Recipe: Tasty The 7 Hour Brioche/Ensaymada

Recipe: Tasty The 7 Hour Brioche/Ensaymada

Delicious, fresh and tasty.

The 7 Hour Brioche/Ensaymada. Red Ribbon Ube Ensaymada: Ube Brioche Buns (Kneaded By Hand) With Butter/Cheese Basic Ensaymada Recipe Muhlach Megamelt Style. Ensaymadas are a decadent, handmade Filipino brioche bread made from yeast, butter, sugar and grated cheese.

The 7 Hour Brioche/Ensaymada Ensaymada is a brioche bread that has its origins from the Spanish Ensaïmada. While the Spanish Ensaïmada traditionally uses saïm, reduced pork lard, in the Philippines, the brioche is butter based. Cheese Ensaymada is a Filipino style brioche. You can cook The 7 Hour Brioche/Ensaymada using 15 ingredients and 14 steps. Here is how you cook that.

Ingredients of The 7 Hour Brioche/Ensaymada

  1. You need of Bread Dough.
  2. Prepare 1 cup of milk, warmed.
  3. You need 2 1/4 tsp of active dry yeast.
  4. It's 1/2 cup of granulated sugar.
  5. It's 5 cup of all-purpose flour.
  6. Prepare 3/4 cup of granulated sugar.
  7. Prepare 1 tsp of salt.
  8. You need 3/4 cup of butter, melted.
  9. You need 3 large of eggs.
  10. It's 1 each of egg, beaten.
  11. You need 1 of milk, splash.
  12. You need of Topping.
  13. Prepare 1 cup of granulated sugar.
  14. You need 1/4 cup of butter, melted.
  15. You need 1 cup of grated cheese.

It is a sweet bun that is topped with sugar, butter and cheese. Ensaymada is eaten for breakfast or snack. Ensaymada is one of the favorite breakfast or snack of most Filipinos. Light, sweet, pillow-soft Ensaymada textured in moist yet fluffy bread, filled and.

The 7 Hour Brioche/Ensaymada step by step

  1. Combine yeast, milk and sugar in your main mixing bowl to activate the yeast. Remember to use lukewarm milk, you don't want to boil your yeasty friends to death. Set aside in a warm place until the mixture is foamy..
  2. In a separate bowl, combine the dry ingredients: flour, sugar and salt. You can also sift the ingredients together. Make sure that the salt is thoroughly mixed in to prevent killing the yeast..
  3. In your main mixing bowl where your activated yeast is sitting, beat in the eggs and melted butter..
  4. Combine the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients thoroughly until you have a workable dough. I used a mixer to knead the dough, but I would sometimes work the dough on a lightly floured work surface..
  5. Preheat your oven to the lowest possible setting then turn off. You will need a warm environment to allow for the dough to rise..
  6. Turn dough on to your work surface and knead until the dough is smooth and elastic. Take your time and make sure that the dough is smooth and it springs back into shape when poked..
  7. Now it's time to let your dough rise in the warm oven. Lightly grease your mixing bowl with oil or butter and put the dough in and cover with a damp cloth or plastic wrap. If the oven is too warm, prop the door slightly open with a wooden spoon..
  8. After a few hours, check on your dough. You want the dough to at double in size..
  9. Once the dough has doubled, punch the dough down and then cut into your preferred shape..
  10. A note about shaping the dough. Some people prefer to roll the dough into ropes, then coiling them. I went about it a different way because I am a glutton for busy work. What I did was I cut the dough into small equal pieces, flattened the dough into a rectangular shape, brushed the dough with melted butter, sprinkled a little bit of cheese, the rolled it up like a cigar. Then I coiled it. It's really up to you, the cheese is optional, but it adds a lot of flavor..
  11. Proof your formed dough into their final shapes. If you formed the dough in a pan like in the picture, make sure you line the pan so that it's easy to pop out. Cover with plastic wrap and let it rise in a warm place (you can proof in a warm oven). This could take an episode or two of your favorite TV show. No worries..
  12. When you are happy with the proofing, preheat your oven to 350°F. DO NOT FORGET TO TAKE YOUR PROOFED DOUGH OUT BEFORE PREHEATING. Brush your dough with a simple milk eggwash before baking. (If you don't want the bread to turn out pretty dark, take out the milk from the eggwash.).
  13. Bake bread for about 15 minutes or until it smells like bread, and feels hollow when you tap..
  14. Optional. After baking, let the bread cool. Then brush the bread with melted butter, dust with granulated sugar, then top with grated cheese. I completely understand if you don't want to do this because you're worried about the carbs, but you're about to eat bread, you might as well go down swinging..

Our sourdough ensaymada is a traditional philippine brioche type pastry, which utilizes cheese and buttercream, making the sourdough ensaymada an extra delicious and exotic treat. I'm starting with ensaymada, a fluffy brioche-like pastry that is extremely popular throughout the Philippines. Try this ensaymada recipe for that soft, sweet bread covered with buttercream then topped with lots of grated cheese. These could easily be the best homemade ensaymada you could ever make. Who could resist this soft and buttery sweet dough that is baked to become pillowy buns?