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Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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I've been making a foccacia recipe for the last few months that
turns out tasting good, but something just still doesn't seem correct to me. The recipe I use is out of "Vegeterian Cooking for Everyone" (I'll post here if requested) and the last step is to let it rise on the back of cookie sheet with parchement paper or use a peel dusted with cornmeal. I do the later and then slide it onto my baking stone. As I said, it comes out tasting great (SO and I just ate a whole loaf for dinner!) but the dough just looks very wet and "unstable" when I put it into the oven. In all the baking books I've seen and on TV shows, dough always seems like it's fairly strong and that one could pick it up. When I slide my dough onto the stone, it always ends up getting mishapen, which I then fix by just folding it into the right shape. Do I need a lot more cornmeal or should I just stick to using parchement paper so that I can just slide the whole sheet of paper instead of having to move just the dough? Or is the problem related to something else like not kneading it enough? Tnx, ~Deepak -- Deepak Saxena - - http://www.plexity.net |
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