Back in January, my cousin messages me, "Have you seen the cookbook "Mooncakes and Milk Bread"? I got it from the library, this girl knows what's up." That's pretty much all the convincing I needed to buy Kristina Cho's Mooncakes & Milk Bread. This cookbook is filled with some of my Chinese bakery favorites like cocktail buns, pineapple buns, egg tarts, as well as some new creative recipes such as "After-school PB&J buns" (PB&J filled milk bun rolls!). Every night, I read a few new recipes and get more excited to try them out.
As my first recipe to try, I decided to go with the main star of the show --- "Mother of All Milk Bread." This is the foundation recipe that she uses for most of her baked bread recipes in her book, so it seemed like an important one to nail down! It had been a few years since I had made tangzhong breads (used to use Christine's Recipes tangzhong bread recipes and they worked well!), so I dusted off those old skills and got to work.
(Cha siu bao, made back in 2011!)
(Maybe I should try making these again??)
I started going through her recipe and everything had been going fine until I started to knead the dough. I remember thinking that the dough was a bit stiffer than I thought it would be. Kristina specifically said this would be a sticky / hard to work with dough especially if you were hand kneading, which I was. I contemplated adding some more liquid at that time, but decided I wanted to try to follow as closely to the recipe as I could. Note, I did already substitute instant yeast for active yeast, and table salt for coarse salt, but this was approved by Kristina in her notes about ingredients. Anyway, I proceeded on to knead the dough the best I could and then let it rise for its first proof.
After about 2 hours, I checked on it again and I couldn't tell if it had "doubled" because...it's hard to tell when the dough is in a stainless steel bowl! I was anxious to move on with the recipe, so I did. At this point, I ended up splitting up half of my dough to make cocktail buns, and half of them to make mini loaf pans. I really should have just stuck to one recipe for the first time, but I couldn't help myself. I shaped my buns, and let them proof a second time. Again, I was not sure if my proofing was adequate, but I kept marching on.
Eventually the buns were baked, the kitchen smelled divine, and the buns came out looking great with a beautiful browned color. However, when I finally tried them, they were not as airy or moist as they should be.
(Cocktail buns filled with a sweet coconut filling. You can see that the bun is a bit dense.)
Evidently, I had made some mistakes.
So I analyzed the process and what I had done. What were my possible mistakes? I narrowed it down to a few possible things:
I was ready to try again the next day, but before I did, I came across this King Arthur article "How to convert a bread recipe to tangzhong". It's a great read that dives into the science of hydration levels and the effects of including tangzhong. They walk through how to calculate hydration levels, and how to adjust it for tangzhong recipe. Their recommendation is that the dough hydration level, which for typical sandwich/dinner rolls is about 60-65%, should be 75% for tanzhong breads. This is because some of the liquid that is used for making the tangzhong is "trapped" by the tangzhong, and does not help with your bread's final texture. That got me curious -- what was the hydration level of Kristina's Milk Bread recipe?
In the basic form of calculating hydration, you take the total weight of liquids and divide it by the total weight of your flour. However, at the end of the KA article, they included a "Extra credit: determining water content" where they list out the different water content for typical bread ingredients for even more accurate hydration calculations. Old high school math nerd and straight-A student me could not resist the extra credit option! It was time to break out the calculator.
Kristina's recipe was as follows:
Tangzhong
Milk bread
So the liquids in this recipe were milk (225g total = 100g from tangzhong, 125g from dough), egg, and butter. The flour was a total of 355g. The water percentage listed for each of the wet ingredients are as follows:
We can use the above information to calculate the water weight of the wet ingredients:
This summed up to a total of 241.55g water. Dividing this by the total flour weight (355g):
Interesting! So this was slightly below the recommended hydration level of 75% per the KA article. The next step then was to determine how much extra milk I needed to add to reach the 75% hydration:
I needed to add about 28g of milk to the recipe!
So the first change I made to the recipe was using 153g of milk instead of 125g in the bread dough. The second thing I changed was to not heat up the milk because I was using instant yeast. Instant yeast does not have to proof active dry yeast and rather than risk boiling off my preciously calculated water and also risking killing my yeast from too-hot milk, I decided to just use room temperature milk. The third thing I changed was proofing my dough in a clear bucket with markers so i could actually see how much it rose.
So how did this dough compare to the first run? It was much stickier, much more pliable, and much softer. Though I did not knead until the dough passed the "window pane" test, it got pretty close. My kneaded dough was smoother and more airy. It also reminded me more of the higher-hydration sourdoughs I had worked with in the recent (pandemic) years. I had high hopes for it.
Oh, and the fourth thing I changed - sticking to one recipe. I chose to go with the 3-segment loaf, baked in a pullman pan for that square sandwich bread. At this point, I also decided to look up different ways of rolling up my swirls. I landed on this YouTube video about pullman loaf shokupan (Japanese white bread)/ tangzhong bread and ended up following those instructions, which involved two rounds of rolling. Their results looked pretty great, so I hoped mine would too.
(Milk bread rolls before 2nd proof)
(2nd proof - proofed to about 75% of container height)
And it came out pretty well! The dough rose all the way to the top of the pullman pan, creating a nice square loaf. Sides did end up shrinking in a bit after cooling, but this was expected. The resulting bread was soft, moist, and flavorful. When you're kneading the butter into this dough, you'll realize that the bread is pretty much pre-buttered. No wonder why it tastes so great plain!
I'm excited by how this came out, and I look forward to trying out more of Kristina's recipes! I don't think it was her recipe that was the issue for my first failed run because I've heard of many other people having great success with her recipe. I may try her original recipe again but keeping the tweak of not heating up the milk for the instant yeast. Either way, the first failed run gave way to a great learning experience on hydration calculation for tangzhong doughs, and I can't wait to make more!
(Adapted from Kristina Cho's "Mother of All Milk Bread" recipe)
Hand kneaded, and baked in a 9" x 4" x 4" pullman loaf pan.
Tangzhong
Milk bread