The brownie recipe!

The brownie recipe

The brownie recipe! Yes, it is uploaded HERE. This is my recipe for a brownie, chocolatey, gooey, not too sweet.  I made it one day when friends were visiting between the very short time of ending a bushwalk and them getting back on the road with what was going to be an empty stomach.

I have read a number of good posts about brownies, wondering when I would finally find a recipe I would really like.  This blogger went on a mission of recipe testing,  others (there is a good post I read a couple times, just can’t find it now)  discuss the different versions: with cocoa (which I must say I have not yet tried) vs with chocolate, more cake-like, more fudge-like.  As for me I tend to like a brownie with some texture and a melting centre.

The brownie must be not too sweet, this is important as many brownies recipes have enormous amounts of sugar. Note that it is not sugar free either.  One of the keys of a good brownie is using brown sugar. It holds moisture better than white sugar due to the molasses.

Another important ingredient is the chocolate you use.  I like using 70% dark cooking chocolate. For some of you, it may be a bit strong, you can then use a bittersweet chocolate or 60% dark chocolate of good quality. If you are going to use milk chocolate for the choc chip in this recipe, decrease the white sugar by 40 g.  Now if you want a brownie for the children, try this brownie recipe with dulce de leche (i.e. caramel sweet concentrated milk) , my children love it!

chocolate and nuts soft brownies

Bread and brioche

A good brioche is a treat.  I use this start brioche recipe on this blog but do not necessarily shape it as a star brioche.  How beautiful!  Note that for a nice brioche, you will need a dough hook mixer.

This bread is our usual family stapple, I have now years of baking our bread. If you started on the journey and ended up with a brick, don’t be disheartened, try again.   If you have started going into sourdough bread making, you may want to read the tips on my sourdough bread making recipe. I do mostly baguettes now (I started with loaves, balls).  Sourdough baguettes are made from pretty much the same recipe but wetter (i.e. more sticky), see HERE.

briochhe parisienne et baguettes au levain
French brioche and sourdough baguettes, all homemade

 

Sourdough Baguettes

This recipe will make four  sourdough baguettes.  The baguette length is about 40 cm ( to fit in a home oven).  These sourdough baguettes have  beautiful crust and great bubbles inside.  They are delicious.

baguette

There is no dry yeast added in this recipe (not necessary). You will need an active starter.

As for all sourdough bread making, there is flexibility in the timing of the dough making and baking. Assuming STEP 1 (see below) is complete (24 hours required), in terms of timing for the making of your baguettes,  I propose two approaches:

  1. Shorter time-frame: start in the morning and have  sourdough baguette by mid-afternoon or dinner.  In that case, the second rising is done at room temperature.
  2. Longer time frame: if you want your baguette for, let’s say, Sunday morning, you would start the making sometimes on the Saturday, the latest mid-afternoon. Your sourdough baguettes will do the second rising in the fridge overnight.

NOTE: I posted this recipe a few years ago. I have slightly changed the ratio of starter to flour&water since. In the end, the wet to dry ratio is the same. What changes is the proportion of starter in the mix.   These days I do not use the Kitchen id for the baguette dough. I would punch it once  about half an hour after mixing the dough and forget the bowl (covered with a tea towel) in the fridge until the next day.  That leaves plenty of time for the yeast to slowly develop and grow. The next day, I shape them, let them rise, and bake them.

sourdough baguettes
A recent photos which I uploaded when updating this recipe
Starter

You will need 500 g of active starter. Once your starter is developed, don’t forget to save a little for next time.  I do not cover here how to develop a starter.  Here are a few pages that can help:

sourdough baguette
Healthy starter (developed)

For my starter I used organic rye flour and bottled water. Organic rye flour because it has the natural yeast you are after and bottled water because there is no added chlorine.  Then you will want to use unbleached white bread flour, organic or not. It worked every time, give it a go.  For the water, once the starter is established, tap water is fine, the yeast will at that stage be strong enough to resist a little chlorine.

A starter takes a few bread cycles to develop to its full strength.

Alternatively, contact me and we can explore options of me sending you some starter (I have done so before).

Ingredients:

Note: flour in this recipe is bakers flour.

