How an 'autolyse' kneads your dough for you

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 5. 12. 2021
  • Thanks to HelloFresh for sponsoring this video! Use code ADAMRAGUSEA14 for up to 14 FREE MEALS + 3 Free Gifts across 5 HelloFresh boxes plus free shipping: bit.ly/3jZhlZO
    "Bread Science: The Chemistry and Craft of Making Bread," Emily Buehler: www.twobluebooks.com/bread-sc...
    King Arthur flour blog post testing the autolyse on baguettes: www.kingarthurbaking.com/blog...
    1985 journal article with photos of the micro-structure of wheat and dough: digitalcommons.usu.edu/foodmi...
    1973 journal article with photo of gluten fibrils surrounding starch granules: www.cerealsgrains.org/publica...
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 869

  • @noahgeerdink5144
    @noahgeerdink5144 Před 2 lety +1523

    Finally someone who actually explains autolyse, and doesn’t tell me it just does a bunch of magic and makes my bread amazing.

    • @tomypreach
      @tomypreach Před 2 lety +12

      So.. you haven't made any research at all ? Have you baked any sort of bread ? Adam hasn't explained anything, 100's of channels hasn't done before.

    • @tomypreach
      @tomypreach Před 2 lety +1

      But I guess, good for you. I'm glad you made progress. Put it into action, show us what you've made.

    • @adamszczerba5777
      @adamszczerba5777 Před 2 lety +82

      @@tomypreach What do you mean Adam hasn’t explained anything? He explained what autolysis is in a way comprehensible enough for a person with common knowledge to understand. Yes, you could go even more into detail like how the globulary proteins are hydrolyzed and then forms gluten fibrils but you don’t have to be so pedantic.

    • @tomypreach
      @tomypreach Před 2 lety +2

      @@adamszczerba5777 Good for you Adam. Calm down and do it right.

    • @jamesiyer4937
      @jamesiyer4937 Před 2 lety +40

      @@tomypreach Watch the video again....

  • @Christopher0601
    @Christopher0601 Před 2 lety +1560

    Adam really does everything to make cooking lazier and I love it

    • @appalachianoperator
      @appalachianoperator Před 2 lety +32

      A man after my own heart

    • @aragusea
      @aragusea  Před 2 lety +865

      Efficiency ≠ laziness

    • @robert58
      @robert58 Před 2 lety +44

      @@aragusea Definitely true.

    • @arealhuman3677
      @arealhuman3677 Před 2 lety +13

      @@aragusea absolutely

    • @ZakkandtheJ
      @ZakkandtheJ Před 2 lety +59

      @@aragusea "work smarter not harder" as the old saying goes.
      I appreciate you dropping these tips to make cooking less intimidating.

  • @danielm0rk
    @danielm0rk Před 2 lety +705

    I have done MANY autolyses of different kinds. I agree with you, salt nor yeast makes a difference in practice. I simply mix everything and let it sit for 20-25 minutes and it always comes out magnificent

    • @Legomyegoorj
      @Legomyegoorj Před 2 lety +21

      Agreed. There’s a sourdough baker on CZcams called Food Geek and he compared sourdough loaves in which autolyse was used versus those where it wasn’t and found no appreciable difference. I think with something like a sourdough especially, it just doesn’t really matter since the amount of time the bread takes to ferment is quite long.

    • @konrai1972
      @konrai1972 Před 2 lety +6

      totally agree I dump everything in the bowl mix it all up sit for an hour kneed for 10 mins proof and its ready to go.

    • @danielm0rk
      @danielm0rk Před 2 lety +1

      @@Legomyegoorj Sune is great!

    • @rolu9345
      @rolu9345 Před 2 lety

      @@Legomyegoorj Sourdough is way way lower in PH than chemical yeast. Depending on how acidic your "levain" is, you might want to add it later, after the autolyse.

    • @jewish_slave_of_YESHUA_n_YHVH
      @jewish_slave_of_YESHUA_n_YHVH Před 2 lety

      Isaiah 66:17
      King James Version
      17 They that sanctify themselves, and purify themselves in the gardens behind one tree in the midst, (eating swine's flesh), and the abomination, and the mouse, shall be (consumed together), saith the Lord.

  • @0k0sMrHazard
    @0k0sMrHazard Před 2 lety +236

    Adam, I would be really interested to hear your take on the differences between jam/jelly/preserves/conserves/marmalade/fruit sauce, etc., and a brief history of jam too. (Perhaps paired with a jam, scone, and clotted cream recipe?).

    • @kjdude8765
      @kjdude8765 Před 2 lety +12

      It would be interesting but boy, those comments are going to be brutal. The terms are colloquial and not fixed. Therefore everyone's ideas are probably different. For me: jelly=set juice; jam=jelly with fruit bits; preserves=similar to jam but with more fruit; marmalade=jam made with citrus peels; fruit sauce=any cooked down fruit, normally with sugar but not expected to set or be preserved.

    • @pawel198812
      @pawel198812 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kjdude8765 Not to mention it also depends on country /language / culinary tradition. You might find places that use various terms interchangeably or differentiate their terminology based on different factors/aspects (like how much sugar you add, what kind of fruit you use, is the fruit whole, diced, crushed, pureed, pressed, etc.).

    • @0k0sMrHazard
      @0k0sMrHazard Před 2 lety

      ​@@kjdude8765 You may be right, though one reason I thought to mention it is because he's made some videos that deal with subjective semantics and etymology (the cider one for example).

