- Location
- Next door to Mr Benn at No 54
Making bread can be a real pain in the bum, or is that Pita for short?
Now you're just looking up lists of bread types on wikipedia to find puns.
Anyway what I like skol said is correct. You need to activate yeast in warm water with sugar and wait for it to go frothy before you use it.
Then when you've made the dough you leave it somewhere WARM to rise and you leave it there for AGES.
Making bread can be a real pain in the bum, or is that Pita for short?
Now you're just looking up lists of bread types on wikipedia to find puns.
Anyway what I like skol said is correct. You need to activate yeast in warm water with sugar and wait for it to go frothy before you use it.
Then when you've made the dough you leave it somewhere WARM to rise and you leave it there for AGES.
Having read all the replies, I've come to the conclusion that it was a partially dead population in the little packet. The French stick experiment was, due to its disproportionate amount of oil, inedible and so I put it on the balcony for the birds yesterday. They didn't notice it until this morning which ordinarily would have been fine but it was -20 deg C last night and so it was a bit like ferroconcrete when they got round to it. So I broke it into even smaller pieces (no easy task!) and watched five blackbirds and two sparrows scrapping over it. The raisin bread is edible although a bit dry due to me not putting butter in (it was in the recipe but I didn't notice it). I did however bung some cinnamon in which makes it OK. It's not bad with a bit of orange marmalade on it. Lessons learned: use young vigorous yeast, slow down and read the recipe properly and if you must halve the quantities make sure you do it for all ingredients!