  • 500 g of starter
  • 750 g of bread flour
  • 550 of water
  • 14 g of salt
  • spare flour for dusting

UPDATED RATIOS:

  • 225 g of starter
  • 890 g of bread flour
  • 640 g of water
  • 14 g of salt

You will also need:

  • Optional – a stand mixer with a dough hook (see tip in method if you do not have it)
  • a dough scraper
  • baguette tins (enough for 4 baguettes).  You can do without, the baguettes will be a bit flatter on the bottom.
  • a few clean tea towel
  • a large plastic bag
Method:
STEP 1:  Starter development and pre-fermentation.

Twenty four hours before preparing the dough, feed your starter to obtain 500 g of active starter. In my case I mix the kept starter (150 g) with 200  of flour and 200 g of water and leave in the corner of the kitchen for 24 hours. Leave at room temperature until it is about three times the size. If you are starting from another quantity of saved starter develop to obtain 550 g .  The 50 g extra is what you save to keep your starter for the next batch.

At the same time, mix in a plastic box the 750 g of flour with the 550 g of water, make a very rough dough. Place the lid on and put in the fridge overnight.

STEP 2: Dough making

Have your starter for the next batch? Take 50 g of developed starter from the starter, add to those 50 g, 50 g of water and 50 g of flour. Mix and place in the fridge for up to a week. If you are not a frequent baker, decrease the water to 25 g, this will keep the starter fed for longer, about two weeks.

Place the 500 g of starter, the water-flour mix and the salt in the mixer bowl.  Mix on low-speed for about five minutes or until the dough forms a ball and no longer stick to the side of the bowl.  Do not exceed ten minutes, you then run the risk of over-developing the dough.

Tip: if you do not have a mixer or prefer to do it by hand, this works as well. In a large bowl, place the flour, the developed starter, the water and the salt. Ensure the salt is not directly in contact with the developed starter at this point. With your hands (use the 2 of them), mix until it is homogeneous.  Let to rest covered for 30 minutes to an hour. With one wet hand, grab a corner of the dough and punch it in the middle, give a quarter turn to the bowl and repeat about 4 times (imagine taking each cardinal point and placing it to the centre, do this twice). Alternatively, after the first punching round, place in the fridge covered with a tea towel overnight. 

Tip: Because the baguette dough is more sticky than the bread dough, don’t forget to have a wet hand while doing the punching.

Place the dough in a large bowl, cover with a tea towel and allow to rise to almost double size.

Tip: The rising time will depend on the temperature and humidity level.

STEP 3: Preshape

This step is not strictly necessary, I often skip it.  It is possible to skip it as long as you cut your dough in 4 balls gently and are not tempted to rework it.

The dough has risen. Dust the kitchen bench and gently pull the dough on the kitchen bench. Using a  knife or the dough scraper, cut into 4 portions (4 baguettes).

sourdough baguette

One portion at the time, spread the dough gently (up to 20 cm wide) by pulling on it, this time in the shape of a circle.  Again imagine four corners and pull each towards the centre. Repeat another time or two. You are close to having a ball. Pinch the centre to close the ball, turn around and using your hands firmly placed on the kitchen bench (they must not lift), scoop the back of the ball and bring towards you. The dough should roll tucking the front underneath and simultaneously tightening the skin. Turn 90 degrees and repeat. If the ball does not tuck or roll, often it is because there is too much flour on your bench.

Rest covered  loosely with the tea towel for 10-15 minutes.

STEP 4: Shaping

It is now time to shape the 4 baguettes.

Take one ball of dough.  Pull it gently until you get a rectangle about 20-30 cm by 10-15 cm. Be mindful not to push the dough but to pull it gently.

Tip: Here it is very important to understand that you want to keep as much as possible all the bubbles and air in the dough, so you need to be gentle with it.

The short edge will be facing you:

  1. Imagine a line in the middle of your rectangle parallel to the narrow edges. Fold each narrow edge towards that line, the edges should just meet.
  2. Using the heel of your palm, flatten the dough pressing down on the new line. Repeat the previous step (alternatively fold only to a quarter length each end then another quarter so that the halves meet in the middle). Now pull the upper edge 2/3 towards you. Next, pull and stretch the lower edge over as to wrap the log as much as possible.  pinch the line where the dough stops to close the log.
  3. At each end of the log pinch the end to close the baguette.
  4. Turn the log seam down on the workbench.
  5. Roll the baguette back and forth and lengthen it (remember your high school pottery class!) to the length of your baguette tin.
  6. Transfer (seam down) on the baguette tin.

