la buona cucina americana: Sandwich Buns

June 27th, 2008

You can get lucky and buy hotdog and hamburger buns as good as anything you are used to. Or you can buy an innocent looking package of buns and they will be as sweet as Italian breakfast brioche. That really bothered me. So I wandered around the internet and found a recipe to make them at home, then of course had to alter the recipe to be made with Italian ingredients.

I made these miniature. I had just found packets of tiny hotdogs that were 25 grams each, four to a 100 gram package. I thought they were really cute, so making the buns for them was even more apt. This recipe made twelve each of tiny buns. If you made them normal sized, I think you could make sixteen of them. Naturally, most people will want to make all one kind, not both kinds.

These are a bit firmer and breadier than buns I bought in USA supermarkets. I would not hesitate to use them for any sandwich for which a soft bun is all right. That would include lobster rolls (oh sigh) or crab or shrimp rolls (which we can do here depending on if crab meat is available. It’s real bread, just a soft bread without a crunch crust.

I have always preferred the style of hotdog buns with smooth top and bottom and rough sides. Before making these I had no idea I had any sentiments about hotdog buns, but I apparently do. Anyway, I put them close together so they would come out that way.

Hotdog or hamburger buns

INGREDIENTS:

1 cup (250 ml) milk
1/4 cup (125 ml) water or you may need a bit more
1/4 cup (50 g) butter
2-1/4 cups (300 g) 00 flour, farina di grano tenero
1-1/2 cups (200 g) bread flour, farina di grano duro, or farina di Manitoba
1 (.25 ounce) package instant yeast which is also, handily, 7 g just as you find it in Italy
2 tablespoons white sugar
1 teaspoons salt
1 egg
1 egg for egg washing

DIRECTIONS:

In a small saucepan, heat milk, water and butter until very warm, 120 degrees F (50 degrees C).

In a large bowl, mix together 1 3/4 cup (230 g) flour, yeast, sugar and salt. Mix milk mixture into flour mixture, and then mix in egg. Stir in the remaining flour, 1/2 cup at a time, beating well after each addition. You might need a bit more water if the weather is dry or the flour is. I use the dough hooks on my Braun multi-mixer. When the dough has pulled together, turn it out onto a lightly floured surface, and knead until smooth and elastic, about 8 minutes, or you can do most of it with dough hooks and just do the last bit by hand.

Divide dough into 16 equal pieces. Shape into smooth balls, and place on an oven paper covered baking sheet. Flatten slightly. Cover, and let rise for 30 to 45 minutes. It may be the difference between all purpose US flour and the mix of two Italian flours, but mine definitely needed more rising time that that predicted by the recipe.

Make an egg wash of an egg and a bit of cold water, then brush it over the surfaces before putting them into the oven. That’s how you get that shiny, golden crust.

Bake at 400 degrees F (200 degrees C) for 10 to 12 minutes, or until golden brown.

For Hot Dog Buns: Shape each piece into a 6×4 inch (10 X 15 cm) rectangle. Starting with the longer side, roll up tightly, and pinch edges and ends to seal. Let rise about 30 to 45 minutes. Bake as above. You could also make Philly steak sub rolls, but I think it would make about 6 and take from 12-15 minutes to bake. Try and tell me what you get—- I am on a DIET and cannot do it.

It takes less than 1.5 hours, and for most of that you are doing nothing. This is a worthy project! At my market prices, it costs about one euro, too. Stick them into a plastic sack and tie it tightly with a twistie and in the freezer they’ll stay fresh at least a month.

Gnam gnam!

In Italiano:

Questi sono i panini per hamburger e wurstel come sono dalla vera cucina americana. Non somigliano tanto quelli venduti nel supermercato. Provateli!

Panini per hotdog e hamburger

ingredienti:

250 ml latte
125 ml acqua (o possibilmente di più)
50 g burro
300 g farina 00 di grano tenero
200 g farina di grano duro
una bustina (7 g) lievita di birra in polvere
2 cucchiai di zucchero
1 cucchiaino di sale
1 uovo
1 uovo per la glassa

Preperazione: circa 15 minute e poi 40 lievitazione e poi 12 minute di cottura. Meno di 1.5 ore per un pane buono, morbido e sano!

Riscalda in una piccola padella il latte, l’acqua e il burro fino a 50 gradi.

In una ciottola grande, mette 230 g di farina e aggiunge il liquido, battendo fortamente. Aggiunge l’uovo and mescolare bene. Man mano, aggiunge il resto della farina, battendo ogni volta di incorporarla bene. Poi, su una superficie spargata di farina, lavorate la pasta fino a è lisce e elastica.

