Making bread the easy way

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

bread

I’m probably the only person left on the planet who has not tried the No Knead Bread recipe that appeared in the New York Times in November of 2006.  Even though I had read hundreds of blog entries about how the recipe works and how the bread is really good, I didn’t quite believe it.  I scoffed at the idea of good bread without kneading.  And I admit it - I’m suspicious of short cuts.

But my husband got it in his head that he wanted to try the bread recipe recently.  He researched the best vessel in which to cook the bread [some cast iron pot available at Target, apparently] and went out and bought yeast.  And then everything sat around for two weeks.  I secretly think that he had no intention of mixing the bread - he wanted me to do it and thought that if all the stuff was sitting right in front of me, I’d break down and bake it myself.  As a testament to how well my husband knows me, I did that very thing yesterday.

And, as luck would have it, I had local flour in the house.  Daisy Flour only has pastry flour [whole wheat and regular white, plus spelt].  Typically, you wouldn’t use pastry flour for bread - pastry flour is made from low protein wheat and has very little gluten, which generally does not make for a good, chewy bread.  But hey, that’s what I had on hand and I used it.  As it turns out, it didn’t make a difference: the bread is fantastic - chewy with a good crisp crust!

For my first go, I didn’t go too crazy - I replaced half of the flour with whole wheat flour.  That’s it.  But there are a gazillion variations on this bread - from the type of flour to multi-grain to various add-ins.  I have yet to see someone have a disaster with the recipe, no matter what they did.  Later today I plan to mix up a batch with oats and sunflower seeds.  And I’m looking forward to the garlic harvest this year, so I can make roasted garlic and rosemary loaves.

Posted by Nicole on 01/22 at 02:34 AM

Cooks Illustrated just published their version of that recipe. It’s on my to-do list as well. I hope my dutch oven is big enough to work.

Posted by Jackie  on  01/22  at  04:26 AM

Honestly, I’m not so interested in no-knead bread.  I do like fresh bread, but the reason I bake bread is that I like kneading and playing with dough…

Posted by naomi  on  01/22  at  05:55 AM

I must have inferior kneading technique or something - my bread generally doesn’t have good texture.  So the ‘no knead’ thing works for me.

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  01/22  at  06:33 AM

My husband and I made this a bunch of times—and always ended up eating most of it standing in the kitchen, just after it came out of the oven.

These days we think of making it all the time, and then realize it’s basically a 24-hour wait, and who knows what we’ll be doing 24 hours from now (right.  Our life is exactly *that* crazy.  Not!) and never start it.  Now I’m inspired to do it again, & add some whole wheat flour.

Posted by Meira  on  01/22  at  01:44 PM

I tried the recipe a few times when the article was first published, and I wasn’t all that thrilled.  I’ve resorted to a few favorite recipes (ciabatta, focaccia, pugliese, baguette) and never really gone back.  In my experience, the bread was very dense (not very good crumb, I think is the term).  Perhaps my technique degassed it…

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  01/22  at  03:03 PM

My first loaf (from the Mother Earth News version) wasn’t thrilling, but I think I did it wrong.  I’ll try again!

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  01/23  at  04:01 AM

I found video of the guy making the bread—very interesting the way he puts just barely mixes it and walks away . . .

bread video

Posted by Meira  on  01/23  at  08:43 AM
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