.h.i.+ng it away with the b.a.l.l.s of the hands, turning it all the time.
This stretches the gluten and changes it from a sticky paste to a smooth, elastic substance. Use as little flour on the board as possible, and work it until it no longer sticks.
The more it is worked the finer will be the grain, and the less flour used the better will be the bread.
[Sidenote: Baking.]
When dough is made at the first mixing, return it to the pan after it is kneaded and let it rise to double its size (not more), and then work it down, mold it into loaves, and let it rise a second time in the baking-pans. When a sponge is made, knead the dough when the flour is added to the sponge, and put it at once into the baking-pans.
Divide the dough evenly and shape it to the pans as well as possible, filling the pans only half full. Cover and set them in a warm place free from draughts. When they have doubled (not more) in size, put them in the oven. The loaf rises a little more in the oven. If it is too light, it is likely to fall, which means it has soured, and for this there is no remedy. The loaf in the pan should rise in one hour.
The Century Cook Book Part 66
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The Century Cook Book Part 66 summary
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