OLIVE OIL BRIOCHE

Karen from Karen’s Kitchen Stories is a source of endless inspiration for me. Particularly on anything related to bread, she finds the most unusual, exotic, unique recipes, and then bakes them like it’s no big deal at all.  Just to give you a recent example, look at this incredible concoction for which she used 12-ounce empty soda cans wrapped with foil as a baking “pan.”  Amazing, isn’t it? Today I share with you my adventure with her Olive Oil Brioche. I made only half the recipe and still had a ton of dough to play with. Enough for a large loaf and 6 buns. For reasons that will be discussed in the comments, if you make it, be ready to have one loaf and 8 buns. The amount for the loaf pan was a tad too much.

OLIVE OIL BRIOCHE
(slightly modified from Karen’s Kitchen Stories)

for the poolish:
100 grams all purpose flour
100 grams water
1.5 grams instant yeast

Mix the ingredients, cover with plastic wrap, and place in the refrigerator over night.

for the levain (Sourdough)
1 tablespoon starter
110 grams all purpose flour
110 grams water

Mix the ingredients, cover with plastic wrap, and let sit overnight at room temperature until bubbly.

for the final dough: 
200 grams poolish
150 grams levain
500 grams bread flour
12 grams salt
7.5 grams instant yeast
250 grams eggs
120 grams milk
80 grams honey
Zest of one Meyer lemon (optional)
25 grams water
220 grams extra virgin olive oil
For the egg wash: 1 egg plus one tablespoon milk

In a stand mixer, combine the flour, salt, yeast, eggs, milk, levain, poolish, honey, lemon zest, and water and mix on low for about 5 minutes. Cover and let rest for about 20 minutes.

Mix the dough with the spiral hook on medium to high speed for 8 minutes.
With the mixer running on medium,  add the oil slowly, pausing so that the oil is absorbed. I did it in three additions. Incorporation of the oil will take time, so exercise patience.  Add a sprinkle of bread flour to speed incorporation if you so desire, but do it only in the second and third addition. The dough should end up very smooth and not tear when  you stretch it.

Allow the dough to bulk ferment (in a large bowl covered in plastic wrap) for 2 hours at 70 degrees F. Do three stretch and folds during the first 90 minutes, one every thirty minutes.  When the dough is ready, remove three pieces of about 250g each and braid them. Place in a slightly oiled 9 x 5 loaf pan for final proofing. Divide the rest of the dough in 8 portions, shape as buns, and proof.

Heat the oven to 425 degrees F.  After the bread has been proofing for 1 and a half to 2 hours (until doubled), brush with egg wash and bake until golden brown, 30 to 40 minutes, until internal temperature is 200 F. You can sprinkle sesame seeds on the buns if you so desire.

Un-mold the large loaf and cool on a wire rack together with the buns.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments: I will not lie to you, this is a project. The bread requires a sourdough starter, a poolish (fermented flour using small amount of commercial yeast and prepared the day before), and commercial yeast in the final dough. But it is a total pleasure to work with, rises like a rocket and the texture and taste? You will not miss the butter, that’s for sure. As Karen said, it keeps a lot better than the traditional version. And freezes beautifully too.

When you start adding the olive oil, you will be sure the whole thing is ruined, and might have a few rude thoughts directed at me. It seems impossible for the dough to come together. Have bread faith. And here is a little tip that might help: as you add the olive oil and the mixer is going and going, with a puddle of oil all around and looking hopeless, add just a sprinkle of bread flour on top. It will help things get in shape faster. But just a sprinkle, I say 1 tablespoon or so. If you add the olive oil in three additions, do that in the final two, when the dough will have more trouble incorporating it.

For a 9 x 5 loaf pan, I advise you to make three strands with about 250g of dough in each. Then divide the rest in 8 buns. When you do that, you will be able to let the shaped loaf proof for closer to 2 hours and it will not rip a bit like mine did. I had no choice but to bake after 1 hour and 10 minutes, the dough wanted to leave the pan and explore the kitchen. No bueno. That’s because I used 300g per strand, a bit too much. Don’t be put off by the complexity of this recipe, once you have the starter and the poolish prepared the day before, it is just a matter of weighing all other ingredients and having some fun.

Karen, thank you for the inspiration, I know I tell you this all the time but it’s so true… Your blog is a pleasure to follow!

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13 thoughts on “OLIVE OIL BRIOCHE

  1. Awwww. Thank you!! Your loaf and buns look wonderful! Great tip on the flour sprinkle. When I’m saying a few cross words as everything sloshes, I take the dough out and drop it back in in smallish pieces one at a time as the mixer is going. Your method is much easier.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Any tips for getting the dough to come together in the mixer in the 8 minute time frame? I mixed for 8 minutes and the dough wasn’t particularly close to coming together. So I let it rest for 15 or 20 minutes and tried again for 8 minutes (this is using a kitchen aid mixer with C shaped dough hook on medium speed). Still wasn’t cohesive so I let it rest again and tried one more session of mixing… closer but it never formed a ball. I was still able to incorporate the olive oil, but the dough was too sticky to shape so I put it into the pan without shaping. The baked loaf rose in the oven OK and the bread was good, maybe a bit less airy than it could have been. I double checked the ingredient quantities and they were correct. Only change I made was almond milk instead of dairy milk, and bread flour instead of all purpose in the poolish and levain.

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    • if a dough refuses to come together I add more flour and don’t worry about sticking to the amounts listed, because ingredients can vary – just yesterday I made cinnamon rolls according to a VERY Reputable source and I swear to you I had to add almost 3/4 of a CUP more flour to make it come together – I was shocked. So my apologies that things were a bit off for you, I do hope you try the recipe again because it is a great loaf, and I made it about 4 times total… not sure if the change in milk was the problem, but as I said, if things are not looking promising I add more flour

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      • Appreciate your reply, thanks. Very true, different flours and conditions make a big difference. I actually got the recipe from the Tartine book originally, then searched online to see if anyone had made it and your page popped up. I was looking for loaf pan size since that’s not mentioned in the book so your notes on that were very helpful. Since you had success I figured I’d ask about getting the dough to come together. I’ve baked bread up to 90% hydration with the flour I used for the brioche so I didn’t think that was the problem. The few times I’ve tried mixing very wet bread dough in the kitchen aid mixer with the dough hook I’ve had trouble getting the dough to come together. If I work the same dough by hand it develops strength just fine. Maybe a spiral shaped attachment might work better. Or hold back some of the liquid until the dough starts to come together. Thanks again for your help.

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