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How To Make Homemade Bread (English Edition) Formato Kindle
In How to Make Homemade Bread you will find simple tried and true recipes and tips to help you get started making your own delicious homemade bread and homemade cinnamon rolls just like grandma made.
How to Make Homemade Bread includes all the tools and information you need to avoid disasters and make good bread right from the first loaf-- and you don't need specialty items like brick stones or special pans.
You can make crusty breads and soft breads in a regular oven with ingredients you already have on hand using this wonderful collection of delicious and wholesome recipes. Easily make these recipes at home, enjoying the process from start to finish. How to Make Homemade Bread includes easy to follow directions that make baking fun, rewarding and simple, even for the amateur baker.
Get "How to Make Homemade Bread" today and enjoy fresh homemade bread tonight!
- LinguaInglese
- Data di pubblicazione5 gennaio 2014
- Dimensioni file971 KB
Dettagli prodotto
- ASIN : B009XTVHTM
- Editore : LivingOnADime.com (5 gennaio 2014)
- Lingua : Inglese
- Dimensioni file : 971 KB
- Da testo a voce : Abilitato
- Screen Reader : Supportato
- Miglioramenti tipografici : Abilitato
- X-Ray : Abilitato
- Word Wise : Abilitato
- Memo : Su Kindle Scribe
- Lunghezza stampa : 47 pagine
- Recensioni dei clienti:
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Easy to read and a great do it yourself book. And yes the loaf of bread you end up with you can actually eat.
Dive in and punch that dough, knead it and enjoy it.




Some of the tips are helpful (method to raise bread) but others are largely superfluous. Tips on freezing dough, reducing yeast, and using potatoes/potato water, while nice, are probably more than a beginning baker needs to know and could lead to confusion, since they appear right at the beginning of the book. Stating that you can't knead bread too much is true, but is missing the important caveat that it is true only if you are kneading by hand. It is quite possible to over-knead with a mixer.
I also felt that there were some very important steps and hints for beginners that were missing from this book. Water temperature guidance - I was always taught "baby bath" temperature (use the inside of your wrist; if it is warm but not hot there, yeast will also be happy) - was one thing missing. For me, this type of guideline is much more helpful than "120 degrees". There also is no instruction in actually HOW to knead. When I work with new bakers, this seems to be the most intimidating part - they don't know physically what to do with dough to knead it. There is also no real instruction (other than the standard "smooth and elastic") as to how to know that the dough has been kneaded enough - no tests or clues like windowpane or a moon crater surface.
The recipes look nice and there are recipes for bread machine, dinner rolls, cinnamon rolls, etc., in addition to traditional breads by hand. I don't like the format very much, as it comes off more like a blog (with 'reader comments') than a standard cookbook.