Chocolate Rolls
- 1 the baker's percentage is in
- 250 grams Bread (strong) flour
- 60 grams Cake flour
- 48 grams Castor sugar or superfine sugar
- 7 grams Instant dry yeast
- 5 grams Salt
- 30 grams Heavy cream
- 135 grams Low Fat Milk
- 54 grams Beaten egg (M)
- 60 grams Chocolate
- 15 grams Sugarless cocoa powder
- 30 grams Margarine (or butter)
- Mix the flours up lightly.
- Put the yeast on top of the sugar, away from the salt.
- Mix the ingredients together well and heat up to body temperature (35-38 C).
- I used milk chocolate.
- I wrote heavy cream in the ingredients, but I actually used a vegetable base whipped cream and it turned out fine.
- Chop up the chocolate very finely by hand or using a food processor etc.
- so that it will melt as much as possible with your body or the temperature of your machine when kneading.
- A few bits of unmelted chocolate are fine.
- Pour the liquids into the bowl aiming for the yeast.
- Mix in half the flour until the mixture is sticky, then mix in the salt and the rest of the flour to form one mass.
- Transfer the dough to a work surface and knead until smooth.
- It's a soft and sticky dough, so scrape off any dough that sticks to the work surface as you knead.
- Add the ingredients and keep kneading until smooth.
- Please see "Simple Square Loaf "for reference.
- Scrape off and add in the dough that's stuck to your hands before introducing the fats.
- When the dough is done kneading, form it into a smooth ball with a taut surface.
- Put the dough ball into an oiled bowl with the seam side down, and leave for the 1st rising.
- Cover with a tightly wrung out moistened kitchen towel during this 1st rising and the resting time later.
- Leave to rise until it has increased to 1.5 to 2 times its original volume.
- Poke the dough with a finger, and if the hole doesn't fill back in it's done rising.
- Using my microwave's dough-rising setting at 40 C it took about 70 minutes.
- This dough doesn't rise that much.
- When the 1st rising is done, round off the dough lightly to deflate it, divide into 15 pieces, cover with plastic wrap and a tightly wrung out moistened kitchen towel, and let rest for 15 minutes.
- I made three 134 g pieces and six 45 g pieces this time.
- I put the six 45 g dough balls (using a total of 120 g of flour) in a 15 cm-diameter round cake tin.
- I lined the tin with kitchen parchment paper beforehand.
- Leave to rise (2nd rising) until 1.5 to 2 times its original volume.
- (Using my microwave's dough-rising setting at 40C it took about 60 minutes. )
- I put the three 134 g balls into an 8.2 x 21.2 x 7 cm high poundcake tin, lined with kitchen parchment paper.
- I let it rise with the Step 9 dough.
- It also took 60 minutes at 40 C. If the dough rises to about 1 cm below the rim of the pan, it's ready.
- Preheat oven to 180 C. Then lower to 170 C and bake for 5 minutes.
- Cover the tops with aluminium foil to prevent the crust from hardening.
- Lower the temperature to 160 C and bake for another 21 minutes or so to finish.
- Once you take them out of the oven, drop each pan onto your work surface from about a height of 30cm to "shock" the bread into releasing its steam.
- I baked loaves with different heights at the same time, so the crust on the round one was a bit softer.
- It may be better to bake the round one at 170 C, and to cover the surface with foil about 8 minutes in.
- Moist and fluffy.
- Warm the rolls up in a oven once they have cooled.
- If you have a sweet tooth, add chocolate chips for an even more chocolately flavor.
- This is made with 300 g of dough divided into 15 pieces, and baked in a 150C oven (preheated at 160C) for 5 minutes, then at 140C for 10 to 12 minutes.
- If it looks like the rolls are getting burned on top, cover with foil.
- This is a shokupan (square loaf bread) made with a different ratio of ingredients.
bread, flour, sugar, yeast, salt, heavy cream, low fat milk, egg, chocolate, cocoa, margarine
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/143081-chocolate-rolls (may not work)