Is there a way to make this bread recipe's crust less crunchy?
This is a challah recipe I inherited:
1 cup warm water
2 eggs, lightly beaten
2 tbsp vegetable oil
4 1/2 cups bread flour
1 tbsp sugar
1 tbsp yeastKnead, let rise, braid, let rise, egg wash, and bake at 375°F for an hour.
I like the flavor of this and the consistency of the bread inside. However, I don't like how hard and thick a crust it gets. I've tried leaving off the egg wash but it's still crispy and tough. (This hasn't always been a huge deal, it's just how this loaf bakes... but my daughter recently got braces, and she's finding it very difficult to eat!)
Are there tweaks I can make to ingredients, baking time, or oven temperature to get a more pliable crust?
Best Answer
I make the same Challah bread recipe every year, and mine says to bake at 350°f for 35 min and the crust is chewy but not crunchy or crisp. I've never had it under baked either.
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How do you make bread less crunchy?
Can you soften bread crust that is too hard? To prevent hard bread, make sure your dough is moist and soft, don't over or under-knead it, and don't let it rise in the fridge for more than an hour. To fix hard bread, you can steam it or place a wet towel over it after you pull it from the oven.Why is my bread crust crunchy?
As bread cools, any leftover moisture in its interior migrates to the surface. If that moisture reaches the surface and hits cool air \u2013 e.g., typical room temperature \u2013 it condenses on the loaf's surface, making it soggy. If it hits warm air (your still-warm oven), it evaporates \u2013 leaving the crust crisp.How do you make a soft crust for sourdough bread?
Butter the loaf while it cools \u2013As soon as your loaf comes out of the oven, slather it with some melted butter on all surfaces, and leave on a cooling rack with a drip tray underneath. This will help soften the crust as it cools.How do you make bread crust smooth?
There are a few other ways to soften a bread crust without changing the basic recipe you're working with. One is to rub butter on top of the hot crust when it comes out of the oven and the other is to simply cool the bread underneath a clean tea towel.Homemade Bread for Beginners - Easy
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Answer 2
Another way to ask this question is: how can I cook the exterior of this food less, while keeping the inside cooked? The answer to this question is a lower temperature. This applies to most foods, including meat, cakes, etc. I suggest cooking this bread at a lower temperature for longer. The inside will be cooked and the outside will be relatively less cooked. Perhaps try 325.
Is your oven using convection by chance? If so, turn that off. Convection increases surface temperatures significantly and dries more due to moving air.
Answer 3
As the currently provided information seems to point to overcooking, as the commenters and other answers already found out: you want to cook it until it is "just through" and see what happens. So I would suggest going by internal temperature instead of time.
Stick a meat thermometer in the bread and remove it when it reaches 96C, that should give you a properly baked bread. If that turns out to be too doughy, you can experiment with 98 C or so. But keeping it in the oven until dried out a lot will indeed produce the hard crust you describe.
When you do this, the inside of the bread will change also. Challahs tend to be rather soft-squishy, although this one probably not so much, as it is not overly heavy on egg yolk. But be prepared for a different texture on the inside.
Answer 4
I've made normal white bread before, and when it came out of the oven I would cover it with a clean dish towel, and the crust would be soft after it had cooled. I'm presuming the steam would be trapped next to the crust and soften it. I remember the loaves I didn't do this to had very hard crusts.
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