VIENNA HARD ROLLS
From Joy of Cooking 2006, page 618. Posting this because it is entirely different from what I have found here. Slightly modified to allow egg glaze using the 2 yolks. Preparation time includes time for rising. This looks harder than it is because I have chosen to expand the original directions hoping that a new baker would have a easier time and better results.
Provided by Queen Dragon Mom
Categories Yeast Breads
Time 4h20m
Yield 12 rolls
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- Mix warm water and yeast in a large bowl. Allow to stand until yeast is dissolved, about 5 minutes.
- Add to the yeast, next 1 cup water, sugar, salt and shortening. Stir well.
- Continuing to stir, add next 2 to 2 1/2 cups of flour. Mix until thoroughly blended.
- Fold the beaten whites into the soft dough. The dough will be very wet and sticky at this point and have a "blob-like" consistency.
- Gently stir in the flour for stiffening, use more or less as needed, until dough is still soft but no longer wet.
- Sprinkle part of the kneading flour on a cool, flat surface. Turn dough out, sprinkle with flour and knead until smooth and elastic, about 7 minutes. Sprinkle remaining flour over the surface of the dough as you knead until all stickiness is gone.
- Oil a large bowl well, turn dough into bowl, coat with oil and cover with a muslic cloth.
- Let rise for 1 to 1 1/2 hours until double.
- Push the risen dough down gently in the middle, let sit for a few minutes, then turn out onto a clean, cool surface and knead very gently for about a minutes. The dough will change consistency just a little in that time. Don't add any more flour and don't overwork the dough.
- Let the dough rise again for another hour, until doubled.
- Again, press the dough gently, don't punch it. Let it rest for about 5 minutes then turn out on a clean surface. Divide into whatever portions you need, 6 for long "hoagie-type" rolls, 12 for smaller 2 1/2 buns.
- Form dough as desired.
- Let the formed dough rest on the work surface, covered with a clean towel for up to 10 minutes, while preparing cookie sheets. Transfer dough to baking sheets which have been dusted with cornmeal. Cover with cloth and let rise for another hour, until doubled.
- While your dough is resting, preheat oven to 425.
- Put a 13 x 9 inch metal (DON'T USE GLASS!) baking pan on the bottom rack of the oven while preheating.
- When oven is hot, pouring boiling water into pan in bottom of oven and immediately place a baking sheet of rolls onto the middle rack.
- Lightly beat the yolks and milk, set aside.
- After rolls have "popped", brush the tops with the yolk/milk mixture, return to oven.
- Bake at 425 until golden brown and crusty, about 20 minutes.
- Remove from oven and cool on wire racks.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 243.1, Fat 3.6, SaturatedFat 1, Cholesterol 31.8, Sodium 258.3, Carbohydrate 44.5, Fiber 1.9, Sugar 0.6, Protein 7.2
HARD OR VIENNA ROLLS
Steps:
- Sift flour (can substitute 1/2 with bread flour) Dissolve dry yeast in 1/4 HOT (105-115*) water for 3-5 minutes. Combine 1 cup warm water, sugar, salt shortening and the dissolved yeast mixture. Fold in beaten egg whites thoroghly but lightly. Add enough of the sifted flour to make a soft dough. To knead and proof. Allow the dough to rise twice. Aftet hte second rising punch down and knead about 1 minute. Then let rest, covered about 10 minutes before shaping into 12 oblong pieces. Place them about 3 inches apart on a greased baking sheet. To ensure a hard crust, have in the oven a 9 x 13 inch pan filled with 1/2 inch boiling water. Bake at once in a opreheaded 450* oven about 20 mintues or until golden brown.
VIENNA ROLLS (BREAD ROLLS)
Make and share this Vienna Rolls (Bread Rolls) recipe from Food.com.
Provided by AaliyahsAaronsMum
Categories Yeast Breads
Time 2h20m
Yield 16 rolls, 4-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Sift the flour, salt, dried yeast and sugar into a bowl. Make a well in the centre and pour in the milk.
- Mix in and knead to form a smooth dough, then turn the dough onto a work surface and knead for about 10 minutes.
- Put the dough in a greased bowl, cover with clingfilm and leave it to rise in a warm place for 1-1 1/2 hours until doubled in size.
- Punch the dough down in the bowl to knock the air out, and then gradually work in the softened butter a little at a time.
- The dough will now be very sticky to work with, but just continue working on until the butter is blended in evenly.
- Turn it out onto a lightly floured work surface and shape the dough into a ball and cut the ball into 16 bits.
- Roll each ball out into a long sausage-shaped roll, and then tie each roll into a knot.
- Place each roll onto a greased baking tray and brush the top of the rolls with the beaten egg.
