Larissa, so I tried to analyze
I sifted 190 grams of flour into a cotton bucket. I crumbled yeast into warm milk. I put it in a bowl of warm water. The yeast stood for about 10 minutes, in places it began to bubble from the edges. Shuffled them. I didn't add sugar with flour. They did not grow with a hat.Yeast begins to ferment if it has anything. And you just soaked them in the water, your 10 minutes didn't solve anything,
If you wanted to activate them to the cap, then you had to use flour and sugar to feed
It was getting late and I was in a hurry. I decided to stand them all night and sent the milk and yeast mixture into flour. I kneaded for a minute, turned it off and left.
She returned after 17 minutes and continued kneading for 2 minutes.
yeah, this is the source of your lumps.
someday take an egg and add a lot of sugar to it, try to mix it into an eggnog and you will run into lumps.
Egg foams are resistant and resilient. Against them, only liquid can be used or a blender, if you create them on your head in the dough.
Your thoughts below are completely correct. So to speak, your version of dancing with tambourines
It is probably necessary to grind it a little in a coffee grinder to make it easier to disperse.
further, the process is not so important in terms of kneading. here you just need to thoroughly mix in.
so from experience
I drew attention to this and the second time introduced all the same in small portions, gradually carefully mixing. As a result, the dough "left for the night" in the consistency of thick liquid honey, without a hint of lumps ...
In my opinion, I do not see the need to strongly beat the whites into a dense foam, since such
elastic foam will mix worse
I see no need
grind the yolks with a lot of sugar, which, according to all the laws of physics, is in them
not dissolve.
If you are so eager to have whipped whites, then you can make "soft peaks", just
soft foam.
The proteins in the dough are identical to the liquid, so adding to the dough
proteins first in
soft form, and not yolks with sugar, will then provide easier dissolution of sugar.
Rubbing the yolks with sugar is only necessary to better dissolve the sugar in the dough. Therefore, it is not at all necessary to torment the yolks with a large amount of sugar. You can even half, you can grind the sugar into powder, or you can just buy fine high-quality sugar and just add it to the dough after the yolks, which will already be normally liquid.
You can hold three tablespoons of milk or water for yolks with sugar, it mixes much easier, especially when warm. And it is necessary not just to mix until lumps, but beat until whitening, the sugar is completely dissolved.
Anything, if only the sugar is dispersed, and yolk-sugar lumps with protein islands are not formed.
The program ended and I started kneading the dough again for 12 minutes. Total 32 minutes. The lumps never parted.
it is no longer necessary. After kneading the first dough, it is only important to mix thoroughly. Kneading is no longer relevant.
Added melted butter. I kneaded for another 2 minutes and turned off the x / n. When I poured the dough into a saucepan, I thought that I should have tried to strain it from lumps through a coarse sieve.
But since I already poured it, I decided to leave it and see what happens next. Maybe they will disperse during the kneading process. The dough looked like Izyumkino.
At 24.10 I put the dough. T in the kitchen 25 C.
At 4.30 she looked at the dough, poked her finger. In the photo there is a dimple from the finger on top.further strange effect
At 4.50 she got up and lowered her, she was afraid that she would fall. Dough rose to 2 liters of 370 ml. I then topped up the water to the place of the rise.
At 9.30 am the dough grows.
At 9.45 began to frown and sag, not rising to its original height ~ 1.5 cm. Second rise up to 1 liter of 850 ml.it is completely incomprehensible why the dough began to grow weaker.
Why did she frown and fall off? Since you did not allow her to outgrow, she had to add to the original height without any fall. Or maybe the first ascent "stalled", but you did not notice?
This moment is strange. The yeast should not have weakened, then why did the gluten weaken, which it could not stand?
Perhaps the flour turned out to be weak and it was necessary to knead it early?
What was the smell of the dough? haven't you overexposed it? somewhere similar
jointbut I don’t understand where.
At 10.05 I added another 190 grams of flour, kneading for 3 minutes.
Rest 32 minutes. After that, the dough was kneaded without additional flour. First with a litter.
.........
This time the cakes were made without flour.
Let the yeast play. (I don’t know this in principle?) The impurity in the dough is probably due to the fact that it was holding flour with a milk-yeast mixture. Then the cotton did not cope with kneading.
Already after baked I found it at Raisin. On page 10, Zest wrote: “For the dough, I do everything step by step, as I showed in the pictures, I knead it not very long until approximate homogeneity, so that the ingredients do not remain by themselves in different" corners "of the container. But of course, there is no need to develop gluten in the dough ...If you are sure of leaps and bounds, then you can even without "letting it play", it is enough to withstand the dough in the warmth, they will work themselves. Lux are strong, they can cope without activation, while others weaker can be spurred on by activation.
The impurity in the dough is associated, on the one hand, with insufficient moisture in the first dough, on the other, with an excess of sugar in the yolks for mixing. And ... remember the biscuit.
There, at the beginning of this beating, lumps appear, and then after continuing beating, the yolks with sugar turn into a homogeneous mass, unless, of course, there is an excess of sugar.
The highlight not only did it knead the dough with a higher moisture content, it also forcibly applied energy to break these lumps in a blender, as we beat in a biscuit for a long time.
That is, "grind" is not entirely correct. It is more correct to "dissolve", beat, since you decided to mix the yolks with sugar. And the yolks with sugar dissolve more easily, beat with a couple of spoons of hot water
No wonder they write in old recipes: mix sugar with yolks until whitening.
There are only two ways for these lumps: either you dissolve them in the yolks, as in the mogul-mogul, biscuit, or in the liquid of the first dough, if there is enough of it.
Lumps, among other things, did not dissolve HP for you. If you rubbed intensively with a silicone spatula before adding oil, you would have achieved more.
However, all these dances with a tambourine are not needed, if the dough is kneaded more moist, the foams are softened, sugar is not immediately pushed entirely into the yolks with the formation of lumps,
add ingredients a little at a time.
Or - do not rush with slippers, beat sugar until whitening with whole eggs without any lumps. This will save time and get the beating of eggs so desired by everyone.
And you see, your flour forms gluten in 30 minutes better than immediately. The pause before kneading was good.Perhaps you can try to increase it to 40 minutes, if you make the dough softer next time.