Homemade Curry Bread
- 250 grams Strong bread flour
- 1 tsp Sugar
- 1/2 tsp Salt
- 2 tbsp Vegetable oil
- 1 1/2 tsp Dry yeast
- 150 ml Lukewarm water
- 100 grams Ground Meat (beef, pork, beef-pork mixed etc.)
- 1/2 Onions (finely chopped)
- 1/2 Potato (roughly finely chopped)
- 2 pieces Curry roux (breakable type)
- 200 ml Milk
- 1 packages Fresh panko
- 2 cm in the bottom of the frying pan Frying oil
- Pace the bread flour into a large bowl set the sugar and dry yeast off to one side, and add in the salt and vegetable oil on the opposite side.
- Pour the lukewarm water over the dry yeast.
- Using a rubber spatula at first, scrape the dough that is stuck to the sides of the bowl and drop it back in, and mix until it all clumps together.
- Knead it with the palm side of your wrists.
- If you do this for 10 minutes, then it will become about as soft as an earlobe, and knead up smoothly.
- Place the dough into a bowl lightly coated in vegetable oil, set it into a another bowl full of hot water slightly hotter than bath water, and cover with plastic wrap.
- Let sit for 25 minutes for the first rising.
- (You can also use the proofing function on your oven).
- Saute all of the ingredients in a Teflon frying pan without using oil.
- Place the curry roux on top once it has cooked through, close the lid, turn off the heat, and dissolve the roux in the residual heat.
- If the water cools a bit lower than bath water, then add hot water to keep the temperature up.
- The first rising will be done in about 25 minutes when it has about doubled in size.
- Stick your finger into the dough, and it's ok as long as the hole doesn't close (finger check).
- You can if course do this in the bread maker as well.
- Take it out of the bowl, release the gas, and roll up into 8 equal portions.
- At this point, making them light will make them the same uniform size.
- I had 360g, so I divided into 8 45g portions.
- Thinly spread it out into a 10cm diameter circle with a rolling pin, and pack in the ingredients from Step 5, one tablespoons at a time.
- Fold it in half like gyoza dumplings, and tightly close the overlap.
- Coat the dough in milk and then panko in that order.
- Prepare the oil by heating it up.
- At this point, use new oil as oxidized oil is bad for your health.
- Fill the bottom of a frying pan with about 2 cm oil, heat up to 180C, and fry up crispy while flipping it back and forth until the outside is crispy.
- It will plump up, so fry 4 at a time.
- Scoop out any stray bread crumbs that fell into the oil and the 2nd set of bread will turn out nicely.
- The crispy,fluffy and delicious curry bread is done.
bread flour, sugar, salt, vegetable oil, yeast, water, ground meat, onions, curry, milk, fresh panko, oil
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/168151-homemade-curry-bread (may not work)