Emile Henry Bread Baker recipe

Toast

I was wondering if anyone could give advice on quantities for the small Emile Henry Bread Baker. It only comes with a couple of recipes that aren’t basic sandwich loaves, which is what I’m looking for and what I thought it would do!

It’s too small for 500g loaves, and not sure if the type of bread baker that it is means you have to use different recipes altogether. 

Is anyone able to help please?

TIA. 

Mark

OK, this document gives the amount of flour that the various bakers can hold:

https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/2961/4672/files/Emile_Henry_Bread_Baking_Recipe_Booklet.pdf?v=1645732481

The "Bread Loaf Baker" is listed as holding 3 - 3 1/4 cups of flour.  A cup of flour is about 120 - 125 grams per cup (King Arthur's All-purpose is 120). So 360 - 375 grams of flour per loaf.  That's about 12 1/2 ounces in US measure. It's better to measure by weight because cups of flour can vary all over the place.

That much flour will get you a loaf that weighs around 20 oz or 565 grams. For an airy sandwich bread, perhaps a little less.  If the loaf is very enriched (with butter, eggs, etc), a little more.

It looks like the recipe in the booklet is for a loaf of bread that uses 420 grams of flour. So that's what you should probably aim for when you're going to make wheat (as opposed to rye or gf) bread.

Do you know how to use baker's percentages to scale recipes?  It's pretty simple and will open up a whole world of recipes for you.

Here are 124 sandwich loaf recipes.

https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/recipes/bread?main_results_recipe_index%5BhierarchicalMenu%5D%5Bcategory_lvl0%5D%5B0%5D=Bread&main_results_rec…

not sure if the type of bread baker that it is means you have to use different recipes altogether.

You can use most any recipe - scaled to fit, of course - as long as the loaf shape will fit the baker.  So you won't be able to bake a round boule, but the same dough could be shaped to fit into the baker.

I thought it was worth repeating.

Use a scale, not a measuring cup.

With such a small baker, a measuring cup is just not accurate enough.