    • @kjdude8765
      @kjdude8765 Před 2 lety +1

      @@0k0sMrHazard I agree it would be interesting. But just read the comments on the cider video, it's certainly entertaining.

    • @aaronsirkman8375
      @aaronsirkman8375 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kjdude8765 I mean, all those definitions sound spot-on for my understanding of fruit/sugar combinations, so maybe there won't be too much disagreement to be had.

  • @dark0q205
    @dark0q205 Před 2 lety +36

    Can't wait until Adam make the dough season and bake itself

  • @juliekoichu421
    @juliekoichu421 Před 2 lety +160

    Hey, I started watching your videos last week because of two topics I was researching - baking steels and Neapolitan high hydration pizza. I'm a sourdough bread baker and I'm reading one of Prof. Calvel's books right now (the English translation of "The taste of bread"). So overmixing, overoxidation, overfermentation, are (all different) problems that I found more obvious in big bakeries - where the batch sizes are big, the mixers are big and there's a strict timeline. One is tempted to add more sourdough/yeast, use hotter water, develop the dough more fully inside the big mixer or do other things to quicken the maturing, but they all degrade the flavor and keeping quality of the bread while often contributing to its volume. Making hundreds of loaves requires different technology than mixing 1 kg of dough at home. It's totally fine if a home baker "takes shortcuts" and is happy with the results because bread is awesome! But one can't learn from the blog post on King Arthur's site or from youtube and to conclude that it will work equally great on the large scale and would give consistent high quality results. All of this to say, is that the autolyse does improve taste in my opinion, if you compare the gentle maturing you receive with this technique to working hot and fast. As for color, all wheat bread is rather white, but extreme white overoxidized dough has higher volume and less flavor that bread made in a gentler method. I love these discussions and could go on forever haha. Thanks, take care!

    • @juliekoichu421
      @juliekoichu421 Před 2 lety +24

      By the way, Prof Calvel was born in 1913 and has taught French style baking in the US, Japan and other countries, making actual shifts in Japan's baking industry. He saw huge shifts in industrialization before and post WWII, and mentions a big improvement in the quality and strength of flour in 1939. So I think that was the era of overmixing and speeding up that he was criticizing in his books and articles, not the later decade of the home mixers of the 1970's.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
  • @ThatGamerDude9000
    @ThatGamerDude9000 Před 2 lety +103

    Oh boy, can't wait for the promised no knead recipe from a few months ago now that Adam has found a way he likes to autolyse.

    • @mlgpro2241
      @mlgpro2241 Před 2 lety +6

      I think years ago in his baguette style bread video he talked about wanting getting onboard the no/low knead train

    • @ThatGamerDude9000
      @ThatGamerDude9000 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mlgpro2241 That might actually be the vid I'm thinking of. I just said months because I forget how long ago it was.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před 2 lety +4

      There's no knead for that recipe.

    • @RoccoTeh
      @RoccoTeh Před 2 lety

      Yep, it just came out yesterday haha

  • @ThePoltergust5000
    @ThePoltergust5000 Před 2 lety +234

    I've been making heavy use of this alongside the cold ferment strategy to have "pizza dough" ALWAYS ready in the crisper for a few weeks now-- two big tupperware containers, just mix up a single pizza's worth of flour oil yeast sugar salt water, mix it up with the handle of a butterknife or something and pop it in the fridge for a few days. Couldn't be easier-- could be _better,_ but perfectly serviceable pretty good bread trumps GREAT bread that can take a dozen times more sweat in overall net "happiness" gain, nine times out of ten at least when easily distracted and slow-to-commit people like me are involved.

    • @yiftach2949
      @yiftach2949 Před 2 lety

      What do you mean by better?

    • @ThePoltergust5000
      @ThePoltergust5000 Před 2 lety +12

      @@yiftach2949 Quality-wise. It's a convenient and very easy way to make pizza dough, but unless you get lucky or put in a little extra elbow grease at _some_ point it's probably going to come out a 7/10 at best. Which certainly isn't _bad_ but it could be better.

    • @beccae8685
      @beccae8685 Před 2 lety +9

      But it’s a lot better than a frozen pizza. I’ve been meaning to try this method. It’s a sign!

    • @hankhill5616
      @hankhill5616 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ThePoltergust5000 It's nice to have excess cold ferment on hand. Whats your recipe using flour wise?

    • @ThePoltergust5000
      @ThePoltergust5000 Před 2 lety +5

      @@hankhill5616 Maybe a cup or so? I eyeball everything except yeast so it's hard to tell, but I'd guess around 3/4 of a cup of water, 1 tsp of yeast, a pinch of salt and sugar, a few glugs of olive oil, and a cup or so of flour. Really I just mix in flour until it's dry- mix in more oil if it's TOO dry.

  • @hadijaradat4842
    @hadijaradat4842 Před 2 lety +92

    "Why I kneed my bowl, NOT my dough"

  • @brandonfolz9205
    @brandonfolz9205 Před 2 lety +22

    I see Adam is going for the John Wick look

  • @allan6398
    @allan6398 Před 2 lety +139

    I really feel like Adam somehow manages to do being "lazy" in the most overachiever way

  • @Xanthelei
    @Xanthelei Před 2 lety +13

    My mom has been doing this for my entire life. She mixes the dough up, gives it a very light knead, then puts it in a bowl with a towel over it to 'pre-rise' for about a half hour. Pretty sure she's never heard of autolyse, it's just how her mom and grandma did it!

