Thanks all of you for your help, I can always rely on you people. However another question. In Italy I have never seen strong bread flour for sale, they have Farina which I use for cakes and something caled 00 which is used for pasta. It would be impossible to carry or send enough strong flour over, which do you suggest I use or have you got another suggestion.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
How does a breadmaker work
Collapse
X
-
-
Originally posted by chrismarks View Postprooving? - is that rising?
Originally posted by stella View PostThanks all of you for your help, I can always rely on you people. However another question. In Italy I have never seen strong bread flour for sale, they have Farina which I use for cakes and something caled 00 which is used for pasta. It would be impossible to carry or send enough strong flour over, which do you suggest I use or have you got another suggestion.Happy Gardening,
Shirley
Comment
-
Nope never seen plain flour either. Tippo 00 does make good pasta but as far as I can see it does not rise at all, hence the use for pasta
Comment
-
Originally posted by shirlthegirl43 View PostYou could do what the bloke does in Scarey's video link and take out the paddle when it reaches the end of proving.A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot! (Thomas Edward Brown)
Comment
-
Do you have a Lidl near you in Italy? I often buy a mix for the bread maker which has everything in and all you need to do is add water and a little bit of olive oil. One packet (costs less than a eruro) makes 2 loaves - perhaps that would be a good starting point.A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot! (Thomas Edward Brown)
Comment
-
Originally posted by stella View PostNope never seen plain flour either. Tippo 00 does make good pasta but as far as I can see it does not rise at all, hence the use for pasta
I just googled "Italian bread flour" and got this: "You could, of course, secure some doppio zero (look for the 00 on the pack) flour from a specialist Italian food supplier"
http://www.italiana.co.uk/basic-reci...ian-bread.htmlLast edited by Two_Sheds; 14-10-2010, 03:26 PM.All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
Comment
-
No we dont have a Lidl only a small local supermarket, so I will have to use one of the 2 sorts of flour on offer but which would be best. What is in strong bread flour that is not in ordinary flour. Perhaps I could buy the ordinary and add baking pow??
Comment
-
-
Just got the book its a morphy richards 48220 series fastbake 48230, it say's dry measurments esp flours must be done using the cup provided and level off with a knife. Liquid, also use the cup and place at eye level, A guesstimate is not good enough.Gardening ..... begins with daybreak
and ends with backache
Comment
-
Does anyone know how many kw a breadmaker uses as we live in a shed and only have 1 plug with 3 kw. If I blow the electricity I dont think I will be very popular
Comment
-
I googled this 800 watt breadmaker for you, just as an example. Other good breadmakers are availableAll gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
Comment
Latest Topics
Collapse
Recent Blog Posts
Collapse
Comment