Give Us This Day…

The Daily Bread

Here’s the bread that I came up with yesterday.

img_9706

img_9708

img_9709img_9710

img_9711

img_9713

And here’s the recipe, such as it is. You’re on your own as to the details. I mix this up in the bread machine on the dough setting, then make a free-form loaf and bake it in the oven directly on a baking stone.

I’ve discovered that there is a lot of flexibility in a bread recipe. I basically start with a formula of 3 cups of flour and 1 cup of water, and improvise from there. My bread machine is a Zojirushi, and they don’t make the particular model I have any longer. It makes a 1 1/2 pound loaf, so if yours is smaller, you’ll need to modify the amounts accordingly. My machine calls for adding the liquids in the bottom, then the dry ingredients, and the yeast on the top.

I use King Arthur flours, and keep everything except the unbleached white in the freezer. I use that up fast enough that I don’t worry about it. The yeast I use is SAF-Instant brand, and I buy it in bulk and store it in a tin in the refrigerator. The added gluten flour gives you more of a rise out of your flour. I use it if I’m adding whole wheat or rye flour, about a Tbl of gluten flour for each cup of ww or rye that I’m using. If you’re going to bake the bread directly in the bread machine, watch it with the gluten flour; it gives the bread a nice oven spring, and you might overflow the pan! If you take a look at that loaf in the bread pan, it never would have made it through the machine cooking cycle.

2 cups KA unbleached white flour
1 cup KA pumpernickel flour
1 tsp salt
1 Tbl gluten flour
1 Tbl olive oil
2 Tbl honey
1 cup water
2 1/2 teaspoons yeast
1/2 cup seed/grain mix, soaked in just enough hot water to cover

More flour or water as needed

Put the ingredients in the bread machine according to your machine’s instructions.  Let the seeds/hot water stuff cool a bit before adding. You can use a commercial cereal mix, or mix your own (wheat flakes, oats, a variety of seeds, polenta, bulghur wheat, etc.). I mix up a plastic container full and keep it in the freezer.

Once your bread machine starts, open the lid and play around with adding more flour/water as needed. You want a ball of dough that is floury enough to stick together, not too wet, but not too floury either. With experience, you’ll figure out how much to add. Remember that after you add more flour, it might take a bit before it absorbs the liquid, especially if you’re using ww or rye flours. If you add too much flour, you’ll get a leaden ball that feels more like a brick. After the machine is finished with the dough cycle, take it out, knead a bit to get a feel for the dough, add more flour if it’s sticky. Form your loaf, either in a pan or on a board, let it rise again until almost double. I sprinkled this one with poppy seeds, then slashed the top right before popping it in the oven. I beat an egg white and brush a little of it on the top so the seeds stick before I do the sprinkling.

I keep a baking stone in my oven, and preheat for at least 30 minutes so the stone is evenly heated. This one I started at 400 degrees, but this is a bit flexible as well. My oven runs cool, so you might try 375. Watch the bread, if it’s looking like it’s getting too brown on the outside but not done in the middle, turn the oven down, or cover your bread with a piece of foil. I start checking the bread at about 20-30 minutes, and use an instant thermometer to tell when it’s done. Stick it in the middle, when it reads somewhere around 190 degrees, you’re there. Your bread should also sound hollow when you pick it up out of the oven and tap on the bottom.

I also use a spray bottle and shoot a little water in the oven towards the oven walls every few minutes during the first 5-8 minutes or so to create steam. This gives it a nicer crust, but mostly makes me feel like Julia Child. If you have an oven light, don’t spray right on the bulb, the cool water could break it. Julia would never do that.

When it’s done, take it out, put it on a rack, and admire it. But restrain yourself from cutting into it until it’s cool, or nearly so. Bread, like a roast, cooks more when you take it out of the oven. If you cut into it right away, you’ll get an unsatisfying texture, more gummy than not. And remember that homemade bread doesn’t keep as well as store bought. This is usually not a problem around my house!

This is a great resource for bread bakers, and has a lot of other cooking tips as well. My favorite bread book is this one. Peter Reinhart’s books are also lovely, though not about bread machine baking. Yesterday’s bread was from one of his books, and is his Struan bread, one of my all time favorites. Here’s a link to the recipe.

This link tells you a little bit about adding other stuff to your bread, and what you might expect when you do so.

I’ll now return you to your regular knitblogging programming.

Author: Lorette

My name is Lorette. I learned to knit in 1999, and took up spinning in 2009. I'm a physician specializing in internal medicine, and live in the Pacific Northwest. Enjoy my blog!

19 thoughts on “Give Us This Day…”

  1. I love Rustic European Breads for your Bread Machine. A friend of ours gave it to us for our wedding, and every recipe we’ve tried from it is a success. I thought you might have read this book when you described messing with the dough after you start the machine.

  2. The gluten flour is a great idea. Whenever my husband has made whole wheat loaves or even half and half with white flour, they’ve come out very dense and crumbly. Ok for toast, but awful for sandwiches.
    And at least now I know that the gummy texture in our house is due to our impatience and not simply a feature of our homemade bread. Waiting until it cools will be a definite challenge.

  3. Back when I was married, I made almost all our bread — no bread machine, though. I think you’ve made me want to bake bread again…..

  4. RLB is indeed the queen of baking. That bread looks absolutely delicious! Note to self: time to pull out the levain and get cracking.

  5. The bread looks yummy!
    Have you ever been to King Arthur’s store/factory/whatever you call it place in Vermont? If not, it is a “must do”. Very cool.

  6. Yummy bread. I used to make a lot of bread when I was in Colombia. But here in Utah I can’t get the yeast to rise right. I have tried all kinds of different brands. From what I have read I think it has to do with humidity . Now I will have to give it another try. The links are great! Thanks

  7. OMG! I have that same bread machine. I haven’t made bread in a long time. I need to get back into it. It was always such a treat, and Kenny (now 16) always liked it when I made “big bread.”
    I’ll have to try your recipe.
    Bake on,
    mk

  8. Ooh – that looks scrumptious. Makes me want to get a bread machine again. Mine died a few years ago and I haven’t resurrected it. Such great comfort food. Thanks for the recipe.

  9. What a delicious-looking bread. In the pre-bread-machine days, I liked the Bernard Clayton bread books. I made the dough in a Cuisinart food processor or in a Kitchenaid mixer. (And DH did add rice to his latest whole wheat bread.)

  10. oopsies…just saw that it IS a Zo. I’m going to give this recipe a try. I always have to use the dough cycle in this elevation. Great bread pics!

  11. Oh, that looks so yummy. I was in the habit of making bread when I was pregnant but since my daughter arrived in August, we’ve been living off of frozen soups. Bread doesn’t freeze as well. Maybe next weekend I’ll give your recipe a try – it’s so tempting!

  12. The bread looks fabulous! I love the smell of bread baking. We have a local bread factory near our house. When they are baking and you drive by… oh my goodness the smell is divine.

Comments are closed.

Discover more from The Knitting Doctor

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading