GIving that alcoholic taste to yeast-leavened cakes (panettones)

GIving that alcoholic taste to yeast-leavened cakes (panettones) - African American hipster man pouring alcoholic drink from transparent bottle into shot glasses for degustation while sitting at table near friend and elite wine bottle in wooden box in countryside

For the last 3 new year evenings I've tried to make panettones (both chocolate and fruit ones) and my recipe is getting better, with the last one being the first reasonably successful one. However I don't know much about yeast-leavening and there is one thing that I'm really missing on my panettones: that slightly alcoholic taste most store-bought ones have.

What is the trick to achieve such taste or what may I be doing wrong to be missing it?

None I've ever bought - having that taste - had any kind of alcohol/beverages listed as an ingredient. Only vanilla extract and, sometimes, fake panettone flavour, which I strongly think not to be the answer. Also, I know yeast can produce alcohol, but I do not know how or "why". (I've noticed that flavor to be much more intense around the panettone fillings, for truffled and dulce de leche ones)



Best Answer

Yeast naturally creates alcohol from the sugars (gluten) found in bread flour. However, this probably won't be enough to leave an 'alcohol' taste, depending on the amount of yeast used and the amount of time the dough is left to leaven. You'll find that sourdough bread has more of that alcohol taste (and is also a lot fluffier) than a quick 2-hour no-knead bread, for instance.

Traditionally, the dough for Panettone is cured for a couple of days, which results in the fermentation leaving that alcohol taste you're familiar with. However, some Christmas fruit cake recipes (especially the ones in South Africa) do ask for alcohol. Although Panettone doesn't contain alcohol traditionally, you could soak the fruit pieces in liqueur overnight. This is a lot quicker than curing the dough for a couple of days. Perhaps try this recipe and see if you like it more.




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How do you put alcohol in a cake after baking?

I've even used alcohol as a no fuss way to correct a dry sponge cake. I just let it steep for a couple of days and then serve with a dollop of whipped cream. Here's a tip: to impart a proper kick to your cake, don't cook the alcohol. Stir it into the icing, pour it onto the cake after baking or add it into a glaze.

Does panettone bread have alcohol?

While some fruitcake varieties incorporate alcohol into the recipe, panettone does not \u2013 but it goes quite well with a glass of sweet wine! Panettone is more than just a Christmas bread.

Why does panettone last so long?

Actually, the word panettone means "big" or "strong" bread, because of the citrus peel and raisins, according to the trade commission. The double rising of natural yeasts insures panettone's long shelf-life - and the reason you can enjoy a "fresh" cake made months ago in Italy and shipped to this country.

What countries eat panettone?

Panettone (/\u02ccp\xe6n\u026a\u02c8to\u028ani/, Italian: [panet\u02c8to\u02d0ne]; Milanese: panetton [pane\u02c8t\u0169\u02d0]) is an Italian type of sweet bread originally from Milan, usually prepared and enjoyed for Christmas and New Year in Western, Southern, and Southeastern Europe as well as in South America, Eritrea, Australia, the United States and Canada.



Sponge cake | vanilla cake | oven bake | no bitter | with yeast




More answers regarding gIving that alcoholic taste to yeast-leavened cakes (panettones)

Answer 2

Yeast doesn't really give you an alcoholic taste in bread. Little yeast activity doesn't give you much aroma, and high yeast activity gives you a bread-typical aroma based around thiols and even hints of ammonia. If you leave your dough to ferment until you can smell alcohol in it, it is no longer suitable for baking.

As to why you are sensing something alcohol-like, it is probable that it is the aromatics that were used have some alcoholic compound. Possible sources are

  • the filling was soaked in alcohol (raisins are a candidate for that)
  • the filling is orangeat or citronat, and was created either using alcohol or with added flavors that are reminiscent of alcohol-based flavors
  • you are sensing the alcohol from the vanilla extract (which is very unlikely, unless you notice this effect in all baked goods made with vanilla extract)
  • the producers used some aromas that imitate alcoholic beverages without actually containing alcohol. For example, there are additives that imitate rum, and these are frequently used in celebratory breads from different cultures. This can be combined with some of the factors above (e.g. raisins being soaked in a liquid using this kind of additive instead of real alcohol)

For all of these cases, it depends very strong on labeling laws whether the alcohol will be listed or not, so it is possible that real alcohol was used but not listed (e.g. if the labeling law doesn't require manufacturers to differentiated between "raisins" and "rum-soaked raisins").

How you repeat the exact taste depends on what the manufacturer actually used, but if you are just after some nice alcoholic taste that is frequently associated with pannetone, I would suggest buying a rum-tasting additive and using it in your dough.


The above assumes that the taste you call "alcoholic" is really due to alcohol. If for some reason you describe the taste of yeast fermentation as "alcoholic" (which I think is the low probability here, especially since you want to imitate store bought products), the solution is to use more yeast than the recipe calls for, and shorter fermentation times at higher temperature. This will give you the thiol-ammonia aroma mentioned above.

Answer 3

Try this recipe. Mine tastes as if it was SOAKED in booze! I think all down to leaving the dough out for a while. I actually left mine for longer than the recipe recommended...

https://www.greatitalianchefs.com/recipes/panettone-recipe

Oh, and I also highly recommend homemade candied peel. Miles better!

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