  • @Nathaniel_Peterson
    @Nathaniel_Peterson Před 2 lety +39

    I don't even knead. After getting it together into something resembling a cohesive mass, I rest it, come back, fold it a few times, rest it again, come back, fold again...just do that a 3 or 4 times, ball it, and let it ferment. Consistently excellent results every time. It's even easier with high hydration doughs. I don't even use my KitchenAid mixer for pizza doughs anymore. It's too much work that way, lol.

    • @kjdude8765
      @kjdude8765 Před 2 lety +5

      Yes, turn and fold works wonderful for high hydration dough. Letting time do the work for you is the whole basis for the even less work, no-knead dough.

  • @Lz-cy5gx
    @Lz-cy5gx Před rokem +4

    This makes so much sense. My MIL makes amazing bread and she doesn't knead very long at all, but hers is the most amazing bread ever, and she let's it sit for about 20 minutes!

  • @Eunakria
    @Eunakria Před 2 lety +115

    In case you're wondering, your way of saying "lysis" isn't more faithful to the original Greek pronunciation - in Greek, it originally had a /y/ there, which is the ü sound in German, or the "ee" in English "peel" but with pursed lips. However, you do pronounce it the same way most English-speaking scientists pronounce it, so if there is such a thing as a "correct" way to say "lysis", you nailed it.

    • @svenwouters9547
      @svenwouters9547 Před 2 lety +1

      So I've been confused about this for a while as the y looks to my brain that had 4 years of ancient greek just likes a gamma (γ) which is definitely not a vowel

    • @purplealice
      @purplealice Před 2 lety

      If you were to try to pronounce it as if you were French, it would sound like "ow toh- leez" (rhymes with "how Joe squeeze")

    • @Eunakria
      @Eunakria Před 2 lety +2

      @@svenwouters9547 yup, that's the symbol used for it in the IPA. the Latin letter Y originally came from Greek upsilon, even though Latin lowercase y looks nothing like Greek lowercase υ. I used the IPA because there was no real English analog for that phoneme

    • @svenwouters9547
      @svenwouters9547 Před 2 lety

      @@Eunakria ooooh that makes sense and now I feel stupid as I actually know IPA

    • @ordinaryshiba
      @ordinaryshiba Před 2 lety +1

      Also, the way adam pronounces it is more consistent with the way upsilon is normally anglicized

  • @emjai2122
    @emjai2122 Před 2 lety +7

    Thanks for not serving us a half-baked video! We really kneaded this tip! 🥖

  • @davidasher22
    @davidasher22 Před 2 lety +4

    Can we appreciate that Adam actually used the shirt off his back for his auto-lyse metaphor.

  • @_knighted
    @_knighted Před 2 lety +3

    Are we just going to ignore the professor casually walking into work holding a baguette?

  • @Xanderqwerty123
    @Xanderqwerty123 Před 2 lety +58

    I've been baking sourdough bread at home, and the autolyse is almost essential when working with dough that is 70-80% hydration. Otherwise it will be unbearably sticky and unworkable.

  • @yurymol
    @yurymol Před 2 lety +58

    People who think that autolyse improved their dough might get that idea because they weren't properly kneading it without autolyse. The process simple allows to reach that ideal stage quicker and easier.

    • @InnuendoXP
      @InnuendoXP Před 2 lety +14

      also that the dough becomes far more supple as it hydrates & autolyses, so that at that point you actually 'can' knead it properly. The 10-15 minutes they were trying to shove protein around was largely wasted effort as the autolyse was just happening anyway.

  • @Peetreesaur
    @Peetreesaur Před 2 lety +13

    I make pizza dough for a pizzeria in Baltimore, MD. I’ve made dough for pastries and bread for about 7 years.
    How I use autolyse in pizza dough is to keep my dough silky. If you kneed to much the pizza dough becomes resistant to being stretched and will tear holes when stretched. The more autolyse you let happen, then less the dough gets “stressed out”. This is only for dough shapes that you do not want to hold it’s shape.

    • @moon_bandage
      @moon_bandage Před 4 měsíci +1

      I know this comment is like 2y old but I'm still going to try hah. Do you only combine the flour and water for the autolyse? Or do you also mix in the yeast and salt? I've been using a stand mixer for pizza dough but what you just described sounds ideal and I'm very excited to give it a try

  • @bar111a.5
    @bar111a.5 Před 2 lety +8

    The editing is massively impressive! The quality! The research! This channel never cease to impress me, loving the chemistry parts too!

  • @DavidRutten
    @DavidRutten Před 2 lety +24

    I've been using a 24 hour recipe lately, works really well. Salt, yeast, flour, water; barely mix at all. Let stand for 12 hours, it may still have dry regions. Fold it over itself a few times, let stand for another 12 hours, bake in cast iron with lid. I daresay it could be shortened by quite a few hours, but it's so much easier to plan if you start exactly one day in advance.

    • @Sally4th_
      @Sally4th_ Před 2 lety +6

      I do similar but do the first phase cold overnight then second prove in the warming oven in the morning. Takes maybe an hour to have fresh rolls ready for breakfast.

    • @emiljohansson3089
      @emiljohansson3089 Před 2 lety +3

      The long rest or long ferment really makes a big difference! When I have been baking bread I always start with kneading it until done, will incorporate autolyse hence forth, and then just leave it to rest in room temperature for like six hours and then in the fridge for anything between 24-48 hours. A long wait but so worth it:)

  • @AliCatCooks
    @AliCatCooks Před 2 lety +7

    I owe a baker an apology... I'll return!! Love your work Adam, its helped me so much in my cooking.

