Brioche
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Brioche is a French bread made from eggs, butter, flour and yeast. The dough ends up soft, buttery and rich. Some recipes will call for Eau de fleur d'oranger, vanilla or vanilla sugar.
Brioche is most often made as individual rolls. To make the rolls, the dough is risen and baked in those round, Brioche moulds with flared, fluted sides that mostly end up as dusty decorations on our kitchen walls.
There are also round and long Brioches, and a braided one (see "Brioche Vendéenne".)
Cooking Tips for Brioche
The Brioche rolls with the top knots are made by first reserving some dough before making larger rolls. The larger rolls then have a hole pressed into their tops with a thumb, almost all the way through. Pieces of the reserved dough are formed into tear-drop shapes, with the pointier bit inserted into the holes in the larger rolls.
If you don't have Brioche moulds (and they're not worth buying, unless you intend to make Brioche rolls all the time), just use muffin tins. Or, make a tressed loaf instead.
Try brushing rolls and loaves with a eggwash before you set the formed rolls and loaves out for the final rise. It will keep them from drying out, and enhance the flavour. Brush again with egg wash just before baking.
Literature & Lore
And whoever did say it, it actually made sense. Back then, there was a law in France that if ordinary bread was sold out, fancier breads such as brioche then had to be sold at the same price as regular bread.
Some have even mused that the idea originally came from an event related in a letter written in Latin by John Peckham, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1272 to 1292. What Peckam actually writes, however, is that because the deacon and sub-deacon of a rich church in Lichfield were so poor that they were begging for bread, that they should eat at the Vicar's house, and that the Vicar would be provided with extra money per year to allow for this.
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