It’s not that I like violence, exactly. I’m more of the
passive-aggressive type. But every once in a while I like to get tough. I like to inflict pain upon unsuspecting heaps of butter and flour. (Maniacal laugh.) Here’s
how it all went down with the brioche dough needed for pecan sticky buns:
The war zone on day three |
But where was the slap?
Grind grind, sgush sgush. No slap.
Glurp. Glurp. Grrrrblup. Still no slap.
Check recipe. Breathe.
All right, time to get serious. Add more flour, be patient.
I won’t do anything for at least two more minutes. Tick tick. One minute passes….Must... Add... More... Flour.
Glurp. Grind. Glurp.
Still no slap? What the…?
Forget the recipe: I know better.
I stopped measuring. I stopped counting minutes. I threw all
caution to the wind and moved on pure instinct. More flour, more!
And finally, the dough began to cooperate. At last I
achieved that sought-after rhythmic slap. My baker's high kicked in. Brioche dough, I
will destroy you! (Some days I like to coddle my baked babies, but I was in a domineering
mood by now. And I know you talk to your dough too. Admit it.)
By this point, the KitchenAid was getting pretty heated up over all the
work it was forced to do. I was secretly hoping it would finally poop out on me
so I could save the day with my kick-ass hand-kneading skills. (Flex Captain
America biceps.) But no luck. The mixer persevered. At least I didn’t have to aggravate
the old carpel-tunnel syndrome. (Sad face emoticon.)
Look at my butter layers! |
Yeah, the gorgeous dough fell apart at this point, but eventually I got it to behave. I knew I could do it all along.
The rest of the project proceeded as expected: Add butter. A
little more butter. Now add some more. Roll dough into submission. Incarcerate
in refrigerator for awhile. Remove from fridge and add more butter. Re-roll. Just
for a little more punishment, place dough in solitary confinement in the freezer. Remove
from freezer, slice into rounds. Add pecans, butter and some brown sugar. No,
more than that. More. A little more. Okay, good.
Ignore for two hours. Bake. Flip onto plate. Torment family
with enticing scent of warmed butter, cinnamon and sugar, but refuse to let
anyone taste a morsel for at least an hour until buns are cooled and brunch
guests arrive. (Looks good. Evil happy dance.)
Another winner. After three days of perfecting my torture
techniques, it better be.
Thanks to Lynn of Eat Drink Man
Woman Dogs Cat for hosting this week. You can find the recipe
at her blog as well as at the blog of our other host, Nicole of Cookies on Friday.
love the sticky coating on yours!!! absolutely loved this recipe!!
ReplyDeleteYes, this was not an easy "slapper". And I totally used my hands to squish the butter...
ReplyDeleteFun post
Nice butter layers! I enjoy your writing, too!
ReplyDeleteGreat post! I also talk to most of my doughs/foods - you have to let them know who's boss!
ReplyDeleteFun post! Your butter layers are impressive, mine didn't turn out nearly as neat. I think I read right past the instructions to listen for the dough to slap - I'll have to pay more attention next time.
ReplyDelete