  • @alexhurst3986
    @alexhurst3986 Před 2 lety +3

    This type of content is why I LOVE your channel. Perfect for the food science nerds out here. Thank you so much

  • @joseph_b319
    @joseph_b319 Před 2 lety +15

    I have been baking bread for ages. I have made every mistake possible. I also have broke every rule of baking bread, And it still comes out fine. Here is the deal, Adam pretty much spelled it out too. The outcome of your bread mainly depends on your formula, bake time and temp. All other mistakes your bread will forgive you. I do the autolyce. It does help absorb flour and start gluten development. I have bloomed my yeast in salt water, used water from areas when they say you can make bread with and Have done blind tasting with using different methods and it always comes out good.

    • @jellofroggo8568
      @jellofroggo8568 Před rokem +1

      It’s true! I’m a young baker and I can mess up so many factors but as long as it’s homemade there are never any leftovers 😆

  • @salmerongarridomaria1069
    @salmerongarridomaria1069 Před 2 lety +5

    When he brought out the shirt I was convinced he was about to launch into an incredibly smooth ad transition about a monthly subscription to shirts or something like that.

  • @fxm5715
    @fxm5715 Před 2 lety +55

    I'm surprised that this wasn't figured out thousands of years ago, and been the default for breadmaking ever since. I do an overnight rise with all the ingredients included, then three or four stretch-and-folds over the course of a few hours, and that's it. Makes great bread with minimal effort.

    • @Number2Vaderfan
      @Number2Vaderfan Před 2 lety +6

      im sure people tried it before but came out unsuccessful in the circumstances of their ancient environment

    • @mackenziedrake
      @mackenziedrake Před 2 lety +20

      On a practical level I am sure it was repeatedly. The jump from art to science requires scientists.

    • @Athalwolf13
      @Athalwolf13 Před 2 lety +13

      Agree with Quintem here.
      Its most likely that the wildly flactuating flora and fauna, along with also not having access to as pure flour or yeast most likely meant that something like autolyse or letting it rest for 12 hours without a lot of preperation is difficult.

    • @Sally4th_
      @Sally4th_ Před 2 lety +6

      I'm pretty sure it must have been. Makes sense to mix the bread last thing, leave it overnight and bake in the morning.

    • @nazgul7914
      @nazgul7914 Před 2 lety +1

      Im sure it was. I have heard of no knead bread 10 years ago already

  • @andriypredmyrskyy7791
    @andriypredmyrskyy7791 Před 2 lety +27

    I'm sure you know there's demand for this already, but Mr. Ragusea, I want nothing more than a video series explaining to me all the properties of the holy Trinity of water, flour, and yeast. I'm tired of trying to understand and remember recipes that have decided *this is how you make this bread*. No, no more, I want to start with the bread/dough/noodle I want to end up with in my mind, and from my knowledge of the fundamentals of bread-making, understand the ingredients and processes that allow me to go from raw ingredients to finished pastry.
    Please, Adam, there's no book (as far as I can tell) that covers the process of going from dough to food. I will pay good money for something that teaches me how to do it myself.

    • @juliaf_
      @juliaf_ Před 2 lety +1

      Pasta: use enough water to make the dough come together and workable, but not enough to make it too sticky or soft. If it's too soft, it won't hold shape, and too sticky makes it clump into a mess when you try anything. Too low hydration is mostly just a workout. Hydration will vary based on the protein content of your flour. I see 35-45% hydration pretty often, but it varies a lot. For drying, use the minimum amount of water reasonable for more even drying, which helps prevent cracking.
      Noodles: more or less the same as pasta. Some noodles call for a base (ph>7, usually around 10ish) for a number of reasons, such as strength or stretchiness.
      Bread: 65-85 % hydration. Mostly personal preference, and this affects how it's cooked.
      % hydration is a ratio of flour to water. 100% is 1 flour to 1 water. 50% is 1 flour 0.5 water
      Hopefully something there was helpful

    • @TheDevourerOfPancake
      @TheDevourerOfPancake Před 2 lety +1

      Ratio by Ruhlman would explain a lot of what you want know! The book is focused on by weight ratios behind a lot of recipes but in short, an average bread dough is 5 parts flour to 3 parts water (or sixty percent hydration) with 2 percent of the flour's weight in salt added. Drier doughs (55 percent hydration) form tighter bubbles and are chewier, like bagles. Wetter doughs (70 percent hydration) form much bigger holes inside the crumb as the steam expands

  • @ruffethereal1904
    @ruffethereal1904 Před 2 lety +22

    I've actually been using autolysing because a whole wheat bread recipe advises it. My father needs low-sugar, low-carb recipes and whole wheat flour just infamously refuses to soften or even come together in an elastic dough without using some fancy baking tricks to make it act more like all-purpose flour.

    • @adityaruplaha
      @adityaruplaha Před 2 lety +1

      Tip: work some vegetable oil into the dough. It helps.

    • @blackmber
      @blackmber Před rokem

      Yeah I always do this for whole wheat bread, since it doesn't take kneading very well and the bran needs some time to soak up more water. I can either spend ten minutes kneading and scraping sticky dough off my hands and the counter or just let it sit for ten minutes then give it a few turns. I put in all the ingredients at the beginning, except sometimes oil, which can make weird clumps if it gets in the dry flour.

  • @emiljohansson3089
    @emiljohansson3089 Před 2 lety +8

    I really love this type of cooking videos of yours! Talking about the benefits or in general of one specific thing and then going very deep into how it chemically works. It really gives a deeper understanding of the process, probably completely unnecessary but the nerd in me absolutely love it:D

  • @likebabystopit2182
    @likebabystopit2182 Před 2 lety +49

    I can’t wait to use my autolyse to knead my dough!

