Bakerboy From Lyon

15/10/2013

Getting it RIGHT !


Today was standard. Good push in the morning...still need to kick it up a gear with the shaping. I guess I’m just impatient to get to that level of efficiency already.

We made bread today with buckwheat, also known as “sarrasin/blé noir”, with 20% buckwheat and 80% T80 as buckwheat has no gluten in it so its suitable for people who can’t handle gluten, but obviously you’d need a recipe without wheat as well...because it had no gluten, it’s not ideal to use for bread on its own and is more commonly used to make pancakes and noodles in other countries.

Possibly a combination of that and maybe rice flour or potato flour would work but I’d have to play around to find out. The colour was a deep, dark colour. Darker than rye and had a slightly not aniseed, but floral, sweet flavour.

I’ve been thinking and it seems like to make alternate wheats/grains more accessible to people who want to try it for flavour and not for allergy reasons, it works best to combine the alternate grain/wheat with wheat flour to give a better texture and volume...as most would end up quite dense without the addition.
Also, for some reason I was adamant that internal body temperature was 32.4....I have no clue wtf I got it from but I was arguing with everyone at work that it wasn’t 37.5 (it all started because the final temp for the seigle Auvergne is 37.5)...I was positive that I had read it somewhere before and that maybe they had it different in France.

We had an order for about 180 brioches a la forme de miche today. So we cooked them in the deck oven at 175...it’s possible to cook viennoiserie in a deck oven provided you give the deck enough time to cool down sufficiently. You have to bake at a slightly lower temperature than you would in a convection, but also for a longer time as you don’t have the ambient heat circulating. Useful for mornings when your pastries are proved overnight and your doughs are only mixed and fermented that morning.

NOTE: with a viennoiserie recipe, when you increase water and lower eggs it will be lighter as the eggs provide extra protein which adds structure to the dough and water creates steam during baking which will obviously aerate the product and make it lighter.


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