Tip: if you do not have a baguette tin, use a large tea towel and make little gutters, dust with flour and place your baguettes in each of them. 

STEP 5: Second rising

If you are baking the baguettes the next day, wrap the tins with a tea towel. You can place them in a large plastic bag to prevent them from drying (it depends on your fridge). Then place in the fridge.  You need to take them out of the fridge an hour or so before baking, you also need to ensure they have risen enough (almost double), else allow them to rise before baking.

sourdough baguetteIf you are baking them the same day, cover with clean tea towels and allow to rise.

You know the bread is risen sufficiently when a little poke bounces back slowly yet leaves a print.

 

SEPT 6: Baking

Heat up the oven to maximum (about 250 °C) with a pan of water at the bottom of the oven.

sourdough baguetteUse a scoring blade (available online) or a very sharp knife, do incisions at 45 degrees as suggested here on the left. Add a dusting of flour if wished.

Place in the oven without losing too much of the heat and steam.

Reduce heat to 200 °C and bake until golden. Remove from the oven, allow to cool down.

 

baguettes

 

Back to bread

Back to bread!

It has been a while since I last wrote about breads.  Let’s go back to breads!  I have updated my sourdough bread explanations with some photos and more details.

If you are still struggling with some aspects of the bread making, don’t be to hard on yourself, it takes time.  I remember posting on FB a photo two years ago of a bread I found amazing. Looking back, it was not such a good bread, a beginner’s bread starting to get the hang of it! Keep perseverating!

Just for fun, here is a gallery of sourdough overtime, all mine.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

More fun with 100% hydration breads

100% hydration bread is not to be confused with 100% starter hydration.  I am not blaming you if you are not sure of the difference, I wasn’t onto it myself for a bit, I thought this only related to the starter.  So, without being too technical, here you are:

100% hydration starter

This is when the starter contains exactly a ration of 1 to 1 of flour and water (by weight).  So, if you are always using a liquid starter (for those who make bread every day or every two days),  and feed it an equal weight of water and flour, you have a 100% hydration starter.

For those like me, who make bread from every two days to every week (or more), we would keep our starter as a stiff starter to ensure it doesn’t have a mega tantrum.  That is 2:2:1 (starter, flour, water).  In words: same weight of starter and flour, but half the weight of water.  It allows a slower development of the yeast and thus keeps for longer. When I save my starter, I take away 50 g of the developed starter (the rest will go in the bread I am about to make), 50 g of flour and 25 g of water. I mix it all in a ball and put back in the fridge!

Une petite disgression sur les ratios…./ lets explore these ratios….

As a result, when I develop the starter, the ratio of hydration is slightly less than 100%.  For a feed of 200 g water, 200 g flour, the starter is 25 g short of water to be 100% hydration (it is 90% hydration).

Does it make much a difference? It depends on the quantity of bread you make per batch.  For me 25 g out of a total weight of water (starter and bread) of 620 g of water (25 g in starter, 200 g in feed, 420 in the bread, minus removal of new starter assumed 25 g water), is a 4% difference in hydration.   In the end using the 90% or 100% hydration starter in the bread with the quantity I use does not make any difference.  The type and origin of the flour will have more influence at that stage that your hydration ratio.

When I go on holidays for a couple of weeks or more (it has worked up to 3 weeks, I have not tried more), I feed it additional flour and water keeping the ration 2:1 (twice as much flour as water).

Have I lost you? 

In brief, if you do a few breads at the time (750 g of flour or more), using a stiff or liquid starter before feeding it will not influence the end result.

100 % hydration breads, a trial

I have been reading blogs and following some keen bakers (Ca mia for example has great results with that method) working hard on 100% hydration breads.  This ratio applies when you make the bread itself (using 100 % hydration starter or your normal fed starter of course). For those breads, water is used in the same proportion as water. This makes for a very liquid dough.  Be assured, the process is completely different. Why do people do it? because of the bubbles! Big beautiful bubbles.

