If there's one thing I could forbid my parents from doing, it would be to ban them from buying bread outside. I tried the last time they visited Australia while I still lived in Brisbane and I failed. The first morning after I issued my ban, I saw commercial bread in the kitchen. After analysing the situation I am thoroughly convinced that great improvement must be made in my bread making skills to achieve such thing. My objection, thus, is to make bread so good that my parents not only keep quiet (silence is a sign of approval in my family) but they'd express some sort of positive emotion.
Typical Asian bread is soft and sweet. My grandmother particularly loves the soft pillowy buns that we buy from Kaisar Bakery at home (not to be mistaken with Kayser). There's not really a name for it but something generic. I've been looking through my bread book wondering what it is exactly. Is it brioche? Challah perhaps? Milk bread?
I saw the lemon curd brioche croissant in
Knead for Bread and I decided to give it a go. Trouble is that I prefer my citrus uncomplicated, untouched... simply served wedged. So.... I made a chocolate brioche croissants instead. All you have to do is make a thick chocolate ganache for the filling.
Knead for Bread had so kindly put up a step by step guide accompanied by pictures, however I went with my own little recipe for brioche, using fresh milk instead of water to further enrich the bread.
It makes a pretty neat breakfast bread or tea party snacks for those of you who, like me, never quite grown up. :P
3 comments:
Pain au chocolate is my favorite splurge in Paris and elsewhere when I can find a good one. I like the idea of doing it with brioche! It looks wonderful.
That looks absolutely delightful. I hope it passed your families seal of approval.
I will test it on my family the next chance I get. Pain au chocolat sounds deliciously dangerous for my waist line! :D
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