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Silicone ones will have stiffening supports in them so that they doesn't have to be supported by a baking sheet. In addition to plain-sided ones, you can also get ones that have designs impressed into them, so that they act as decorative moulds for making speciality breads such as Lemon Bread. Bread Pans can also be used for breads such as banana breads, or for meatloaf. Metal Bread PansMetal Bread Pans can be shiny or dark. Ones made of darker metal produce a darker crust; ones made of light metal, a lighter crust. The metal can be bare, or treated with a non-stick coating.Professional-grade metal Bread Pans are made of heavier metal, so that they can stand up to heavy use and banging without denting as easily as home-grade ones would under such intense use. Metal Bread Pans may stick the first few times you use them, until they get seasoned. Some people swear that the secret to Bread Pans is to season them, and never, ever wash them. Old-style metal Bread Pans have pleated corners made of tin plate or blued steel. Often the metal was dimpled. Dry all metal ones well before putting away. Don't scrub metal ones, and don't put them in the dishwasher. Just rinse them with warm water and a sponge or cloth. You can use warm water, and soap on non-stick ones. Terra Cotta Bread PansTerra cotta Bread Pans need a few more bakes than metal ones do before they are seasoned. To season them, you are first supposed to soak the pan in water first, then rub it with oil. Then bake in a low oven (250 F / 125 C) until the oil is dry, and let cool completely, You then repeat the process an additional three times.Bread MachinesBread machines come with their own "built-in", non-stick Bread Pans. You don't grease Bread Pans in bread machines; as the Bread Pans are also mixing pans, anything you coat them with will just get caught up in the mixing. Never, ever insert a knife or anything metal into a bread machine's bread pan. If the bread pan's non-stick surface gets damaged or scratched, you have to order a new one. Some services will resurface them (and other non-stick pans), but they are very hard to find.Always use oven mitts to remove them from the bread machine when the baking cycle has finished. These pans are not dishwasher safe, but rarely need anything more than a rinse. Non-Stick Bread PansThe advantage to non-stick Bread Pans may be obvious, but they never seem to last as long as the "stick" ones. The non-stick tends to flake off if the pan is put through a dishwasher: if not on the first run, then on subsequent runs. As well, bread cooked in non-stick loaf pans tends to come out with a paler crust on the sides.If you are baking in non-stick Bread Pans, you may find that you need to compensate by lowering the oven temperature by 25 F ( 10 to 15 C) Novelty Corn Bread PansMany think that cornbread is best baked in a cast-iron skillet. These Bread Pans, picking up on that, are made of cast iron. They are a tray with seven moulds in them. These moulds are long, and shaped like an ear of corn with kernels indents in them. You put the corn bread dough in here to bake. The corn bread comes out flat on the top, corn-shaped on the bottom. You invert them out of the pan to serve them.Braided Loaf PansBraided Loaf Pans have a moulded shape on the bottom. When the bread is baked, you flip the loaf over to present it "bottom up" so that it looks like a braided loaf of bread. The purpose is to save you all the work of making a braided loaf. Some shake their heads, pointing out that braiding dough is the work of seconds, and nothing compared to the work of making the dough in the first place. One problem with the finished product can be that the top rises as bread is wont to do, in a curved formation, making for an unstable bottom when you flip the loaf -- the loaf's being tippy on the breadboard is going to be the giveaway that all is not as it seems.Cooking Tips See Also:Bread Machines, BreadOther entries for:Bread PansFrench Bread Pans, Pullman Loaf Pans Other entries for: PansAebleskiver Pans, Appachatti Pans, Appakarai Pans, Baking Pans, Broiling Pans, Cast Iron, Chafing Dish, French Roasting Pans, Frying Pans, Kanom Krok Pans, Meat Loaf Pans, Non-Reactive Pans, Non-Stick Pans, Quiche Pans, Roasting Pans Other entries for: Cooking ToolsAlambic Stills, Apple Corer, Avocado Slicers, Baking Mats, Baking Stones, Batterie de Cuisine, Biscuit Brake, Blowtorches, Branding Iron, Bread Bins, Bread Machines, Bulb Baster, Butter Bell, Butter Muslin, Caja China, Can Openers, Canning Funnels, Cans, Chopsticks, Contact Paper, Cookware, Cooling Racks, Corkscrews, CorningWare, Cuppitiello, Dishwashers, Doughnut Cutters, Egg Cups, Esky, Fat Separators, Firkins, Flour Dredgers, Flour Duster, Food Pushers, Funnels, Girdle, Graters, Griddles, Heat Diffuser, Ice Pick, Icing Syringe, Kitchen String, Kitchen Tongs, Kneading Gloves, Knives, Measuring Cups, Melon Baller, Mesquite, Milk Cellar, Non-Electrical Rotisseries, Olive Pitter, Oshibori, Oxo Good Grips, Paraffin, Pastry Brush, Pastry Frame, Pea Sheller, Petites Marmites, Pie Plates, Pie Racks, Pizzelle Iron, Proof Box, Ramekins, Rolling Cookie Cutters, Rolling Pins, Salad Spinner, Salamanders, Scales, Spatulas, Steamers, Sugar Cutters, Sushi-oke, Tassie Cups, Tea Trappings, Thermometers, Tortilla Warmers, Treen, Tupperware, Uchiwa, Waffle Iron, Whisks |
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Bread Tins 