8 large egg yolks
1 cup granulated sugar, divided
1.5 cups heavy cream
2 cups mascarpone (16 ounces)
PREPARATION
Cooking with the Kees
Monica’s Focaccia
Ingredients for 5 focaccia
715 g of pizza flour
560-570 g of ice water (if kneaded with a mixer)
3 g of dry yeast
14 g of salt
14 g of extra virgin olive oil
Half-recipe:
357 g of pizza flour
280-285 ml of ice water
1.5 g of dry yeast
7 g of salt
7 g of extra virgin olive oil
Directions:
Put flour and yeast into mixing bowl with dough hook
Pour 300ml (150ml for half recipe) ice water in, mix on lowest speed for 1 minute
Switch to speed 2 for 7-8 minutes
Add salt
Add oil, run mixer til absorbed
Add remaining water (in half recipe: 135ml) very slowly – so little that you give it time to “restring” before continuing, this can take several minutes
Total kneading time is 20-30 minutes (do not let dough overheat)
Transfer dough to very large bowl
Fold dough 2-3 times, cover bowl with plastic wrap
Let dough rise for 1-3 hours until it’s doubled in size
Then put in refrigerator and let continue to rise for 24 hours (ideally 30)
Stretch dough out in plenty of flour into long loaves
Cook at about 500 degrees for 10-12 minutes
From mypizzacorner.com
For the dough
Water (room temperature) – 360g (about 1.5 cups)
Pizza Flour (00 flour) – 640g (about 4 cups)
Salt (fine) – 14g (about 1 tsp)
Yeast (dried or fresh) – around 0.2g to 0.5g (depending on yeast type & room temperature)
Tips:
This recipe is for a 24 hour prove, so make pizza the night before (or, even better, 2-3 days before)
Check out pizza dough calculator here to find out the exact amount of yeast required. This will usually be between 0.2g – 0.5g depending on the type of yeast and your room temperature.
Directions:
Mix all the ingredients with a dough hook in mixer bowl, starting by adding the water first.
Cover the bowl with cling film and leave the dough to rest for around 1 hour
Turn the dough out onto the counter and knead for around 5 minutes.
Place the dough back into the bowl and cover.
Leave the dough to prove for around 20 hours in fridge.
Divide the dough into 4 equal parts (250g each) using some kitchen scales and a knife (or dough scraper). Ball dough.
Place each dough ball into a small bowl and cover. Alternatively, use a large tupperware container with a lid.
Leave the dough balls to prove again for about 4-6 hours, or 1-2 days more in fridge.
https://glebekitchen.com/neapolitan-pizza-dough/
Ingredients
369 grams Italian 0 or 00 flour
236 grams cold (refrigerated) water
10 grams salt
Sourdough starter or dry yeast – quantity based on temperature (in our garage, .07g)
Using instant dry yeast
For our garage temperature (64 degrees) use .07 grams of yeast
Add the water to the bowl. Add 2/3 of the flour and the dry yeast and mix manually.
Add the salt.
Make the dough
Turn your stand mixer with dough hook on to its lowest setting. Mix for about a minute and a half. Add the remaining flour.
Continue mixing until the timer goes off (six minutes). Look at your dough. If it’s one cohesive ball, it’s good to go. If not, run your mixer for another minute or so.
Remove the dough from the mixing bowl. Knead manually 25-30 times.
Cover and let rest for 12 minutes. Use a timer.
After 12 minutes, do 2-3 slap and folds. That’s described in the text above.
Cover and let rest another 12 minutes or so. Set a timer so you don’t forget.
After 12 minutes, repeat the slap and fold. Put the entire dough ball into a Tupperware. Store the dough in the room you used to measure the temperature (for deciding yeast amounts). Let the dough sit for around 24 hours.
After 24 hours ball the dough. Use your scale to help you divide the dough. I shoot for around 307 grams.
Place it into round Tupperware containers. Let sit another 24 hours.
When you are ready to cook, open the dough. Dress the pizza to your taste. Cook the pizza at 750F or so for around 90 seconds. Pay attention. At these temperatures things can go very wrong, very fast.
Ingredients
450g strong white flour (about 2.75 cups), plus a little extra (50g?) for rolling out
80g softened butter, plus a little extra to grease the baking tray (about 6 tbsp)
80g caster sugar (a little over 1/3 cup)
2 free-range eggs
5 tsp baking powder
250ml milk or cream
1 free-range egg, beaten with a little salt (for glazing)
To serve: butter, jam, clotted cream
Method
Preheat the oven to 400 (425 without fan)
Lightly grease a baking tray with butter and line it with baking or silicone paper (not greaseproof).
Put 450g of the flour into a large bowl and add the butter. Rub the flour and butter together with your fingers to create a breadcrumb-like mixture.
Add the sugar, eggs and baking powder and use a wooden spoon to turn the mixture gently. Make sure you mix all the way down to the bottom and incorporate all of the ingredients.
Now add half of the milk and keep turning the mixture gently with the spoon to combine. Then add the remaining milk a little at a time and bring everything together to form a very soft, wet dough. (You may not need to add all of the milk.)
Sprinkle most of the remaining flour onto a clean work surface. Tip the soft dough out onto the work surface and sprinkle the rest of the flour on top. The mixture will be wet and sticky.
Use your hands to fold the dough in half, then turn the dough 90 degrees and repeat. By folding and turning the mixture in this way (called 'chaffing'), you incorporate the last of the flour and add air. Do this a few times until you’ve formed a smooth dough. If the mixture becomes too sticky use some extra flour to coat the mixture or your hands to make it more manageable. Be careful not to overwork your dough.
Next roll the dough out: sprinkle flour onto the work surface and the top of the dough, then use the rolling pin to roll up from the middle and then down from the middle. Turn the dough by 90 degrees and continue to roll until it’s about 2.5cm/1in thick. ‘Relax’ the dough slightly by lifting the edges and allowing the dough to drop back onto the work surface.
Using a pastry cutter, stamp out rounds from the pastry and place them onto the baking tray. Dip the edge of the pastry cutter in flour to make it easier to cut out the scones without them sticking. Don’t twist the cutter – just press firmly, then lift it up and push the dough out.
Once you’ve cut 4 or 5 rounds you can re-work and re-roll the dough to make it easier to cut out the remaining rounds. Any leftover dough can be worked and rolled again, but the resulting scones won’t be as fluffy.
Place the scones on the baking tray and leave them to rest for a few minutes to let the baking powder work. Then use a pastry brush (or your finger if you don’t have a brush) to glaze them with the beaten egg and salt mixture. Be careful to keep the glaze on the top of the scones. (If it runs down the sides it will stop them rising evenly.)
Bake the scones in the middle of the oven for 15 minutes, or until the scones are risen and golden-brown.
Leave the scones to cool, then split in half and add butter, jam and clotted cream to serve.