  • @SuperCookieGaming_
    @SuperCookieGaming_ Před 2 lety +8

    i have made many times with success is babish’s no knead bread. just bread flower, water, salt and yeast. leave it for a day and bake it and bam amazing fresh bread

  • @febiebayas5092
    @febiebayas5092 Před 2 lety

    The best explanation ever, don't want to miss any portion of his teachings!!! Thank you, sir!!!

  • @kentarouification
    @kentarouification Před 2 lety

    that "nah" at the end saves me time to read that entire journal. Thanx Adam

  • @basharkano9658
    @basharkano9658 Před 2 lety +3

    Quality content as usual. I love these food science videos. Makes understand the subject semi-deeply so I can apply what I learned in different circumstances.

  • @starlakelsey2782
    @starlakelsey2782 Před 2 lety +2

    For the first time I actually understand this process. Well done!

  • @recoil1592
    @recoil1592 Před 2 lety +1

    Another outstanding tip I have picked up from this man. Well done in bringing this to the attention of the masses.

  • @JustinWalker951
    @JustinWalker951 Před 2 lety +13

    I learned much of this (minus the autolyse part and the in-depth explanation from Emily) from Alton Brown years ago. Sounds like you may be a Good Eats fan too!

  • @georgiephaggotts632
    @georgiephaggotts632 Před 2 lety +1

    This channel never ceases to amaze me, great work!

  • @princekai1
    @princekai1 Před 2 lety +19

    I think you should do a video on the differences between pate fermentee, biga, poolish/flour brew, sour dough starter and maybe see if along with the auto lyse it improves the flavor, and the differences of where you'd add one of the above pre ferments to your dough e.g. poolish/flour brew before autolyse, and biga, sour starter, and pate fermentee after you've autolysed.

  • @davidonfim2381
    @davidonfim2381 Před 2 lety +52

    Adam, you really need to make a video on gluten/seitan. It's delicious when cooked properly and quite versatile. It also ties in well with gluten formation and this video.

    • @FutureCommentary1
      @FutureCommentary1 Před 2 lety +1

      I have seen comments asking for a video on seitan so when I saw the thumbnail I thought that was it.

    • @southsouthsouthside
      @southsouthsouthside Před 2 lety +2

      Kinda related but isolated wheat gluten (seitan) can be used to make weak flour (like AP) stronger and more suitable for bread making

    • @nialltracey2599
      @nialltracey2599 Před 2 lety +1

      As I understand it, it's one of the most wasteful foodstuffs imaginable -- it's made by just washing everything out of flour and binning it, cos there's no efficient way of capturing and using the by-products.

    • @davidonfim2381
      @davidonfim2381 Před 2 lety +8

      @@nialltracey2599 You do rinse away the starch component of flour, but calling it "one of the most wasteful foodstuffs imaginable" is not even remotely accurate. There are many other considerations that need to be taken into account when considering food waste- shelf life, land use, resources consumed to produce a certain mass of the food, etc. And also very importantly, the usefulness of what is being "wasted". Let's face it, most people in developed countries don't need the starch that is washed away in the process of making seitan. Throwing away things that would have had no positive effect (or that would have had a negative effect) isn't waste.
      It's like parents telling children to eat all of their food because there are children starving in Africa. The children in Africa won't be helped one iota by an American kid eating a full plate, and a kid having to habitually eat more than desired will just lead to obesity and its associated health problems. In a way, not "wasting" food by eating unnecessary calories that will likely just end up having negative effects is the biggest waste of all.

    • @purplealice
      @purplealice Před 2 lety +1

      I almost always add "vital wheat gluten" to most of my yeast doughs - they hold their shape better that way. But sometime some of the people I'm feeding are gluten intolerant, so I have to bake some extra bread without it.

  • @bulldog4791
    @bulldog4791 Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you Adam for your in depth research and reviews for an engineer that is a technical cooking nerd! 🤓

  • @pietervisagie7268
    @pietervisagie7268 Před 2 lety

    Fantastic video. Thanks Adam.

  • @selewachm
    @selewachm Před 2 lety

    Thank you. Excellent tutorial.

  • @celinepak5334
    @celinepak5334 Před 2 lety +57

    Actually, "auto-lease" (IPA [ˈɔtoʊlis]) IS the right pronunciation, ESPECIALLY if you're going to use the Ancient Greek argument--the Ancient Greek word is λύσις, and upsilons in Ancient Greek were pronounced somewhere between an "ooh" and an "ee" (most often compared to a German ü), which eventually became a straight up "ee" by the emergence of modern Greek. Consider for example "gymnasium," which has the same upsilon situation in the Ancient Greek as our current word lysis (γυμνάσιον), and is also pronounced as "JEEM-nasium" not "JAIM-nasium."
    It's true that Ancient Greek was spoken for ~2500 years (more or less depending on how you define proto-Greek and modern Greek, its descendant) and its phonology changed extensively and varied by region in that time--however, NOWHERE do we have an attestation for an "ai" sound for the upsilon--that is a purely English botch-up of the Ancient Greek language. (We know for sure that it was a pure monophthongal IPA [u] in Proto-Greek and eventually became an IPA [i] by modern Greek, and the debates for that shift are varied, but absolutely no linguist would ever claim it was an [aɪ] at any point) You can claim you're pronouncing it with an "ai" because you're an American who speaks English, and therefore you're pronouncing this word the English way (consider our word "cycle" from the Ancient Greek word κύκλος, which you'll notice ALSO has the upsilon, but because of the Great Vowel Shift and other phonological pressures of the English language, has retained a similar pronunciation as yours of "lysis.") but the French are actually MORE correct than us on their pronunciation of "autolyse"--and you most certainly should not be using Ancient Greek to back up your pronunciation, because it actually supports the French phonology much more than yours. I don't mean to be rude, but as someone who has made classics her life's work, there is already so much misinformation about the ancient world; please do your research before making such claims.
    For my sources and further information, I suggest Sidney Allen's Vox Graeca or Stephen Colvin's A Brief History of Ancient Greek. I will note that I'm not a linguist by training; only a philologist, so I was required to the learn the basics of this information, but am not an expert by any means.

