vendic wrote:I'll be posting recipes that we used at the restaurant as part of an exchange of recipes series I started with a long time friend from India.
So here's the first, the bread:
Bread:
950g plain flour
1 T salt
1 T sugar
1 T yeast
800g of warm water ( about 100F)
15g of olive oil/sesame (50/50) oil mix
sesame seeds
caraway seeds.
Egg wash:
1 egg, about 1-2Tsp of milk mixed completely. Makes about 4 loaves.
Add dry ingredients then water. Add oil into water or it can clump. Mix quickly for about 30 seconds to a minute. Cover with cellophane or damp tea towel. For best results put in fridge and allow it to rise there overnight. Otherwise a good compromise can be had by leaving it in a warm area. In warm climates, on the bench works. Be careful as it can overflow.
Place on non stick flat pan and spread so it's about 2cm thick. Brush on egg wash and then liberally sprinkle the sesame and caraway seeds.
Bake in preheated oven of 450F for about 22 minutes.
Cover with damp tea towel when it's cooked and let rest for 15 minutes before cutting.
This recipe makes really good bread with almost no effort. I could make 3 batches daily and it hardly took any work time. Most of it is rising, cooking and resting.
Next post will be the capsicum dip. Followed by the kebabs.
So, I made the bread and it turned out great. I did forget the seeds, though.
Couple of suggestions:
1. I don't have a kitchen scale (I'll get one eventually) so listing the amount of flour, water and oil in grams required some conversion. With the oil in particular. Who measures oil in grams? Unlike water, which has a gram-ml conversion of 1-1, the weight of oil is not readily apparent. My bottle lists the contents in Fl. oz and ml. Even if it did have grams, with such a small amount used it would have been a challenge. I found the necessary conversions to translate it into teaspoons. In general, I think you should provide ingredient amounts in units that will be used in the kitchen. Flour in cups, water in ml or fl oz and all other stuff in tea or tablespoons. I'm sure it's different outside the US but most of the people on the forum are in the US.
2. I really didn't know what to think about '1 T' of yeast being added to all the ingredients at the start. Not sure what yeast you use but the only one I have readily available is the dry Flieshmanns stuff. And with that, I typically see instructions to activate it in warm water before using. However, I followed instructions and added the dry yeast to everything else and mixed it up. It worked fine and maybe that's exactly what you meant, but maybe some clarification would be good.
I'm not a baker and hardly can call myself a cook, but those are suggestions coming from someone trying to interpret the instructions.