BBA#27: PORTUGUESE SWEET BREAD

This type of bread was a favorite of mine as I grew up,  but  back in Brazil it goes only by “sweet bread”  (pao doce) and is sold as a very small roll.  When I came to the US for the first time, I saw bags of “Hawaiian bread” that looked similar to the “pao doce” from my childhood.   Only a few years later I learned that indeed those are all the same, brought both to Hawaii and New England by Portuguese immigrants.  So, here we have  a bread that ties Portugal (the birth country of my grandparents), Brazil, and the United States (and for sure other countries influenced by the Portuguese culture).  Of course, I was more than excited to make this bread!
sliced

I remind my  readers that all recipes for the breads from “The Challenge”, cannot be published, so if you want to make any of these breads, buy Peter’s book.

His version of Portuguese sweet bread calls for a sponge made with a large amount of yeast, that ferments for two hours and is then incorporated in the dough.

Even though I work with microorganisms on a daily basis, it never ceases to amaze me how quickly they go to work once food is around…  Water, flour, sugar, and yeast, 90 minutes together…

sponge1sponge2

sponge3

The dough does not rise that much, after 3 hours it had barely doubled in size, but it seemed light and almost airy.  Into the oven it went…

beforerise

afterrise

The bread did not have much oven spring, but tasted very good, had a moist, soft crumb, a gentle hint of citrus, not too sweet, just right.

IMG_2795

Verdict: a nice, simple bread, not exactly like that of my childhood, but it’s ok, some memories are impossible to match… ;-)

Check the Portuguese breads from my fellow bakers:

Txfarmer made a very cute version, shaping them as doves…. click here

Emily from Ready to Wait…. click here

Next on the list: Potato Rosemary Bread……   Stay tuned….

7 Responses to BBA#27: PORTUGUESE SWEET BREAD

  1. Your loaf looks beautiful. It is nice when things remind of us our childhoods.

  2. The loaf looks very pretty.

    In the Philippines where I was born, we have sweetish buns very similar in taste and texture to pao doce. Some Filipino cookbooks have claimed those buns were brought by the Portuguese during their short time there.

  3. You did a nice job with the one Sally. Looks just like in the book! I’ve decided to wait and make this after Thanksgiving.

  4. We really do live in a very small world. Thanks for the background info on this bread. Your loaf is shiny and beautiful.

  5. Thanks, everyone!

    I sliced the leftover bread and we thaw a couple of slices yesterday, it freezes very well, which is always an added bonus with the challenge going on and on and on.

    There is only so much bread one can eat :-)

  6. Pingback: Portuguese Sweet Bread (or not!)

  7. Oh, this loaf look so yummy. It makes my mouth water. Unfortunately, my loaf is long gone, I definitely have to make it again soon because it was so very good!

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