- Loosely cover the baking sheet with a clingfilm and leave it to rise again in a warm place for about half an hour.
- Meanwhile, pre-heat the oven to gas mark 5/375°F/190°C.
- Bake in the centre shelf of the oven for about 20 minutes or until golden brown.
- Remove from oven and transfer on to a wire rack to cool.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 779.1, Fat 27.3, SaturatedFat 16.2, Cholesterol 121, Sodium 1083.7, Carbohydrate 112.4, Fiber 4.2, Sugar 1.5, Protein 19.3
UNBELIEVABLE ROLLS
Simple dinner rolls that are easy to make. Dough is also a great base for cinnamon rolls.
Provided by SHERLIE
Categories Bread Yeast Bread Recipes Rolls and Buns
Time 2h15m
Yield 16
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- In a medium saucepan over medium heat, warm milk, water, sugar and salt. Remove from heat, and mix in the eggs and yeast.
- Measure flour into a large bowl. Make a well in the flour, and pour milk mixture into it. Do not stir. Cover with a lid, and let stand for 20 to 30 minutes.
- Pour melted margarine into flour, and mix well. Add more flour if too sticky. Knead lightly. Cover, and let rise for 20 to 30 minutes.
- Shape the dough into rolls, and place on a baking sheet. Let rise again for 20 to 30 minutes.
- Bake rolls in a preheated 400 degrees F (205 degrees C) oven for 15 minutes, or until done.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 234.8 calories, Carbohydrate 37.2 g, Cholesterol 24.2 mg, Fat 6.9 g, Fiber 1.3 g, Protein 5.7 g, SaturatedFat 1.4 g, Sodium 225.9 mg, Sugar 7 g
VIENNA BREAD
Steps:
- Remove the pâte fermentée from the refrigerator 1 hour before making the dough. Cut it into about 10 small pieces with a pastry scraper or serrated knife. Cover with a towel or plastic wrap and let sit for 1 hour to take off the chill.
- Stir together the flour, sugar, malt powder (if using), salt, and yeast in a 4-quart bowl (or in the bowl of an electric mixer). Add the pâte fermentée pieces, egg, butter, malt syrup (if using), and 3/4 cup of the water. Stir together with a large metal spoon (or mix on low speed with the paddle attachment) until the ingredients form a ball. If not all the flour is absorbed, add the remaining 2 tablespoons water, or as much as is necessary to make the dough soft and supple, not firm and stiff.
- Sprinkle flour on the counter and transfer the dough to the counter. Knead for about 10 minutes (or mix on medium speed with the dough hook for 6 minutes), adding flour if needed to make a firm but supple dough, slightly tacky but not sticky. The dough should pass the windowpane test (page 58) and register 77° to 81°F. Lightly oil a bowl and transfer the dough to the bowl, rolling it around to coat it with oil. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap.
- Ferment at room temperature for 2 hours. If the dough doubles in size before then, remove it from the bowl and knead for a few seconds to degas it (the "punch down") and then return it to the bowl to continue fermenting until 2 hours have elapsed or until the dough doubles in size again.
- Remove the dough from the bowl and divide it into 2 equal pieces for loaves, or into 9 to 12 smaller pieces (3 to 4 ounces each) for pistolets. Shape larger pieces into boules (page 72) or smaller pieces into rolls (page 82). Mist the dough lightly with spray oil, cover with a towel or plastic wrap, and let the dough rest for 20 minutes.
- Shape the larger pieces into bâtards (page 73) or the smaller pieces into pistolets (page 80). Line a sheet pan with baking parchment, dust with semolina flour or cornmeal, and transfer the dough to the pan. Mist the dough lightly with spray oil and cover the pan loosely with plastic.
- Proof at room temperature for 60 to 90 minutes, or until the loaves or rolls have risen to approximately 1 3/4 times their original size.
- Prepare the oven for hearth baking as described on pages 91-94, making sure to have an empty steam pan in place. Preheat the oven to 450°F. Just prior to baking, mist the loaves or rolls with water and dust lightly with bread flour by tapping some through a sieve or by flinging the flour across the surface of the dough. Score the loaves or rolls down the center as shown on page 90, or leave the rolls uncut.
- Slide the loaves directly onto the baking stone, parchment and all, or place the sheet pan with the loaves or rolls in the oven. Pour 1 cup hot water into the steam pan and close the oven door. After 30 seconds, open the door, spray the oven walls with water, and close the door. Repeat twice more at 30-second intervals. After the final spray, lower the oven setting to 400°F and bake for 10 minutes. Rotate the breads 180 degrees, if necessary, for even baking and continue baking until they are a medium golden brown and register at least 200°F at the center. This should take anywhere from 5 additional minutes for rolls to 20 minutes for loaves.
