White Chocolate and Orange Peacock Bread
Sep 10, 2015
Ruby's White Chocolate and Orange Peacock Bread recipe appears in the Bread episode of Season 2 of The Great British Baking Show.
- Course
- Dessert
Tags
Ingredients
- 350ml/12fl oz full-fat milk
- 60g/2¼oz caster sugar
- 14g/½oz instant yeast
- 12g/⅓oz salt
- 700g/1lb 9oz strong white flour, plus extra for dusting
- ¾ tsp ground cardamom
- 1 large free-range egg
- 85g/3oz unsalted butter, softened
- 2-3 oranges, zest only
- 200g/7oz white chocolate chips
- 100g/3½oz candied mixed peel
For the decorative dough
- 100g/3½oz strong flour
- 10g/⅓oz butter
- pinch salt
- blue or green, yellow and red food colouring
- 1 beaten free-range egg, to glaze
For the topping
- 100g/3½oz mini-egg chocolates
Instructions
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Bring the milk to the boil in a saucepan and then remove from the heat and leave to cool. Top up with water to make 400ml/14fl oz total of liquid – the mixture should be lukewarm.
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Add the sugar, yeast, salt, flour and ground cardamom to a large bowl and mix.
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Stir in three-quarters of the lukewarm milk and water mixture, then mix in the egg, softened butter and orange zest. Combine, using your hands, and then add as much of the remaining milk and water as you need to get a soft, sticky dough.
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Knead on a lightly floured clean work surface until smooth, elastic and no longer sticky. Knead in half of the chocolate chips and half of the candied peel. Shape into a ball, place in a large oiled bowl, cover and leave for 1-1½ hours, or until doubled in size.
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Roll out a quarter of the dough to a semicircle shape, about 30cm/12in across and ½-1cm/¼-½in thick. Prick all over with a fork. Sprinkle the remaining choc chips and peel over and gently push in. Place on a greased and floured baking tray.
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Make small balls of foil approximately the same size as mini-egg chocolates.
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Set aside a small portion of the dough for the peacock’s body, cutting this into a 1cm/½in thick triangle shape. Divide the remaining dough into 27 pencil shapes by rolling it all out, cutting into rectangles approximately 1½x10cm/¾-4in, then rolling gently. Plait together the strips in bunches of three, until you have nine braids.
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Put the body in the centre of the semicircle, and arrange the plaits coming outwards from it. Curl each plait back in towards the centre so that the ‘feathers’ curl round like hooks at the end. In each of these small loops, place a ball of foil, pushing firmly into place – this keeps each hole open for a mini-egg to go in after baking.
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Leave the dough to prove, covered with an oiled plastic bag, for 40-45 minutes.
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Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 190C/375F/Gas 5.
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For the decorative dough, mix together the flour with 40ml/1½fl oz of water, the butter and a pinch of salt. Knead to combine and then colour a small portion with yellow, then the remaining with blue or green. Make eyes and a beak shapes for the peacock, and use the remaining dough to make decorative twists or feather shapes.
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Once the dough has proved, brush with the beaten egg, add the dough decorations, and bake for 40 minutes, covering with foil if necessary.
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While baking, paint the mini-eggs with bright food colours to make the ‘eyes’ of the peacock feathers.
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Remove the foil balls and slot in the mini-eggs.