T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2154.1 | Pro's use steam ovens | PARITY::KLEBES | John F. Klebes | Fri Dec 15 1989 14:55 | 8 |
| I worked in several bread bakeries during high school and college.
The ovens used live steam injected into special rotating or traveling
ovens. Based on this I would say placing water in the oven has
some rational. I don't think you will ever be able to reproduce
the same effect completely in a home oven. At least I never
have been able too.
-JFK-
|
2154.2 | but .0 wanted hard rolls | BANZAI::FISHER | Pat Pending | Sun Dec 17 1989 07:28 | 5 |
| I think the live steam has the effect of keeping the crust soft.
That's why home baked bread always has a harder crust than store bought
loaves.
ed
|
2154.3 | Shock therapy | TOCATA::PICKETT | David - Beware of the dogma. | Wed Dec 20 1989 11:21 | 15 |
| Brenard Clayton, in his bread book, suggested the following method
which has worked really well for me.
When pre-heating the oven, place a metal baking pan on the bottom rack.
(I use my 9x13) Just before placing the bread in the oven, pour in a
cup or two of water. The water hitting the hot pan will make oodles of
steam. Over time, this shock cooling will wreck your pan. (I use an old
one, which has been retired to this fuinction solely).
My experience is that this technique works better than simply
preheating the oven with a pan of water. Having the water in there from
the start does make the oven a bit mour humid, but pouring the water
into a hot pan produces quite a sauna!
dp
|
2154.4 | CRUSTS/SOFT & HARD | JULIET::LOWERY_SH | | Thu Jun 25 1992 19:50 | 13 |
| REPLY TO 2154.2
If you want your crust to be soft on your homemade bread, you should
brush it with butter as soon as you get it out of the oven.
To get a nice hard crust like French bread, brush loaf before baking,
with eggwhite which has been beat with a fork and a little water. YES
you do use a pan of water in the oven. It still works and I/my family
like my French bread just fine. Also I sprinkle a little white corn
meal on pan before I set dough on it. This makes the bottom really
crunchy.
|
2154.5 | cover with towel helps too | DECLNE::TOWLE | | Fri Jun 26 1992 10:00 | 8 |
| Another way to keep the crust soft is after taking the loaves out
of the oven, and placing them on a wire rack and brushing with
somf butter, place a cotton bakers towel over the loaves while they
cool. This will keep the moisture that rises while cooling, on the
surface of the bread. When cooled, I place the loaves in a double
thickness plastic bag and place in the refrig.
-VT
|