- Remove the loaves or rolls from the oven and transfer them to a cooling rack. Cool for at least 45 minutes before slicing or serving.
- BREAD PROFILE
- Enriched, standard dough; indirect method; commercial yeast
- DAYS TO MAKE: 2
- Day 1: 1 1/4 hours pâte fermentée
- Day 2: 1 hour to de-chill pâte fermentée; 10 to 12 minutes mixing; 3 1/2 to 4 hours fermentation, shaping, and proofing; 20 to 35 minutes baking
- Commentary
- This version of Vienna dough is improved by the pre-ferment method that I've been touting throughout this book. You will rarely find another version made in quite this same way, as most Vienna bread formulas are made by the direct-dough method. But the use of more than 100 percent pre-ferment adds so much character to the bread that I'll never turn back. Vienna rolls made from this dough are a huge hit at Johnson & Wales, where students eagerly line up for sandwiches whenever we send these rolls to the dining hall.
- BAKER'S PERCENTAGE FORMULA
- Vienna Bread %
- Pâte fermentée: 108%
- Bread flour: 100%
- Sugar: 4.2%
- Malt powder: 2.1%
- Salt: 2.1%
- Instant yeast: .92%
- Egg: 13.8%
- Butter: 4.2%
- Water (approx.): 54.2%
- Total: 289.5%
- GRACE NOTE: Dutch Crunch or Mottled Bread
- Dutch crunch is one of many names given to bread made with a special mottled topping. It doesn't refer to any particular formula, as the crunch topping can be spread on pretty much any type of bread. But if you grew up with a certain brand of Dutch crunch, you may associate it with particular styles of bread, like a chewy white bread or a light wheat loaf. Dutch bakers were among the many northern European bread makers who popularized this style of garnishing loaves, and the method caught on quickly in certain regions of America when it was first introduced. I find that Austrian-style bread, with its slightly enriched but chewy texture, is particularly suited to this treatment, which is a slurry paste made with rice flour, sugar, yeast, oil, salt, and water. However, feel free to use it on any type of sandwich dough or enriched breads (but not on lean French bread dough, with its hard crust). The paste is brushed on the dough either right before the final proofing stage, or just before the bread goes into the oven. (If you brush it on before proofing, the separation and mottling is greater and more dramatic; brushing it on just before baking results in a more even coating.) The paste is fermented by the yeast, and it grows while the dough grows. But because the rice flour has very little gluten to hold it together, it spreads apart and then gelatinizes and caramelizes when the bread is baked. This leaves a mottled, slightly sweet, crunchy coating on the bread that kids find especially mesmerizing. You can use the topping on loaf-pan bread as well as on freestanding loaves.
- Rice flour is available at most natural foods markets. You can use either white or brown rice flour or even Cream of Rice cereal. Alternatives would be fine cornmeal, cornstarch, potato starch, semolina flour, or cake flour (it's low in gluten), but they each deliver a different flavor and texture. Rice flour or Cream of Rice cereal is the most commonly used because it is, well, perfect for the job.
- To make the topping, whisk together, 1 tablespoon bread flour, 3/4 cup rice flour, 3/4 teaspoon instant yeast, 2 teaspoons granulated sugar, 1/4 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons vegetable oil, and 6 to 8 tablespoons of water to make a paste. If it seems too thin to spread without running off the top of the dough, add more rice flour. It should be thick enough to spread with a brush, but not so thick that it sits like a lump of mud. This makes enough for 2 to 4 loaves.
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CRUSTY EUROPEAN-STYLE HARD ROLLS - KING ARTHUR BAKING
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4.5/5 (206)Total Time 15 hrs 30 minsServings 12Calories 160 per serving
- To make the starter: Weigh your flour; or measure it by gently spooning it into a cup, then sweeping off any excess.
- Mix the starter ingredients together until smooth, cover, and let rest at room temperature overnight., Combine all of the dough ingredients and mix and knead them together — by hand, mixer or bread machine — until you've made a soft, somewhat smooth dough; it should be cohesive, but the surface may still be a bit rough.
- It may also stick to the bowl just the tiniest bit., Allow the dough to rise, covered, for 3 hours, gently deflating it and turning it over after 1 hour, and again after 2 hours., Turn the dough out onto a lightly greased work surface.
- Divide it into 12 pieces, shape the pieces into balls, and firm them up by rolling them under your lightly cupped fingers., Place the rolls on a parchment-lined baking sheet, cover them, and let them rise for 1 to 2 hours, until they're puffy, though not doubled in size.
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