Food recipes
Pan De Horno (Real Spanish Bread)
Pan De Horno (Real Spanish Bread) Ingredients: wheat flours, bread, unenriched water, bottled, generic wheat flour, white, all-purpose, unenriched salt, table oil, olive, salad or cooking Directions: Mix the yeast in...
Pan De Horno (Real Spanish Bread)
Ingredients:
wheat flours, bread, unenriched
water, bottled, generic
wheat flour, white, all-purpose, unenriched
salt, table
oil, olive, salad or cooking
Directions:
Mix the yeast in the warm water let sit in a warm place for 10 minutes.
Mix the salt with the flour and run through a fine mesh, allowing it to fall into a large bowl.
Using your fingers, mix in the oil or butter.
Slowly pour in the raised yeast while working the dough with your hands so as to produce a firm dough.
Place the dough on a flat surface with some flour sprinkled on it.
Knead the dough until it becomes firm and elastic.
Grease the bowl and place the dough in it.
Cover the bowl with a moist sheet and set in a warm place until the dough has doubled in volume.
Once again, remove the dough and knead it again over a floured tabletop, to remove air pockets and until the dough feels smooth.
Return the dough to a covered bowl and let it rest, 15 minutes should be sufficient.
Cut the dough as desired to form bars, loafs or balls and place on greased pans.
Cut slits in top of bread as desired.
Let bread raise on pans 30 more minutes or until the tops of the bars begin to flatten.
Place in a very hot oven (450 degrees F) for 30 o 50 minutes, or until the tops of the bars become toasted and they sound hollow when knocked on the bottom.
Remove the bread from the pans and let cool.
This recipe comes from a panadero.
It may not come out exactly right the first time, but with practices the results are incredible.
Ingredients:
wheat flours, bread, unenriched
water, bottled, generic
wheat flour, white, all-purpose, unenriched
salt, table
oil, olive, salad or cooking
Directions:
Mix the yeast in the warm water let sit in a warm place for 10 minutes.
Mix the salt with the flour and run through a fine mesh, allowing it to fall into a large bowl.
Using your fingers, mix in the oil or butter.
Slowly pour in the raised yeast while working the dough with your hands so as to produce a firm dough.
Place the dough on a flat surface with some flour sprinkled on it.
Knead the dough until it becomes firm and elastic.
Grease the bowl and place the dough in it.
Cover the bowl with a moist sheet and set in a warm place until the dough has doubled in volume.
Once again, remove the dough and knead it again over a floured tabletop, to remove air pockets and until the dough feels smooth.
Return the dough to a covered bowl and let it rest, 15 minutes should be sufficient.
Cut the dough as desired to form bars, loafs or balls and place on greased pans.
Cut slits in top of bread as desired.
Let bread raise on pans 30 more minutes or until the tops of the bars begin to flatten.
Place in a very hot oven (450 degrees F) for 30 o 50 minutes, or until the tops of the bars become toasted and they sound hollow when knocked on the bottom.
Remove the bread from the pans and let cool.
This recipe comes from a panadero.
It may not come out exactly right the first time, but with practices the results are incredible.