    • @ur.kr.2814
      @ur.kr.2814 Před 2 lety +8

      Yeah, that he thought with such assurance that the English "ai" would be more accurate annoyed me.

    • @sam-gz1ql
      @sam-gz1ql Před 2 lety +1

      @@ur.kr.2814 🤓

    • @iskamag
      @iskamag Před 2 lety +1

      I don't even know anything of ancient greek but the word "larynx" disproves pronouncing autolyse like rice I'm prettu sure, but I might be wrong because the english language is a huge inconsistent mess that shouldn't have become a standard

    • @vbc4099
      @vbc4099 Před 2 lety

      👏👏👏

    • @vbc4099
      @vbc4099 Před 2 lety +2

      I love his chanel but when he starts to force things to show that English or American way is better..., that really bothers me. Not everything in the culture is perfect. For example when he praised a dish (mac and cheese)made with garbage food (ultraprocessed wanna be cheese)...

  • @Nefi424
    @Nefi424 Před 2 lety +6

    When making really dry doughs, like that for ramen, this step is really a necessity, rather than an option. There's so little moisture that you have to get every advantage you can get just to get it to knead, and even then it's sometimes good to knead it with your feet.

    • @pennyfarting
      @pennyfarting Před 2 lety

      Yeah, especially since ramen dough needs a LOT of kneading. A lot of shops with industrial mixers will just toss the dough in and let it go for literally hours

  • @tomypreach
    @tomypreach Před 2 lety +1

    Good for you Adam.

  • @jamesbenz3228
    @jamesbenz3228 Před 2 lety

    Superb presentation Mr Ragusea. You're really in your element in videos like this.

  • @snailgirl6
    @snailgirl6 Před 2 lety +8

    The back of my mind is imagining Adam putting bread dough in the oven, and then taking out the shirt instead....
    (that he's wearing...)

  • @mackenziedrake
    @mackenziedrake Před 2 lety

    I am so glad you explained this. I buy bread mostly because I don't have the energy to do a lot of kneading. This is a game changer. Thank you!

  • @MarieDomander
    @MarieDomander Před 2 lety

    Thanks again Adam!

  • @bread9173
    @bread9173 Před 2 lety +17

    Love this! I had a feeling that you didn't necessarily need to knead dough given my chemistry and biology knowledge. I am a biology major (concentraring in biochem tho) with a love for baking and cooking. I absolutely nerd out when I do both. I definitely want to read Buehler's book!

    • @nahrafe
      @nahrafe Před 2 lety +2

      Can tell you're a nerd with that username and pfp
      Good thing tho, keep it up

  • @nickjoeb
    @nickjoeb Před 2 lety

    Awesome! I'm glad to get the 20 min time parameter and some tips on this all around. Great little bread insight video!

  • @cu0ngpitt
    @cu0ngpitt Před 4 měsíci

    this is a very impressive video full of the science behind gluten and autolyse

  • @shawnhunter8125
    @shawnhunter8125 Před rokem

    Found a recipe online for regular old home made bread. one step in the procedure was stir the stuff together and let it sit 10min. Now I know why. Think I'll try 20 next time. Thanks for all the great information!

  • @oguzhanskb
    @oguzhanskb Před 2 lety +1

    autolyse process was a question on my midterm test today. wish i had watched this yesterday

  • @sr2291
    @sr2291 Před 2 lety +12

    One video taught me to fold the dough a few folds then put into a covered bowl for an hour. Do this 3 or 4 times. Sometimes the waiting is just as emotionally taxing as the kneading and rising.

    • @Athalwolf13
      @Athalwolf13 Před 2 lety

      I hoenstly am tempted to say that the various ways to make bread really depends what you need it for.
      Need to prepare tomato sauce for pizza or making soup / braised meat?
      Well, letting it ferment for 12 hours while giving it some light punches or foldings in between is certainly more practical than kneading it for a whole 15 minutes, especially since you also need to rolll it out (gently) and then handstretch it. Along with also having plenty of time to clean up the apartment and prep the table.

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 Před 2 lety

      @@Athalwolf13 The recipe was for Ciabatta Bread. It was totally delicious.

    • @Athalwolf13
      @Athalwolf13 Před 2 lety +1

      @@sr2291 Uuuh. It has been a while i had ciabatta bread. I think its very similar to baguette, if perhaps less chewy and much broader ? Though i only had ciabatta from the grocery store.

    • @southsouthsouthside
      @southsouthsouthside Před 2 lety +1

      You can mix and match kneading techniques, I make a fairly hydrated milk bread for sandwichs and kneading by hand straight after mixing the ingredients it's too much of a hassle, I make a 30min autolyse, 10 min slap and fold then 10min bench resting and the dough get's super elastic and strong, any other way and it's just a soupy mess of butter and dough

  • @JasonCC1234
    @JasonCC1234 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Adam.