So, I gave it a go this week.  I doubled my quantity of starter at the feed stage (just making 2 “normal” sourdough as a back up!). And I had this watery mix which sticks so much to your hands and can end up in a big big messy kitchen before you know! That time you need plenty flour to prevent the dough from sticking onto the workbench or onto your banneton (I use a tea towel shaped in a “U” shape in my roasting dish).  When I baked it , I did not give it a chance to come back to room temperature thinking that the cold shape will be slightly firmer to move.  Even so, it is really very soft!

sourdough bread And the result? Yum!  In taste, much lighter, it is another bread! It is closer to the ciabatta.  One bread was a bit flat, the other bread was quite high but had a big bubble in the upper section in one part of the bread.  There is definitely a fault in my technique there.

sourdough bread

 

 

 

 

Sourdough Bread

Your own sourdough bread!

This page will provide you a step to step approach to making sourdough bread.   If you have a stand mixer, feel free to use it.  The below method explain both the technique with and without stand mixer. And if you do not have a stand mixer, all you need is just a bit more time up your sleeve.

I am about to forget to say that sourdough bread making is very forgiving, about to go to the beach? Place the covered bowl into the fridge, you will take it back where you left it when you come home.

 
Overview of the different steps

Step NoStepNo hook machineWith hook machine
1Starter feed and growthThe day beforeSame
2Save your starter for next timeSave your starter, prepare for storage.Same
3Ingredients mixing & autolyseAll at once, making sure the salt is NOT put in direct contact with yeast. Water, starter and flour mixed, salt added after hydrolyse.
Seeds/berries can be added at this stage.Seeds/berries (if used) added with salt
1h rest
4Dough developmentPunch dough + 1h rise/rest x 2Mix up to 10 min or until dough does not stick to bowl and can do the window stretch.
5RisingThe dough would have started to rise already during the previous rest periods. If not risen about double, allow longer.Let rise up to 2-5 h sometimes -depending on temperature & humidity until about double in size
6Pre-shapeDepending on books, pre-shaping is either done here, or earlier half way through the rising (if so disregard this step here). The action aims at diving the dough in loafs sizes and prepare a rough ball. Rest for « h.Same
7ShapingThis is where we give the round or long shape (or other) to the bread.Same
8Final risingHighly dependent on temperature. If you reach that stage in the evening, leave out for 1/2h to an hour then refrigerate, you will bake the next day. Otherwise can take 1 to 3 hours. Dough should almost double. Finger test (not necessary if refrigerating the dough)!Same
9Bake

Get a starter started

This is a section I have recently added as some people have asked.  Keep in mind that this is an easy process and all you need is time up your sleeve!

Apart from time, you also need:

  • unbleached organic rye flour
  • bottled water (has no chloride)
  • A large tall jar (platic or glass), must be super clean!

You do not need any sugar honey or grapes and anything you may found on some other blogs.  You can use them, but they are not strickly necessary.

Now, why unbleached rye flour? Because it has a lot of natural yeast on it, more than plain flour.   Latter on, you can feed it plain flour and it will be fine.

Tip: I sometimes feed my starter unbleahed rye flour to give it a boost.

Tip: yeast do not like being in a draught!

Tip: It doesn’t matter if you use 120 g or 50 g to start with. What matters is the ration water to flour, must be the same weight. 

Ready? Go!
  1. DAY ONE: in the jar mix 120 g of the bottled water with 120 g of the rye flour. Stir.  Cover with a cell wrap loosely  and set aside in a warm place for 24 h.
  2. DAY TWO:  Nothing much will have happened. Don’t worry.
  3. DAY THREE: A little of activity should start to appear, just a few small bubbles.  With a clean spoon, remove about half and add 60 g bottled water and 60 g rye flour.
  4. DAY FOUR: The starter will start to have a small acidic nice smell. Remove half of the content of the jar and add 60 g and 60 g of flour and water
  5. DAY FIVE: The starter should show good activity and significanlty increase in volume. If not, keep doing the Day 4 step for a few more days or until the starter becomes active.  If the starter is active, keep half of it and feed it 120 g of flour and 120 g of water.  The next day, it will have about trippled in volumes.  This is when you  either expand it further to make your bread (feed it, see next paragraph) or store it (further below).

Feed your stored starter

Remove the starter from the fridge, in a large bowl, mix with 160 g of warm like water, then add 160 g of baker’s flour, mix well.  Using your hand may be necessary.  Cover but not tightly and let it be until you are ready to make the bread.

The starter will double in size and should have a nice slightly acidic smell.  The starter will develop small then large bubbles, when fully fed, it will reach the maximum height. This is when you should use it, after this is will start deflating. You can still use it, but don’t wait too much.

