It really depends on the type of dough you make to decide on the number of risings. If you're using sugar or honey in your recipe, then one rising should be sufficient as the enzymes in the sweeteners provide readily available food for the yeast. However, should you use a recipe lacking a sweetener, then you'll need to let it rise twice so the yeast will have the time necessary expand the dough. To help you decide, I'll say this: The longer it take to rise, the more potential you have for complex flavors. It's really going to depend on what you want out of a loaf.
It means rise it in the oven, then take it out and put it on the side with a tea-towel (for people who don't understand this phrase, kitchen-cloth) over it and leave it to rise there for 10-15 minutes. It means rise it in the oven, then take it out and put it on the side with a tea-towel (for people who don't understand this phrase, kitchen-cloth) over it and leave it to rise there for 10-15 minutes.
yes
Yes, but you have to let it warm to room temperature and rise before baking.
Using a basic Pizza dough or white bread recipe, when the bread is ready for it's final rise, spread it out in a thin layer. Place pepperoni and sundried tomatoes over the dough along with some small chunks of mozzerella cheese. Roll up the dough to form a loaf. Let it rise to double and then bake. You can also sprinkle dried garlic and Italian seasoning over the dough before rolling it up if you like.
Depending on the desired coarseness of the bread it will typically take about 20 to 30 minutes to rise. The longer the bread is left in the oven the more coarse it will come out. For softer bread, leaving it in the oven for about 20 minutes will be fine.
To 'prove' your bread means to allow the yeast time to work and raise the dough, to do this cover your dough with a damp tea towel and put it in a warm place for 30 to 40 mins.
I am no baker, but I tried the oven. Preheat on lowest possible temp. Turn off for 20 min before you put dough in to rise (hoping it's down to about 85 degrees). At least it is draft free.
Bread needs to rise, because inside the bread is lots of Carbon Dioxide, so the bread needs to rise to let out all the Carbon Dioxide.
Bread and bread dough are stretchy because they are made with flour containing gluten, a protein molecule that forms networks in bread dough. Gluten is "worked up" in bread dough through the kneading process.
Bread that uses yeast to rise (not "quickbreads") will only rise at a temperature that supports the life and growth of the yeast. This is about the temperature of a very warm room. When bread reaches oven temperature the yeast is killed, so the main rising of the bread is done before baking. Any further rising in the oven happens before the bread gets heated through, or from the expansion of the bubbles that were already in the bread.
Mix and prepare the dough, let it rise (proof), then bake the product.
The Israelites ate unleavened bread during Passover to commemorate their hasty departure from Egypt when they did not have time to let their bread rise. Eating unleavened bread during this time serves as a reminder of their ancestors' freedom from slavery.
After you make the dough, you cover it with a towel and let it rise until double in size, then you punch it down and recover it and let it rise a second time and then you bake it