Am trying to make a dark rye loaf like you’d find on a stall or in a shop. Not the really dense ‘pumpernickel’ style but round or oblong tin shaped.
Have tried various percentages of strong dark rye, muscovado sugar and black treacle but the loaf is still not that dark. I did try some cocoa in one loaf but that just gave an odd colour.
Am using a Panasonic bread machine and in over 5 years it’s only ever produced a couple of duff loaves - which were down to me (forgetting yeast, mixer blade or water) and often use it for the dough function and then finish in oven. Am not averse to resorting to full manual though if needed.
Any ideas?
TIA
- Lemvi ( @Lemvi@lemmy.sdf.org ) 12•8 months ago
I know that the industry commonly uses malt extract, sugar beet syrup, caramel syrup, or roasted malt
- Baggins ( @FatLegTed@piefed.social ) 2•8 months ago
I’ll try and track some down - thanks
- elooto ( @elooto@lemmy.ml ) English4•8 months ago
I don’t know about baking, but homebrew stores carry roasted malts that give a similar dark color to porters and stouts.
- Feydaikin ( @Faydaikin@beehaw.org ) 10•8 months ago
My understanding is that it’s usually a matter of malt.
My old boss (chef) used to make these dark malt buns that were beyond delicious. People would snatch them up like there was no tomorrow.