Tip: Use wet hand when handling the starter manually, it will not stick.

Tip: The starter can be put in the fridge if you cannot make your bread the day planned and thus slowed and retarded.

Tip: starter feeling a bit down? Rejuvenate the yeast by using unbleached organic rye flour for half the weight of flour.  The unbleached rye flour contains wild yeast which will provide a boost to the starter.

This starter is ready to be used, it has even started to deflate. Time to make the bread. If you are ot ready to make the bread, place it in the fridge for a few hours until you are ready.
beautiful bubbles coming through this developping starter

Save your starter and store it

Once your starter is ready, you should ensure you save some for the next breads.

Place in a jar or plastic box:

  • 50 g of starter
  • 50 g of baker’s flour
  • 25 g of water

Mix well, pour on the workbench and knead it lightly to form a small ball, then put back in the box and close it.  If you are going to use it in a day or two, leave outside for 1 hour, otherwise within the next half hour place in the fridge.

Remember, this starter is a stiff starter and will store for up to a couple of weeks at the back of your fridge. Some recipes call for liquid starter, which is obtained after feeding twice your stored starter or requires adapting the water ratio to flour in the recipe (not covered here).

Saving 50 g of developed starter for the next batch

Basic White Sourdough Bread

We will make 700 g breads.  The measures in the table below are given for the two loaves and also the single one.

Ingredients 2 x 700 g 1 x 700 g
Flour 670 g 335 g
Salt 18 g 9 g
Water 380 g 190 g
Starter 385 g 190 g (rounded up)

Note:  the salt must be un-ionised salt.

MANUAL METHOD

  1. Mix all the ingredients together until a rough dough forms. Now, a note for the salt. Salt in direct contact with yeast kills the yeast, I often put the starter at the bottom, then water, flour and salt.
    Stand for 20 min or so, then take one corner and pull to the centre, give a quarter turn to the bowl and repeat until done 4 times. Alternatively, some recipes may call for a couple of envelope turns. Cover.
  2. Rest for 1 h.
  3. The dough will have risen slightly and will feel much lighter and stretchy. With one wet hand, pull one corner of the dough and “punch back” inside the middle. Turn the bowl a quarter turn. Repeat 3 times. This will deflate the dough slightly and it will become hard again.  This develops the gluten strands.
  4. Rest for 1 h
  5. Repeat the previous 2 steps.
  6. Now the dough should be quite smooth and elastic. It should also be about double the initial size. It is time to pre-shape.  Put your dough gently on a very slightly floured work bench.  If you have done the quantity for 2 breads, divide here in 2 roughly even portions.  The pre-shaping, only gives a round form to the portion of dough. Place your hands (cup them) behind the dough piece and slide them towards you without lifting them. The dough will roll on itself and tuck underneath itself creating some tension.  Give a quarter tune, repeat once. Then let to rest covered on a board for 30 min.
  7. Turn the pre-shape dough head down and press gently without deflating to even the dough either in a round (for a ball) or a rectangular (for a long loaf).To shape a ball:  pull one corner at the time to the centre of the dough. Repeat once with the “new” corners”. Draw up the edges to the centre. Pinch them together to “close” the ball (this will be the bottom of your bread).  Turn over. With cupped hand, pull the ball to stretch the skin of the dough on all sides (see the bubbles visible under the skin on photos below).
    sourdough round bread
    To shape a long loaf: Placing the rectangle long side in front of you, fold the left side just over halfway across the right, then fold the right side to the left so they slightly overlap.  Take each top corner from the short side of the rectangle and fold in towards the middle (see photo).  The dough will become quite narrow at the top.Fold the top towards you and press it lightly into the body of the dough. Repeat this action (corner and fold the point) several times until there is one fold left.  Fold the dough down the bottom edge and seal. With your thumbs.  Roll the dough forward to place the seam underneath.

    shaping
    bring the corners in
    shaping stage
    roll over towards you
    shaping
    Close by doing one last roll towards you before sealing the edge

    Two breads shaped, ready for their second rising overnight in the fridge.
  8. Place the shaped dough(s) in a floured banneton head down, cover slightly with flour and with a damp cloth and place in the refrigerator if retarding. The dough is ready when it pushes back halfway when you insert your finger in it (this is the finger test). Retarding the bread has for advantage to increase the fermentation length and develop further the taste.  The dough cannot over-rise when put in the fridge (i.e. rising is controlled).

