What are you baking today (2026)?

Z-Cook

I made my kimmelweck today from this recipe. I find, yet again, that dough recipes without weights are a pita. I probably added another 1/4 cup of flour, easy, to keep from having a gloopy mess. To do again I'd decrease the water by 1/4 cup. The dough was too wet for a new razor to cut the slits...

Anyhow:
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Z-Cook

I made my kimmelweck today from this recipe. I find, yet again, that dough recipes without weights are a pita. I probably added another 1/4 cup of flour, easy, to keep from having a gloopy mess. To do again I'd decrease the water by 1/4 cup. The dough was too wet for a new razor to cut the slits...

Anyhow:View attachment 141096
Yep...
Going by weight is the way to go.
The rolls do look nice though
 
Z-Cook

I made my kimmelweck today from this recipe. I find, yet again, that dough recipes without weights are a pita. I probably added another 1/4 cup of flour, easy, to keep from having a gloopy mess. To do again I'd decrease the water by 1/4 cup. The dough was too wet for a new razor to cut the slits...

Anyhow:View attachment 141096
They came out really well!
You were right to add flour - the recipe comes to +- 72% hydration bc of the egg whites. - very wet as you say
Adding +-30g/1/4c flour (460g total) lowers that to abt 66% hydration which is a good general purpose hydration imo.

This is my conversion to weight/metric as written:

21⁄2 teaspoons active dry yeast (1envelope) = 3gΓ—2.5= 8g
1 cup water, lukewarm = 240g
2 tablespoons vegetable oil = 30g
1 tablespoon sugar = 12g
1⁄2 tablespoon salt 1.5tsp or half for fine salt
teaspoon honey or 1 teaspoon barley malt syrup
2 large egg whites @ abt 33g ea = 66g
3 - 3 1⁄4 cups bread flour (preferably high-gluten) @ 140g per cup = 420g

1 tablespoon water = 15g
coarse salt, and caraway seed, for sprinkling

β€Š
If you add 30g flour, you get 460g flour to 306 liquid(240g water +66g egg whites) = +- 66% hydration

Pretty much what I use for my brioche rolls - I use one lrg egg in the mix

I don't think you need to get silly precise - a good consistent ballpark is good.
 
They came out really well!
You were right to add flour - the recipe comes to +- 72% hydration bc of the egg whites. - very wet as you say
Adding +-30g/1/4c flour (460g total) lowers that to abt 66% hydration which is a good general purpose hydration imo.

This is my conversion to weight/metric as written:

21⁄2 teaspoons active dry yeast (1envelope) = 3gΓ—2.5= 8g
1 cup water, lukewarm = 240g
2 tablespoons vegetable oil = 30g
1 tablespoon sugar = 12g
1⁄2 tablespoon salt 1.5tsp or half for fine salt
teaspoon honey or 1 teaspoon barley malt syrup
2 large egg whites @ abt 33g ea = 66g
3 - 3 1⁄4 cups bread flour (preferably high-gluten) @ 140g per cup = 420g

1 tablespoon water = 15g
coarse salt, and caraway seed, for sprinkling

β€Š
If you add 30g flour, you get 460g flour to 306 liquid(240g water +66g egg whites) = +- 66% hydration

Pretty much what I use for my brioche rolls - I use one lrg egg in the mix

I don't think you need to get silly precise - a good consistent ballpark is good.
Thank you. They're pretty good too, I've had 2 already. 🀀

Did you factor in the snow we're having??? πŸ˜…
 
Thank you. They're pretty good too, I've had 2 already. 🀀
and
Did you factor in the snow we're having??? πŸ˜…
πŸ‘
BTW, I've found that it's not wetter dough that gives a better rise (gives more/bigger holes tho as in pizza and ciabatta etc) but more yeast (the 2.5 tsp in this recipe does that) plus eggs help IMO.
 
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