Test Kitchen video tip: Choosing a bread wash
Bread recipes often call for some sort of "wash" or glaze before baking, sometimes egg, sometimes milk. Even butter. Different washes are used to achieve different results:
- Brushing with beaten whole eggs will give both color and sheen to a bread. Egg yolk provides rich color, browning easily in the oven. Egg white provides a nice sheen.
- Brushing with milk will help to color the crust, the sugars in the milk helping to brown the crust.
- Water is often sprayed or brushed onto bread before it is placed in a very hot oven, and during baking, to give the bread an extra-crisp crust. Water added to an egg wash helps to thin the wash so it brushes more easily.
- Butter will give the bread a softer crust and richer flavor.
- Sweeteners--honey, syrup, etc.--will give bread a sweeter, softer crust.
If you have any kitchen tips or questions you'd like me to explore, leave a comment below or shoot me an e-mail at noelle.carter@latimes.com.
ALSO:
Go behind the scenes at the Test Kitchen
134 recipes for your favorite restaurant dishes
Browse hundreds of recipes from the L.A. Times Test Kitchen
-- Noelle Carter
You can find me on Facebook, Google+ and Twitter
Video credit: Myung Chun / Los Angeles Times








The comments to this entry are closed.