DOUGH MIXER METHOD:

  1. Mix the ingredients at the exception of the salt. Once you get a rough dough, let it rest for 20 min.
  2. Turn on the mixer, add the salt, then continue turning on medium maximum for up to 10 min or until the dough forms a ball and does not stick to the bowl anymore.
  3. Transfer to a clean bowl, cover, let rise for 2 hours, maybe more until almost double
  4. From here, the method is the same as the manual one from step 6.

Tip: The yeast does not like being in a drought (at all!).

Tip: Wet your hand when handling the starter or the dough, it will avoid sticking to your finger and a big mess.

Tip: the autolyse allows the flour to absorb the water heavenly and as a result requires less mixing time. The salt is added latter as it draws the water away from the flour and thus reduced the process.

Tip: The yeast activity decreases with decreasing temperature (and reverse), it starts to become dormant from 4°C.

Tip: It is important that the bottom of the bread be well sealed or it will become the point of least resistance during the baking and will open.

Tip: The loaves are too big? Reduce the quantities to make a 500 g loaf.

Ingredients 2 x 500 g 1 x 500 g
Flour 480 g 240 g
Salt 13 g 6 g
Water 270 g 135 g
Starter 275 g 135 g (rounded up)

 

Tip: Some flour require a bit more water, add a few drops at the time only.

Tip: during the retarding process, it is important to maintain some moisture in the covering cloth to prevent the formation of a dry skin.

Tip: if you let it rise too much, no drama, bake readily. Your bread will flatten a fair bit, it happens to each of us, the next one will be better. Do not score the bread before placing in the oven.

Tip: the manual method may not be suited when using dry yeast in addition of the starter.  Dry yeast introduces millions of yeast cells compared to thousand contained in the starter.

BAKE YOUR BREAD

  1. If the bread was in the fridge, take it out, let it adapt to room temperature, if the bread has not risen enough, let it rise further.

    Risen, ready to bake
  2. Place a pan with water at the bottom of the oven, place your cooking stone/sheet on the middle rack. Heat up your oven about 220°C fan-forced (240°C otherwise).
  3. When the bread is ready to bake, remove your baking stone/sheet from the oven, quickly (no not to lose heat) place the bread on it making sure what was at the top of the banneton is now the bottom of the bread. Slash the bread and insert in the oven.
  4. Decrease oven temperature to 190°C forced-fan (210°C traditional). Bake until golden. Check that a loaf is cooked by tapping the base, it should sound hollow.
  5. Allow to cool on a wire rack.

Tip: the role of the water pan is to create steam all through the baking, this will mostly allow the bread to keep rising and opening and the crust to be crusty and thin. Alternatively, this can be done by steaming the oven for 10 sec at the start of the baking. Some ovens have steaming functions. 

Tip: you can in theory keep your unbaked loaf in the fridge for a few days, ensure it is wrapped with a humid cloth.  I find it not very successful after Day 2 though.

Tip: to slash either used a very sharp pointy knife or a Stanley knife. If you are going to make a lot of bread, you will find on the net some dedicated bread slasher.  Do not leave any of those in the wrong places.

Variations

The introduction of seeds and currants is done generally after the initial 20 minutes rest.  It is critical to maintain the ration flour to added element when changing proportions.  It is also important to hydrate seeds and berries as specified to avoid those sucking all the water required for the dough itself.

Toasted seeds sourdough

Basically, if adding 50 g of seeds, also add 50 g of water.

For a 500 g loaf (480 g of flour):

  • 50 g sunflower seeds
  • 50 g pumpkin seeds
  • 25 g sesame seeds
  • 25 g poppy seeds
  • 100 g water

Combine all the seeds and toast in a dry frying pan on medium heat until lightly coloured. Let the seeds cool down in a bowl and pour the water over the top and stir. The seeds will soak all of the water.

Seeds are introduced after the first 20 min rest.

Walnut, pepitas and cranberries sourdough

For a 700 g loaf:

  • 70 g soaked cranberries
  • 70 g pepitas
  • 70 g walnut

Walnut and pepitas o not absorb water, so no need for additional one.  If the dough is too sticky after the 20 min rest, I add 1 spoon of flour at the time.  If too dry, a few drops of water at the time.

IMG_2412IMAG1207_1