Walnut and Dried Fruit Bread with Rye Flour Kneaded In a Bread Machine
- 200 grams Bread (strong) flour
- 50 grams Rye flour
- 85 grams Milk
- 85 grams Water
- 20 grams Brown sugar (or white sugar)
- 20 grams Unsalted butter
- 5 grams Salt
- 4 1/2 grams Dry yeast
- 40 grams Walnuts
- 80 grams Mixed dried fruit
- Toast the walnuts in a dry frying pan, being careful not to let them burn.
- Alternatively bake them for about 15 minutes in a 150C oven while keeping an eye on them.
- Let them cool down completely, then chop up.
- Put all the ingredients except the ones marked in a bread machine.
- When the "add additions" signal goes off, add the ingredients.
- (I used a finely ground rye flour.)
- Make sure the dough has risen properly.
- If it hasn't risen enough yet, leave to rise for a few more minutes.
- If you poke the dough with a flour-covered finger and the hole doesn't fill back in it's good.
- After making sure the dough has risen enough, take it out of the bread machine and round it off.
- Cover the dough with a tightly wrung out clean, moistened kitchen towel or plastic wrap, and leave to rest for 20 minutes (see third photo).
- Dust the bread mold evenly with flour using a tea strainer (not listed in the ingredient list).
- Deflate and round off the dough, and put it in the mold with the seam side facing up.
- See how the dough is rising, and preheat the oven to 250C (heat the baking sheet too).
- Let the dough rise to almost twice its original volume.
- Holding the baking sheet with one hand, flip the dough over into the panetton basket.
- Slash the top of the dough, and mist with water.
- Lower the oven temperature to 220C, and bake for 10 minutes.
- Then lower the temperature to 200C and bake for another 15 to 20 minutes.
- If it looks like the top is getting burned, cover the top with a double or triple layer of foil.
- It's packed with dried fruit and walnuts.
- It goes well with wine.
- It's delicious spread with cream cheese, butter or honey.
- Here I divided the dough into 4 and baked them in a coupe shape.
- They are smaller and cuter.
- Form the dough into round rolls or any shape you like.
- When the weather is hot and you use a bread machine, use room temperature water.
- When the weather is cold use lukewarm water, or the yeast will not mix in properly.
- For hand-kneading directions, see.
bread, flour, milk, water, brown sugar, butter, salt, yeast, walnuts, fruit
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/169843-walnut-and-dried-fruit-bread-with-rye-flour-kneaded-in-a-bread-machine (may not work)