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• #227
I'm saying that terracotta is fine, but there are tiles that are made to emulate the look of it that may have a matte glaze.
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• #228
True, the unglazed 'should' be the cheapest. I'm wary of any glazed pottery in the oven, I like to be very sure of the source.
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• #229
We looked at some terracotta tiles in B&Q too, but they were either too small or too big. The stepping stone was goldilocks for our oven.
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• #230
Good idea about soaking them in water. I just use the small dish of hot water and plastic spray bottle.
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• #231
Opp, forgot to mention that if using the tiles warm up takes longer, I have an oven thermometer and an infra red temperature thing to make sure the oven get to temp.
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• #233
How much rye is in it? Rye has much less gluten which helps the bread hold its shape.
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• #234
Ah good point. Not much, used a bit in the starter. Probably no more than 20%... dough didn't feel as springy as when I make pizza.
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• #235
What flour did you use?
For rye I mix in 50% white bread flour. Straight rye makes a very dense dough.
How long was the first rise?
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• #236
I'd add more water maybe? The dough I make is really wet but proves nicely because its so loose. It looks dauntingly sticky in the tin on the second rise, but has baked into a really decent loaf each time so far.
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• #237
Thanks y'all. First rise was about 4h. Yes I probably made the dough too dry, just find it sticks too much when kneading othereise...
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• #238
Well stop kneading other ryes then!
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• #239
I knead mine in a cheapy stand mixer with dough hooks, couldn't deal with it by hand. Sacrilege I know. A little bit of olive oil then goes a long way for dealing with the knocking back.
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• #240
Did the dough roughly double in size?
Rye does need to be quite wet, an am making my doughs wetter than I think I should and as marie said, the stickyness has never been an issue as I use a small amount of either olive or vegetable oil on my hands..So keep trying. PS stainbuiry do dove farm rye for £1.60 a kilo which is the cheapest.
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• #241
Have you tried the folding technique? I do like a good knead myself sometimes.
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• #242
Well stop kneading other ryes then!
Do you mean don't add Rye. Sorry, noob here. I won't next time!
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• #243
A little bit of olive oil then goes a long way for dealing with the knocking back.
On your hands or in the dough?
Cheers for the tips all!
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• #244
Do you mean don't add Rye. Sorry, noob here. I won't next time!
Sorry I was making a pun; you spelled "otherwise" wrong in your post above.
I'll get my coat.. -
• #245
On your hands or in the dough?
On your hands.
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• #246
Ah, subtle, i was never gonna pick up on that pre-coffee :-)
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• #247
: ]
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• #248
French style kneading can help:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PvdtUR-XTG0
Gives you a work out (I do 10 mins rather than the 20 he suggests but I leave it 5 mins after mixing the flour and water together to give the gluten a head start) -
• #249
Haha, this looks arduous, but also fun. I will try this.
give the gluten a head start
There's a recipe for pizza dough that suggests only adding half the flour first, so it's sort-of a "pancake-dough", and mixing (stirring) this really good, then leaving it to rest for 20 minutes before adding the rest of the flour.
I found this helps a great deal with "fluffyness" of the dough later, no matter how you continue, so this is what I do not only when making pizza, but also when baking bread now. -
• #250
Make sure you don't have anything on the worktop that might topple over or gradually bounce off the surface and smash on your floor... (Cleaning up a mixture of honey and shards of glass is not fun)
a'ight