Breville BBM800XL Manuel d'utilisation

Page 25

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OPERATING yOUR BREvILLE BREAd MAKER - BEGINNER’S GUIdE

PHASE

dESCRIPTION

NOTES

‘Rise 1’
‘Punch Down’
‘Rise 2’
‘Punch Down’

The ‘rise’ phase, also known as ‘proofing’, is a period of rest that

allows the gluten to become smooth and elastic. The dough ball will

become a puffy mass that increases in size. This phase is important to

the flavor of the bread.
During this phase, no movement occurs in the bread pan.
The ‘rise 1’ and ‘rise 2’ phases are separated by two ‘punch down’

phases, also known as ‘deflating’. This phase is necessary to release

the trapped carbon dioxide within the dough.
During this phase, the paddle will rotate a few turns lasting approx.

10-15 seconds.

If the dough is unevenly sitting to one side of the bread pan, it

should be centered over the paddle before the ‘rise 3’ phase to avoid

a lopsided loaf. This is especially important for the smaller 1.0lb

(0.5kg) and 1.5lb (0.75kg) loaf sizes.
TIP: Although the collapsible paddle will automatically collapse before the

start of the ‘bake’ phase to minimize the hole at the bottom of the baked

loaf, you can also remove the paddle altogether for an even smaller hole. At

the start of the ‘rise 3’ phase, the ‘remove paddle’ alert will sound. Press and

hold the START | PAUSE button to pause the cycle. With protective hot

pads or insulated oven mitts, lift open the lid. Hold the bread pan by the

handle and lift straight up. Place the bread pan on a wire rack. Close the

lid. Take the dough from the bread pan, remove the paddle, form the dough

into a neat ball and replace in the center of the bread pan. Return the bread

pan to the baking chamber. Close the lid. Press the START | PAUSE button

to resume the cycle.
It is important to remove the dough when the alert sounds, and to replace

the dough in the center of the pan to ensure the dough rises completely and

is not lopsided. Removing the paddle is not recommended on the GLUTEN

FREE and YEAST FREE settings as the dough is more like a batter.

‘Rise 3’

The ‘rise 3’ phase is the final rise before the loaf is baked. At the end

of this rise, the risen dough usually fills the bread pan, taking the

shape of the pan. This is why this phase is also as ‘shaping’.
During this phase, no movement occurs in the bread pan.

If the dough rises higher than the bread pan, open the lid, pierce

the top with a skewer or toothpick and allow it to gently deflate.

This should prevent it from baking over the top of the bread pan,

collapsing or spilling onto the heating element.

‘Bake’

The ‘bake’ phase regulates the baking time and temperature

according to the individual recipe.
During this phase, no movement occurs in the bread pan.

Steam will emit from the steam vents. This is normal. Do not cover

the steam vents or touch appliance surfaces as they will be hot.

‘Keep Warm’

The ‘keep warm’ phase holds the temperature of the baked bread for

up to 60 minutes before automatically turning off.
During this phase, no movement occurs in the bread pan.
To turn off the ‘keep warm’ phase, or to reduce the 60 minute keep

warm time, refer to ‘Using the MODIFY button’, page 34.

To retain a crisp loaf crust, press and hold the CANCEL button and

remove the bread pan before the ‘keep warm’ phase. The sides of the

loaf may concave and become soggy or the crust may become harder

and darker during the ‘keep warm’ phase.

NOTE

Due to ingredient properties, some settings have been

programmed to skip certain phases.

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1/07/10 10:47 AM

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