Sunday, February 14, 2010

Here is the Danish dough to try for March's meeting. I might suggest personally selecting either Jo's recipe or this one. Please do note that the recipe is geared for a professional environment and does not give the same explicit directions that we saw in last month's croisssant project.

The formula itself is from Special and Decorative Breads by Alain Couet and Eric Kayser. I have added some directions to it and reduced the yield.

Danish

Bread flour 17.5 oz
Milk 7 oz
Fresh yeast .9 oz
salt 2 tsp
sugar 1.75 oz
eggs 2
cardamom, ground 1/2 tsp
nutmeg, 1/2 tsp

Butter for turns, cool (1/4 weight of dough) 8 oz

Place all ingredients in a mixer with the hook. Mix for 7 minutes. Place in a greased bowl and cover with plastic. Let rise at room temp. for 1 hour, or for 12 hours in the refrigerator.

Place the butter in the mixer with the paddle, and mix until it is uniformly soft but still cold. You should not feel any lumps of colder butter. On a piece of plastic wrap, press the butter to a square, about 6x6".

Dust your work surface with flour. Place the dough on the surface and press to a square, about 8x8" Have the dough thinner in the corners. Place the butter in the center of the square but turn the butter so that the corners of the butter are facing the center of each side (you will have a diamond of butter on the dough). Pull each corner of dough up and press together to seal the butter in.

Begin your turns. We will perform 3 single turns with 20 minutes rest between each turn.

The turns are performed as followed (or follow the directions from croissant- it's the same method.)

Use your pin to roll the dough to a 12x 18 rectangle. Brush off the excess flour, and fold the dough, letter style, into thirds. Take the right third and fold it in, then pick up the left third and put it on top. Be sure your corners are square. Place the dough on a parchment lined sheet pan, and cover with plastic. Mark the tray with turn one complete. Refrigerate for 2o minutes.

Repeat this turning two more times. Each time place the long side of the dough closest to your stomach. Roll and fold.

When you are finished you may freeze the dough, or let it rest in the cooler for up to 12 hours before you roll it out.

Cut and shape as desired.

Let proof, covered, for one hour. Brush with egg wash, then bake in a 400 oven to 15-20 minutes. (In all honesty, this recipe states to bake them at 450-475, but it seems a bit hot. Eggy dough will brown very quickly. You can try it but watch it really closely!)

If you do not know how to shape these, please let me know. There are hundreds of options. At the last meeting, I think we mentioned that everyone should try to finish them their own way so we have some variety.

This dough is used for sweet pretzels, cream horns, bear claws, coffee cakes, as well as your usual individual pastries. Have fun!

5 comments:

  1. Thank you Laurie and Christine! I much prefer your recipes to mine, because yours specify weights. After using just the one ciabatta recipe with weights, I'm totally converted. It is so much more reliable, especially with liquids.
    Now it's time to practice!
    Jo

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  2. What kind of filling is everyone going to make? It will be interesting to hear. I haven't decided yet but I've read a lot of recipes.

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  3. What an interesting blog!
    My company, Pike Publishing, is in the midst -- well, maybe the beginning -- of producing a book of recipes ... I guess you could call it a cook book, but it's more than that.
    The very dear lady who created or assembled the recipes is no longer with us, and many of her hand-written cards and scraps of paper don't have lots of necessary details, such as how long or at what temperature to cook.
    As a non-cook, myself, I am grateful to have a partner who is and who understands the processes.
    For that reason, that is, the realization or at least the beginning of the realization of just how much knowledge is involved in proper cooking and baking -- plus, I'll admit, that you came to visit my blog -- makes me appreciate and, in fact, admire the heck out of your blog.
    Thank you.

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  4. My Danish got too brown. I'm going to skip the egg wash next time. Is it still Danish pastry without the egg wash? Maybe that will help. I am baking at 400 degrees for about 12 minutes and they start to get overly brown (not an attractive brown.) Some I did roll too thinly, but the others were thicker and they still got too brown. They did taste good, though.

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  5. You really shouldn't skip the egg wash- but as an alternative, you could try skipping it and brushing each pastry with a hot sugar syrup as they come from the oven.

    You could also try lowering the oven temp. I was really surprised that the French recipe originally said to bake at 450! I did change that bit, to avoid disasters and disappointments.

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