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Claire is back with the third installation of Try This At Home, a series where she guides you through different baking projects and techniques. And, fittingly, she’s got three recipes for you — all made with the same dough.

Read the story: https://nyti.ms/3oFoj7y

Get the full recipes below!
All-Purpose Enriched Bread: https://nyti.ms/3oBy5as
Hamburger Buns: https://nyti.ms/3u83wKR
Pistachio Morning Buns: https://nyti.ms/3f8PLXT

0:00 – 0:44: Intro
0:44 – 1:17: What is enriched dough?
1:17 – 2:44: Make the tangzhong
2:44 – 7:00: Make the dough
7:00 – 9:22: Windowpane test + 1st proof
9:22 – 14:14: Prepare and proof loaves
14:14 – 15:05: Egg wash and bake
15:05 – 17:49: Perfect hamburger buns
17:49 – 22:05: Pistachio morning buns
22:05 – END: Taste!

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45 Comments

  1. For anyone that needs this
    You need

    Yield:
    2 loaves

    1cup/240 grams whole milk or buttermilk

    6tablespoons/50 grams plus 3¾ cups/490 grams all-purpose flour, plus more, if needed, for work surface

    4 large eggs, chilled ( another one for eggwash )

    2tablespoons vegetable or olive oil

    ¼cup/50 grams granulated sugar

    10grams kosher salt (2¾ teaspoons Diamond Crystal or 1½ teaspoons Morton)

    2teaspoons/6 grams active dry yeast

    ½cup/113 grams unsalted butter (1 stick), cut into ½-inch pieces, chilled, plus more, at room temperature, for pans

  2. I know I'm commenting way late, but it seems to me that coming videos life this are more extended advertising for stand mixers than they are about technique as such. That if ya with smaller kitchens do not have room for every odd small appliance (in my case it was either a stand mixer or a crock pot;; since I had a hand mixer I went with the crock pot).

    I do make bread, kneading by hand or following no-knead recipes, but sometimes I wonder if I'll ever be able to try out a knead recipe that's from later than the 1970s.

  3. So when making the dough, would you recommend you put your stand mixer bowl in the fridge for 30mins before starting just to keep things cold?

  4. This was a great video. It just really sucks that the recipe is behind a pay wall for the New York Times website. I like your videos, and your recipes look great, but I just can't support a publication like the New York Times by paying to subscribe… even for only $2 a month.

  5. After watching Claire's video a million times I finally decided to try it. OMG this is so wonderful! Amazing thready texture just as in the video. Thank you so much. This recipe is a real go-to for me.

  6. my dough just stayed custard like runny consistency & didn't firm up after over an hour mixing & stopping & mixing until I gave up as it was probably too warm at that point despite all ingredients being cold from the fridge at the start😢

  7. Maritozzi, babka, it seems like endless possibilities with this dough, I like that it’s a tangzong brioche hybrid

  8. Video would be better if Claire pronounced Tangzhong properly. Should have consulted a mandarin- speaking friend instead of butchering the pronunciation. The OG is Christine's Recipe's as far as I can remember seeing it on the internet.

  9. I just love you Claire, seriously : )
    I’ve been trying a few of your recipes having a very satisfying result for me and my guests. It’s all of that extra little info, the experience she passes on that makes that difference. I can bake now, and it’s eatable, consistent, and delicious!!! Thank you <3

  10. So I created an account with the NYT Cooking to discover Claire's brioche recipe. I typed Claire's name in the search box and it didn't bring up this brioche bread recipe. Why is this recipe used as a teaser to inspire subscriptions? It's a unclever marketing strategy and feels underhanded. This company seems desperate and pushing boundaries using exceptional recipes as clickbait for subscriptions and not featuring those recipes on website without a paid subscription. I'm moving forward, grateful for the beautiful recipe. NYT here's a reminder there are brioche recipes online change your marketing strategy growth often requires honest exploration.

  11. Does anyone know how this recipe scales? Wanted to double the yield and not sure if doubling every ingredient is gonna mess with the ratios

  12. I make milk bread regularly in large batches (commercial spiral mixer at home), and like brioche it is super versatile. Burger buns, dinner rolls, shokupan, cinnamon rolls, donuts all great. Even made hot crossed buns with it over Easter. I will say that it is not that hard to make by hand though, I made it by hand for some years. 30min autolyse and then kneading with a few breaks until it passes the window pane test and you're good. You won't get the same gluten development as a spiral mixer, but the end product is still great.

  13. I’ve tried to hit the ceiling with a broom when they got too loud upstairs!! I hate neighbors with utter passion because I truly love quietness!!!😂❤❤😂😂

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