Brioches, With A Nod Towards Christmas

  1. Sift the flour into a bowl, scoop out a hole in the middle where you dissolve the yeast in the milk. Leave for 5-10 minutes, or until the yeast starts bubbling away.
  2. Once your yeast is active, mix in all the other ingredients except for the butter. Then add 1/3 of the butter and knead until it is incorporated, then proceed with the second and the third batch. Use a mixer if possible - to work in the butter is no mean feat and will take you 10 minutes! You dough is ready when the butter is fully incorporated into a smooth ball that comes off the sides of your bowl. Cover and leave to rest for around an hour or until it has doubled in size.
  3. Carefully grease your individual brioche tins or a loaf tin.
  4. Once your dough has doubled in size, add the above ingredients and knead until they are evenly distributed. It shouldn't take longer than a minute or so.
  5. Divide the dough into three parts. Divide two of them into seven pieces each to form fourteen individual balls, which you place in the prepared tins. Make another 14 smaller balls out of the remaining dough, but make sure that their surface is smooth and there are no raisins sticking out of the surface as they invariably burn. Obviously, if you are using a loaf tin you simply plop it all into the tin. Remember the raisins, though!
  6. Cover the whole lot with clingfilm and leave to prove in the fridge overnight.
  7. The next morning, remove the brioches from the fridge and heat the oven to 180C. Once your oven has reached the required temperature, remove the cling film from the brioches. Mix the egg yolk with the milk and brush the brioches with the mix before placing them in the oven. Reduce the heat to 160C and bake for 10-15 minutes or until golden brown. A loaf needs to bake for around 40-45 minutes - use a toothpick to check it is fully baked.

brioche, flour, yeast, milk, caster sugar, eggs, salt, cold, handful raisins, handful italian mixed, lemon, ground nutmeg, orange blossom water, vanilla essence, egg yolk, milk

Taken from food52.com/recipes/32078-brioches-with-a-nod-towards-christmas (may not work)

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