  • @SpaceshipOperations
    @SpaceshipOperations Před 2 lety +4

    As somebody who doesn't like to knead, this advice is life-saving to me. Now I might never opt to buy pre-made pizza dough ever again. Thank you very much!

    • @kjdude8765
      @kjdude8765 Před 2 lety +1

      Just know that the trade off is time. You will need much less yeast (so it doesn't overferment during the long rise) and it will take 3-4 hours with a few turn and folds to get the dough developed. Someone else in the comments said they mix everything up and put it in a container in the fridge for 2 days and it comes out pretty good.

    • @SpaceshipOperations
      @SpaceshipOperations Před 2 lety +1

      @@kjdude8765 Cool to know. Thank you for the tips!

  • @brunosangonese
    @brunosangonese Před 2 lety +1

    Great video Adam!

  • @AscendtionArc
    @AscendtionArc Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for this.

  • @babanneklem
    @babanneklem Před 2 lety +1

    I am just used to such smooth ad transitions from Adam, I was instantly dissapointed that this was not that smooth. As if it is norm to have such good transitions. Nice job Adam !

  • @YourFlyIsUndone
    @YourFlyIsUndone Před 2 lety +1

    Died laughing watching the bread professor carry a baguette into work with him

  • @RafaelBeraldoPU2URT
    @RafaelBeraldoPU2URT Před 2 lety +1

    I just decided to bake today after a long hiatus. I said to myself, eh, I'll try this autolyse thing. Then CZcams notifies me about this video. Talk about timing!

  • @lilac6257
    @lilac6257 Před 2 lety

    How to prepare dough cleverly. Sometimes I do like to just kneed my by dough simply because I want to do sth, but on busy or lazy days, this is amazong knowledge!

  • @alejandroolivas3476
    @alejandroolivas3476 Před rokem

    Very nice and informative, also covers other topics like overkneading and oxidation. Thanks a lot man, great work.

  • @julianachandler2975
    @julianachandler2975 Před 2 lety

    Excellent video. Thanks!

  • @sigfreed11
    @sigfreed11 Před 2 lety +5

    Thanks for the video, looking forward to more bread related content! Would love to hear your thoughts on health benefits of true sourdough vs long fermented instant yeast dough 👍🏻

  • @emilyk9074
    @emilyk9074 Před 2 lety

    I used this method for a very sticky cinnamon bun dough and it helped immensely, spared myself 20 minutes of pain :) they also turned out to be the best batch of yeast dough I’ve ever made

  • @susanfarley1332
    @susanfarley1332 Před rokem +1

    I've always had trouble kneading dough. I thought I was doing it wrong. Now I know what to do.

  • @natbvm1880
    @natbvm1880 Před 2 lety

    The thread metaphor was great

  • @pnwmeditations
    @pnwmeditations Před 2 lety

    I really appreciate these explainers. Thank you!

  • @American5585
    @American5585 Před 2 lety

    Great and very useful video adam, thanks

  • @Chris-zl7wk
    @Chris-zl7wk Před 2 lety

    Amazing! Thank you!

  • @FoxFireNaruto
    @FoxFireNaruto Před 2 lety

    Loving the "Good Eats" vibes of the string demo. 👍

  • @yustianp9708
    @yustianp9708 Před 2 lety

    Man i don't even neccessarily wanna know about these stuffs but i adam's video has always been such a leisure time for me lol something about it is just so relaxing

  • @carolr4871
    @carolr4871 Před 2 lety

    Fascinating and educational video! I can't wait to try the autolyse with my next sourdough loaf.

  • @charleya.d.heuertz935
    @charleya.d.heuertz935 Před 2 lety +2

    "This OLD paper of 1985"
    me, born in 1984: I refuse to consider this paper old good sir!

  • @dnjsrl
    @dnjsrl Před 2 lety

    Deeply appreciate you doing the research. As a scientist, this will make my life so much easier since I now understand how autolyse works and now I can reasonably anticipate how the rest of my bread ingedients will interact. I can now rearrange my recipies for max flavor and efficiency!

  • @Stezachuda
    @Stezachuda Před 2 lety

    Every Monday is a class I love
    Love You Adam ❤️

  • @J86745
    @J86745 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm a simple man. I see an opportunity to be lazier in the kitchen, I take it. Thank you Adam!

  • @lux2mars
    @lux2mars Před 2 lety

    This is, to me, what made Adam's channel better than any other channel. He doesn't just give you a recipe and tells you "just do like this it's better". He's gonna tell you why he does something, why he doesn't do something, the pros, the cons, and let's you figure out what you want with the infos he gave you. Thanks to him I don't spend 20 min stirring risotto for no reason anymore, I make the best brownie I ever ate, and many more tips. I'm a regular home pizza maker. I'm 100% gonna try this and I have no doubt it's gonna come out as my new standard of making pizza. Thanks Adam.

  • @scottripley5764
    @scottripley5764 Před 2 lety

    I see that tricep flex, adam. Look good! hell yeah

  • @TimeLapseRich
    @TimeLapseRich Před 2 lety +2

    I've been a millwright building industrial bakeries for 30 years, the biggest places. I don't remember ever seeing any bakery use the autolyse. Most industrial bakeries use mixers in the 500 to 2000 pound of dough range (wonce moved a 3500), they are equiped with 25 to 100 hp electric motors. Those large mixers have no problem kneading the dough, most kneading that is done after the first rise is done as some sort of conveying system.

