Guest guest Posted December 14, 2000 Report Share Posted December 14, 2000 The following recipe was posted today and, as a card-carrying member of ABMtalk, I found an incorrect amount in it. I don't think the folks who pu this recipe together really know what they are talking about when they play with their bread machines. There is a difference in bread machine yeast and dry active yeast. The recipe said * Exported from MasterCook * Walnut Cherry Bread with Orange Zest (ABM) 1 1/4 teaspoons active dry yeast or bread machine yeast It should read 1-1/4 tsp bread machine yeast or 2-1/4 tsp dry active yeast. A 1.5 lb loaf uses 3 cups of flour and 2-1/4 tsp dry active yeast or 1-1/2 tsp bread machine yeast. If you use 1-1/4 tsp active dry yeast in this loaf, it will be a very short 1.5 lb loaf and probably a hockey puck. Just wanted to pass this along as I have learned over the last 2 years to find incorrect amounts in ABM recipes. I create ABM recipes myself and this amount is definitely incorrect. I don't anyone to make a hockey puck. It is a lousy experience. Turns folks off to ABM bread making. Take my advice if you are going to make this recipe. It does look good aside from the incorrect yeast information. RisaG Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2000 Report Share Posted December 15, 2000 Interesting. I was laying in bed last night, drooling over my Gold Medal bread little booklet sold in market. And suddenly, I noticed that all the recipes called for Bread Machine Yeast, which I'd never even heard of until I read this post of Risa's. (Gold Medal must manufacture Fleishman's because all the recipes call for THAT brand of Bread Machine yeast. Anyway, because all I have is regular yeast, I searched all thru the book for info about how to convert to REGULAR yeast. OH, I just noticed-- they equate bread machine yeast with 'quick active dry yeast " (meaning those two are interchangeable).... and here is the chart they published in this booklet, for those of us to have Regular active dry yeast on hand. Here is what they wrote: If Bread machine or quick active dry yeast, then 3/4 teaspoon ==== 1 teaspoon Regular active dry yeast 1 teaspoon ======= 1-1/2 teaspoons Regular active dry yeast 1-1/2 teaspoon ==== 2 teaspoons Regular active dry yeast This info was published in a wonderful little booklet, called Best Bread Machine Recipes, by Gold Medal (Betty Crocker); a picture with every recipe. (#29) $3.75 U.S., $5.50 Canada. In our market now in magazine section. Brenda Adams (who notices that once we first hear of something, we see it around us immediately -- it may have been there for years...but we didn't SEE it until that first mention brought up our awareness) At 06:33 PM 12/13/2000 , RisaG wrote: >The following recipe was posted today and, as a card-carrying member of >ABMtalk, I found an incorrect amount in it. I don't think the folks who pu >this recipe together really know what they are talking about when they >play with their bread machines. There is a difference in bread machine >yeast and dry active yeast. > >The recipe said > >* Exported from MasterCook * > > Walnut Cherry Bread with Orange Zest (ABM) > >1 1/4 teaspoons active dry yeast > or bread machine yeast > >It should read 1-1/4 tsp bread machine yeast or 2-1/4 tsp dry active >yeast. A 1.5 lb loaf uses 3 cups of flour and 2-1/4 tsp dry active yeast >or 1-1/2 tsp bread machine yeast. If you use 1-1/4 tsp active dry yeast in >this loaf, it will be a very short 1.5 lb loaf and probably a hockey puck. > >Just wanted to pass this along as I have learned over the last 2 years to >find incorrect amounts in ABM recipes. I create ABM recipes myself and >this amount is definitely incorrect. I don't anyone to make a hockey puck. >It is a lousy experience. Turns folks off to ABM bread making. Take my >advice if you are going to make this recipe. It does look good aside from >the incorrect yeast information. > >RisaG > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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