How to Make Quick So Cute! Turtle-Shaped Melon Bread

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So Cute! Turtle-Shaped Melon Bread. Wrap each flattened shell over the top of each bread body neatly. Score in some lines with a scraper to create the traditional melon bread lattice pattern and attach the feet and head to the body by using beaten egg whites as a kind of glue. Please make sure that the turtle heads are bigger than the feet.

So Cute! Turtle-Shaped Melon Bread This recipe took a lot of effort but I just really wanted to see my little turtle. Turtle-Shaped Melon Bread in the Microwave cookpad.japan. I realizeded that although I've made a lot of different melon bread recipes, I haven't made a traditional turtle one! You can have So Cute! Turtle-Shaped Melon Bread using 19 ingredients and 12 steps. Here is how you cook it.

Ingredients of So Cute! Turtle-Shaped Melon Bread

  1. It's 300 grams of Bread (strong) flour.
  2. You need 5 grams of Salt.
  3. It's 6 grams of Dry yeast.
  4. It's 50 grams of Sugar.
  5. Prepare 30 grams of Shortening.
  6. Prepare 1 of Egg (Medium).
  7. It's 50 grams of Milk.
  8. You need 80 grams of Water.
  9. Prepare of Shell.
  10. It's 230 grams of Cake flour.
  11. Prepare 3 grams of Baking powder.
  12. Prepare 100 grams of Unsalted butter.
  13. It's 1 of Egg (Medium).
  14. You need 80 grams of Sugar.
  15. Prepare 1 tsp of Matcha.
  16. It's 1 of few drops Melon oil.
  17. Prepare of Eyes.
  18. Prepare 10 grams of White Chocolate.
  19. Prepare 30 of chips Chocolate chips.

There's probably a lot of these recipes around but I thought I would upload mine as well anyway.. Turtle-Shaped Melon Bread Recipe by cookpad.japan. Here's a simpler version of an earlier recipe I submitted for making turtle-shaped melon bread. You can make it easily in a bread maker.

So Cute! Turtle-Shaped Melon Bread step by step

  1. Let's make the shell first. Add some softened butter to a bowl with some sugar and cream the two together well..
  2. Add 1 beaten egg a little at a time..
  3. Combine the flour, matcha and baking powder and sift into the mixture. Add the melon oil and fold in gently with a spatula until the dough forms a ball..
  4. It should look like this..
  5. Once it's all come together, split the dough into 15 equal parts and shape them into balls. Wrap them in cling film and leave to rest for 1 hour in the refrigerator It's probably easiest to do everything up to this point the day before you intend to bake..
  6. Take all of the ingredients listed for the body, from the strong bread flour to water, and add to the bread maker and press start. If it's winter please warm the milk and water up a little. Let the dough knead for 15 minutes and prove for 50 minutes..
  7. When proved, split the bread dough into 15 equal parts and roll into balls. Split each ball into 1 body, 1 head and 4 feel and roll each piece into a ball. Leave to rest for 10 minutes..
  8. Take the cookie dough for the shell from Step 5 and flatten each ball out with the palms of your hands between 2 sheets of cling film. Wrap each flattened shell over the top of each bread body neatly. Score in some lines with a scraper to create the traditional melon bread lattice pattern and attach the feet and head to the body by using beaten egg whites as a kind of glue..
  9. Please make sure that the turtle heads are bigger than the feet. They should look a bit like this photo. Cover loosely with cling film and allow to prove for a second time somewhere warm for 40 minutes..
  10. Bake for 13 minutes in an oven preheated to 180℃. These turtles tend to burn easily so please keep an eye on them..
  11. Once baked, leave to cool on a rack..
  12. Make some eyes with some melted white chocolate and chocolate chips. Use the blunt end of a skewer to attach the eyes and once dry you're done..

I made these using my hometown's matcha green tea powder. You can make it easily in a bread maker. I made these using my hometown's matcha green tea powder. For those of you who don't know what it is, it's a Japanese baked good ("pan" stands for bread) that is crosshatched and shaped to resemble melon. The criss-crossed surface is supposed to look like the rind of a rock melon/cantaloupe, but in the case of turtle-shaped melon bread, it makes the perfect shell.