  • @horizontbeskrajneinovacije6440

    Thank you...great informative presentation...great anologies

  • @kinkinmyslinky967
    @kinkinmyslinky967 Před 7 měsíci

    I was at the culinary back in ‘94. We were autolysing dough in chef coppages class. Funny to think we were at the cutting edge. Crazy it’s been almost 30 years.

  • @JoGurk
    @JoGurk Před 2 lety +2

    1:27 sounded like this videos sponsor was a company selling window panes

  • @AaronStuartHall
    @AaronStuartHall Před 2 lety +1

    I have made sourdough for the past 10 years and played around with it a lot. Adam is really hitting the mark, but I think it's only going to really land with people who have already worked through the basics. So much of this stuff is guided by the "vibe of the thing" and that is really hard to impart with videos like this.

  • @andrewamann2821
    @andrewamann2821 Před 2 lety +2

    Instructions unclear: dresser drawers now filled with flour paste, and my oven has been vomiting out t-shirts for the last 3 hours....

  • @buttsexandbananapeels
    @buttsexandbananapeels Před 2 lety

    I like a man that speaks softly and carries a big baguette.

  • @kealebogapoifo6703
    @kealebogapoifo6703 Před 2 lety

    Informative and entertaining as always

  • @piotrmunnich5240
    @piotrmunnich5240 Před rokem

    Love the way you autolyse this topic into little molecules of understading

  • @rbiv5
    @rbiv5 Před 2 lety +1

    Autolyse is one of the best techniques I have found when working with high hydration recipes. Less time in the stand mixer and much easier to work with otherwise difficult dough. I even do it for lower hydration recipes just to save time. I do it between 30 mun-45 min for strong flours and 20-30 minutes for weaker flours. I have hear autolyse does weaken the flour which is important to not over-autolyse.

  • @davidcarbone3385
    @davidcarbone3385 Před 2 lety

    Nice chemistry refresher!

  • @dwaynewladyka577
    @dwaynewladyka577 Před 2 lety +3

    This is just the video on bread dough that we kneaded. Cheers!

    • @angelina-ng6xw
      @angelina-ng6xw Před 2 lety

      ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ SEXSY.SNAPGIRLS.TODAY/angelina?MAKING-LOVE
      Megan: "Hotter"
      Hopi: "Sweeter"
      Joonie: "Cooler"
      Yoongi: "Butter" .
      ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!この日のライブ配信は、かならりやばかったですね!1万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)やっぱり人参最高!まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!今後は気を付けないとね. . !💖🖤❤️#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!#1万人を超える人が見ていたもん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね! #1万人を超える人が見ていたもん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高! #まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #垃圾 今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!この日のライブ配信は、かならりやばかったですね!1万人を超える人が見ていたもん(笑)やっぱり人参最高!まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした,. 💖🖤在整個人類歷史上,強者,富人和具有狡猾特質的人捕食部落,氏族,城鎮,城市和鄉村中的弱者,無`'守和貧窮成員。然而,人類的生存意願迫使那sfdsd些被拒絕,被剝奪或摧毀的基本需求的人們找到了一種生活方式,並繼續將其DNA融入不斷發展的人類社會。. 說到食物,不要以為那些被拒絕的人只吃垃圾。相反,他們學會了在被忽視的肉類和蔬菜中尋找營養。他們學會了清潔,切塊,調味和慢燉慢燉的野菜和肉類,在食品``

  • @ericwilner1403
    @ericwilner1403 Před 2 lety +1

    Interesting!
    I'd long ago - mainly out of laziness rather than from any knowledge of the topic - gotten in the habit of mixing most of the flour with water and yeast and letting it ferment for half an hour or so before adding oil and salt and kneading in the rest of the flour.
    I'll have to try the "add the yeast later" approach one of these days.

  • @comprehensiblehorrors
    @comprehensiblehorrors Před 2 lety +1

    another great video by the mariah carey christmas chord guy. happy holiday season!

  • @Kragith
    @Kragith Před 2 lety +10

    It's eerie how these seemingly independent and unique food tubers all seem to trend an idea within such close proximity to one another. It's nothing as obvious as directly copying, more that the subject matter that appears in one of their vids very quickly becomes a subject or in some cases even a topic in another. I believe they talk to each other much like fashion celebs do, and plan the next technique we are going to be into.

    • @gyrtiasnecrotaros4710
      @gyrtiasnecrotaros4710 Před 2 lety +1

      I mean to me it would make sense that foodtubers watch eachother in order to learn new things and to tell their own viewers about it when they do
      If they profit from it then their viewers could too

    • @hopeo-w5961
      @hopeo-w5961 Před 2 lety +2

      algorithmic convergence

    • @herzogsbuick
      @herzogsbuick Před 2 lety +4

      I think often they're watching the same stuff upstream. Someone finds a forgotten historical oddity, it's all over the place, stuff like that. With the exceptions of fundraisers and collabs, I think they're more rushing to be the first to publish so they're not seen as copying. I'd be very surprised if they were planning the next technique together.

    • @InnuendoXP
      @InnuendoXP Před 2 lety

      or there's online discussion boards where trends come up, maybe som articles or blogs are written, then content creators notice & decide to make a video about it. Usually lagging behind the other material because it generally takes more time to produce video than text.

  • @harryviking6347
    @harryviking6347 Před 5 dny

    I never done this before, but after autolyse over night, I was impressed by the transformation the dough had made!! It made my sourdough bread so much better! The dough got very sticky though....