Brioche rolls make a great buttery holiday roll as well as a classic burger bun. In what's a relatively easy foray into bread making. I can make Dutch Oven Bread with relative ease. Although bread really isn't my forte. Anything that requires breaking out the scale and making sure that the oven is calibrated properly I find a little bit too tedious to do on too regular a basis. Although brioche rolls are a good starter dough. These brioche rolls are ideal buttered on the side at a big holiday meal or for backyard barbecue burger buns.
Combine warm water, milk, yeast, and sugar. Let rest for 15 minutes, or until the yeast begins to bubble.A typical packet of yeast is 2 ¼ teaspoons, so just remove 1/4 teaspoon if you don't have bulk yeast and are using the packets.
Meanwhile, whisk together bread flour, all-purpose flour, salt, and butter in a large bowl.The butter shouldn't be melted, but should be softened enough to mix into the dough without being in one large chunk! It should, at the very least, create little shaggy balls until the liquids are added.
After the yeast has proofed, whisk one of the eggs into the yeast (the other egg is for an egg wash later on).
Mix the yeast/egg mixture into the flour mixture.In a mixer with a dough hook attachment, this only takes about 5-8 minutes on low. By hand, this takes about 15 minutes. This is a very wet dough and much better suited for a stand mixer. My mixer is in storage, though. So, I did this by hand! I started with a fork to get the butter and everything smoothly incorporated and then switched to mixing it with a wooden or very strong silicone spatula.
Cover dough and let proof for 2 hours, or until doubled in size.
Second Rise
Thoroughly grease a baking sheet.
Roll the dough out onto a lightly floured surface, divide into 8 equal pieces, and shape into rounds.Do this as quickly as possible, without handling the dough any more than necessary.
Roll the pieces into rounds and place on the baking sheet. Cover again with a dry towel, saran wrap, or aluminum foil.You can alternatively use parchment paper and then don't have to worry about greasing the baking sheet. I don't have parchment paper and am not really that fond of it. But it does mean that you don't have to use oi and don't have to worry about oil staining your towels. I also sometimes just use a large, shallow, Dutch oven. It really doesn't matter, though, as long as the dough is covered enough to continue to proof.
Let rise for another hour and a half, or until doubled in size.
Bake
A half hour before the dough is through its second proof, fill a second baking sheet or dish with water. Place it in the lower third of the oven and preheat to 400 degrees Fahrenheit.It's important to preheat the oven with water ahead of time in order to produce enough steam inside of the oven to keep the bread moist while baking.
Mix the second egg with a splash of water. When the dough is done proofing, spread lightly on top of the rolls.
Bake the rolls for 15-20 minutes, or until the crust is lightly crisp and golden brown.
Let rest until cool before slicing. This tends to take about 20-30 minutes.