French Pistolet Rolls finished.

French Pistolet Rolls in Words and Pictures

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Discussion of Pistolets -- French split rolls

This pistolet recipe is from Bernard Clayton, Jr, "The Breads of France." This was my first serious bread book and still my sentimental favorite. The recipe specifies 7 cups of flour and 4 teaspoons of salt. It also says that the recipe will make 48 1 1/2 ounce rolls, which is 72 ounces of dough. I scaled at 50 grams, about 1 3/4 ounces, and got 39 rolls, which translates into 68 ounces, so his "cups" of flour are probably more than 6 ounces. As for the salt, I've tried both 3 and 4 teaspoons of salt and decided that 4 teaspoons is too much for 40 ounces of flour. This figures, as salt is frequently 2% of the weight of flour, and 1 tablespoon (3/4 ounce) would be about 2% of 40 ounces. The malt is optional, but, as he says, it gives the rolls "a lovely tan color." These French split rolls are lovely rolls that can be made small (1 1/2 ounces or 42 grams) for lunch or dinner, or small snack sandwiches, or larger, for regular sandwiches, or even hamburgers. The ones here are scaled at 50 grams and shaped to make intermediate-sized rolls. I've added a rest period, an autolyse, to the procedure.

The crust on these rolls isn't as cruchy as the crust of a lean roll, such as a Mexican bollito, but they freeze and toast well and will last on the counter for several days if stored in a loose-fitting plastic bag. The recipe may seem involved and complicated, but it you take it a step at a time it will all work out and you'll have 35-40 rolls that you'll be proud of.

Ingredients for Pistolet Rolls

Ingred Ounces Grams
HK Flour 40 1135
Water 24 680
Dry Yeast 4 1/2 Tbsp 22 ml
Sugar 3 Tbsp 45 ml
Non-fat dry milk 1/2 cup 120 ml
Soft butter 4 115
Malt syrup 2 tsp 10 ml
Salt 1 Tbsp 15 ml

Method for making Pistolets

Here, you have some decisions to take. This dough will make enough rolls to crowd most ovens. You have to decide if you want to bake in two batches or to brave it and bake them all at once. I've tried both methods and had good rolls either way. If you decide to make two batches, then split the dough and reserve half of it for the second batch, otherwise, just shape and bake them all.

Here we go:

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French pistolet rolls ingredients. French pistolet rolls adding malt. French pistolet rolls adding butter. French pistolet rolls mixing a bit. French pistolet rolls adding some flour. French pistolet rolls changing paddle.
French pistolet rolls mixing. French pistolet rolls mixing. French pistolet rolls finished mixing. French pistolet rolls after resting. French pistolet roll sadding salt. French pistolet rolls mixing.
French pistolet rolls almost finished mixing. French pistolet rolls dough on counter. French pistolet rolls dough on counter. French pistolet rolls dough in pot. French pistolet rolls dough finished first fermentation. French pistolet rolls back in pot for 45 minutes.
French pistolet rolls after second fermentation. French pistolet rolls finished dough on counter. French pistolet rolls half of them scaled. French pistolet rolls open hand for shaping. French pistolet rolls shaping on counter. French pistolet rolls all shaped.
French pistolet rolls dipping in rye flour. French pistolet rolls splitting. French pistolet rolls split. French pistolet rolls stretching. French pistolet rolls all split. French pistolet rolls on baking sheets.
French pistolet rolls half-way baked. French pistolet rolls some finished, with candle. French pistolet rolls all baked, with cnadle French pistolet rolls all baked and cooling. Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional