Brioche Burger Buns with LM

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Brioche burger buns with sesame seeds

In recent times I have massively improved the performance of my Lievito Madre starter and thought about doing something other than panettone. Off the top of my head I devised a formula, originally without egg but ended up adding one egg as my planned mixture needed more hydration. By the time of shaping and proofing, the dough was perhaps a little too soft but it worked out nonetheless.

I didn't go heavy on the butter and went for 25% which I felt was about right but would go higher if I really wanted a strong butter flavour.

Immediately after mixing, dough was cold bulked in the fridge overnight. The following day I left it to warm up in a warm place until nicely puffy.

Total flour not including the starter was 250g (75g 10% protein (Wildfarmed) / 175g 15% protein (Le5Stagioni Manitoba 00)). As I didn't account for the egg addition, next time for 6 buns I would go for 240g of flour. Buns were scaled at 85g each.

Dough divided, buns were rounded and placed, well-spaced on the tray. After a 20 minute rest I used parchment paper and another tray to compress the buns. I repeated this compression after a they had risen a little. Aiming for 1.5cm thickness. Buns were approx. 3.5/4 inches wide.

Egg wash (one yolk plus a splash of milk). Brushed several times before applying the sesame seeds.

 

Burger Buns   
    
Factor10.25bakers
Ingredients(g)(g)(%)
Flour1000250100
LM (50%H)21052.521
Milk25062.525
Sugar1002510
Butter25062.525
Water3007530
Salt143.51.4
Whole eggs2005020

I had enough dough left over to make a small-ish 75g hotdog roll.

Super soft and ultra-light these were a pleasure to eat.

Great buns! Thanks for the recipe and the details! Perfect timing ;) A few days ago I was thinking about converting my old buns recipe from yeast to LM. I rarely use yeast anymore. But now I will for sure try yours ;)

Nice looking buns, Michael. Does the 10% sugar come through in the taste?

 

Lance

Cheers Lance.

No, not sweet tasting at all. I opted for 10% as I figured it was standard for a Viennoiserie type bake, for example croissant dough.

I can imagine things starting to taste sweet around the 15% mark and above.