Per panini di hamburger, dividete la pasta in 16 pezzi, facendo palle. Distribuiscete i panini sulla carta da forno su una placca. Copriteli e lasciateli a lievitare 30-45 minuti.

Quando sono pronti, riscalda il forno a 200° C.

Mescolate l’uovo che rimane con un po’ di acqua con una forchetta per fare una glassa e poi con un pennelino aplicatela su i panini. Infornateli per 10-12 minute, fino al sono dorati.

Per fare i panini do hotdog, dividete la pasta in 16 pezzi, e fa un rettangolo di 10X15 cm. Iniziando da lato più lungo, rottolarli stretti e poi sigillarli bene gli estremità sotto il panino. Finite e infornateli come di sopra.

Sono ottimi per il congelatore, metteteli in un sacco di plastica, siggilatela con i twistie, e i panini rimangono freschi per almeno un mese. La ricetta costa circa un euro qui in Umbria.

Entry Filed under: Italy, bread, expat, cookery, baking, cucina americana

17 Comments Add your own

  • 1. amanda@A Tuscan View...  |  June 27th, 2008 at 9:26 am

    Yum! That hot dog looks kind of obscene but I\’m sure it tastes good.

    The buns look fantastic and I\’ll give them a try because my kids love soft white bread and always complain about the rock like offerings from the local forno, alas I too am on DIET, Judith, and even your crafty buns (we call them Torpedo Buns or Milk Buns in England) cannot tempt me!:)

  • 2. admin  |  June 27th, 2008 at 12:40 pm

    That hotdog, wurstel, is a mere 3″ long and not really very obscene, or it would make me laugh anyway.

    DIET here– no pasta, no rice, no potatoes, no bread, NO WINE, no fun.

  • 3. Lulu Barbarian  |  June 27th, 2008 at 5:41 pm

    I\’m really tired of supermarket buns, and these look perfect! When you use this recipe to make 16 buns, does that give the miniature buns or regular ones?

  • 4. bleeding espresso  |  June 27th, 2008 at 6:18 pm

    Oh this is such a great idea Judith; thanks for putting in the time to Italianize this one.

    Can’t resist…love your buns :)

  • 5. Palma  |  June 28th, 2008 at 8:09 am

    Those look great. It makes me crave a hot dog. I don’t think I’ve had one in a year. Must be 4th of July fever, except…we’re having BBQ ribs!

  • 6. admin  |  June 28th, 2008 at 7:39 pm

    @Palma:

    Surely you could fit a 3″ miniature that weighs 1 ounce!

  • 7. admin  |  June 28th, 2008 at 7:40 pm

    @bleeding espresso:

    I think I am going to reveal other fillings you can put in these buns, although that little hotdog was really good!

    I knew someone would say that.

  • 8. admin  |  June 28th, 2008 at 7:40 pm

    @Lulu Barbarian:

    I made 24 that could have been smaller for my purposes, so 16 should be normal sized and 12 would be really large. But hey, you’re a barbarian, you don’t even need a bun!

  • 9. Lulu Barbarian  |  June 28th, 2008 at 9:42 pm

    @8 LOL! Thanks for the info!

  • 10. Maryann  |  June 29th, 2008 at 4:54 pm

    These look beautiful! Well done!

  • 11. David  |  June 30th, 2008 at 1:28 pm

    I keep getting suckered when I see burger buns in the supermarket, and they\’re always horrible. (Although I do get a kick out of the American flag they drape over the label.)

  • 12. admin  |  June 30th, 2008 at 4:34 pm

    @David:

    I can at least promise this of my buns: no flags and no junk. They are real food.

  • 13. admin  |  June 30th, 2008 at 5:11 pm

    That didn’t come out sounding like I meant it to sound!

  • 14. eg  |  July 1st, 2008 at 1:57 pm

    Maybe not but I would think that it is good that there is no junk

  • 15. mjc  |  July 9th, 2008 at 6:43 pm

    Hi, quick question, since you seem to know Italian - English conversions - how much is a bustina of baking powder? I have a recipe that calls for 1/2 bustina di lievito in polvere, and is that bustina the same size as the yeast packet (7g)? Thank you! :)

  • 16. admin  |  July 11th, 2008 at 9:04 pm

    I don’t know the answer because I hate all these little envelpes so much I will go to foreign countries or bribe small children with space in their luggage to get the tins of baking powder. I will, however, as someone who uses them and get back to you!

  • 17. admin  |  July 13th, 2008 at 10:01 am

    I checked at the market yersterday and the packets I saw were 16 g each. That seems a lot to me. It was a packet of 10 at 160 g total.

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