Recently, a
friend of mine sent a book called “Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day: The Discovery That Revolutionizes Home Baking” by Jeff Hertzberg, M.D. and Zoe
Francois. I was kind of skeptical at
first since I’ve baked bread before and it just isn’t that simple. The bread machine made baking accessible for
me so when I want fresh bread, that’s how I make it. The problem with bread machines is they take
up a lot of space and they leave a weird hole in the bottom of the bread,
making sandwiches crumble. When we went
organic, I found organic bread often cost $5 or more per loaf. In addition, it was difficult to find
specialty breads such as hamburger or hot dog buns, English muffins, bagels,
pitas, and other sweet breads. I could
go to Pike Place Market, but wow is that a trek for a loaf of French
bread. Even then, it was impossible to
find a good organic bagel.
These books,
however, revolutionized the way we make bread and we haven’t bought a loaf
since we got the books. My actual time spent in the kitchen is about five to ten minutes, including clean up. I can have a hot loaf of fresh bread on the dinner table every night with little effort. All I have to do is pull out some dough when I first get home, and 40 minutes later, shove it in the oven. Honestly, there
is no reason to buy bread when you see how easy it is using this method. I’m not trying to sound like a commercial,
just encourage you to let you know that learning how to cut expenses out of
your budget and to switch to organic foods isn’t that hard if you slowly change
your habits one at a time. This is a
good one to begin with since it’s easy, cheap, and nothing is more satisfying
than a crusty, hot loaf of bread you baked yourself.
I’ll give you
the recipes for the basic dough and an example of what you can make with that basic dough to get your started, but I
highly recommend you buy the books. I’ve
adapted the recipes slightly for our use, and you may do the same as you get
more comfortable with how the recipes work in your kitchen and to your family’s
liking. Good luck!
Master Recipe
makes 4 1-pound loaves which can be
doubled or halved
3 cups lukewarm
water
1 1/2 tbsp
granulated yeast (2 packets)
1 ½ tbsp. kosher
salt
6 ½ cups
unsifted, unbleached, all-purpose white flour, measured with the
scoop-and-sweep method
cornmeal
Mixing and
storing the dough
Scoop the flour from the container and use the flat end of a knife to level off the cup |
Just leave the dough to do its thing for a few hours, then put it in the fridge for up to two weeks. It's really that easy. |
On baking day: do not knead the dough, just shape it into a loaf. Prepare a pizza peel or you could use a large, flat cutting board with a piece of parchment paper on top of it sprinkled with cornmeal to slide the loaf onto a pizza stone in the oven. We use a large, domed clay oven, which eliminates the need for a pizza peel and a steam bath, which I will talk about later. Sprinkle the surface of the dough with flour and pinch off a piece the size of a grapefruit. Add just enough flour to your hands to keep it from sticking. Gently shape it into a ball by turning the dough a quarter turn in your hand as you fold the dough under to form a ball. The bottom of the dough might look ugly, but it will flatten as it bakes. This process should take less than a minute.
Rest the loaf and let rise uncovered on the pizza peel, the parchment paper, or on the clay oven bottom for 40 minutes. It may not look like it has risen much after 40 minutes—don’t worry.
Twenty minutes before baking, preheat the oven to 450 degrees F with a baking stone in the oven to preheat as well. Place an empty broiler tray or a metal pan on the lowest shelf. You can omit this step if you are using a dome-covered clay oven as it will trap the steam from the bread as it bakes.
Dust the bread liberally with flour and slash a ¼ inch deep cross over the top of the bread with a serrated knife.
After 20 minutes, slide the loaf off the pizza peel or parchment, or put the lid on the clay oven and put it into the preheated oven. Add a cup of hot tap water to the broiler tray or the metal pan. Omit this step if using the clay oven or your clay oven will crack. Bake for 30 minutes, or until the crust is nicely browned and firm to the touch. Allow to cool on a wire rack before slicing.
Store remaining dough in the refrigerator in a lidded container (it doesn’t have to be the 5-quart bucket) for up to two weeks. Just cut off dough, shape and bake as you need it. The dough can also be frozen in 1-pound portions in an airtight container and defrosted overnight in the refrigerator prior to baking day. You can also bake off the bread and freeze the loaf for croutons, bruschetta, bread crumbs, or bread pudding later.
Variation 1: mix
in 2 tsp of dried thyme and ½ tsp chopped rosemary into the water mixture for
an herbed bread.
Variation 2: for
sourdough, don’t wash the bucket once you’ve used all the dough; immediately
mix a new batch of dough in the dirty bucket and scrape down the dough left
sticking to the sides. It will ferment
and incorporate into the new dough.
These are the dishes I had to clean after making one of the more complicated recipes: Pumpkin Oatmeal Bread |
Cinnamon rolls
Makes 6-8 cinnamon rolls
For cinnamon
rolls, about two hours before you want to eat them, begin this recipe provided you already have some dough in the refrigerator:
Choose a topping
for the cinnamon rolls:
Caramel Topping/Sticky Buns:
6 tbsp salted
butter, softened
½ cup brown
sugar
1 cup pecan
pieces or halves
Cream together
the butter and sugar and spread in the bottom of a 9-inch cake pan. Scatter the pecans on top of the butter and
sugar mixture. Set aside.
Cream Cheese Icing:
8 oz cream
cheese, 2 tbsp corn syrup
2 tbsp heavy
cream (you can use half and half or milk)
1 cup powdered
sugar
1 tsp vanilla
extract
Combine all
ingredients in a bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or use
a hand mixer. Beat on low speed until
combined about a minute, and increase speed to high. Beat until free of lumps. Refrigerate until ready to use.
Powdered Sugar Glaze:
1 ¼ cup powdered
sugar
2 tbsp milk
½ tsp vanilla
extract
Mix ingredients
until it’s free of lumps. Set aside.
For the cinnamon roll filling:
4 tbsp salted
butter, softened
¼ cup sugar
1 tsp ground
cinnamon
¼ tsp freshly
grated nutmeg
½ cup chopped
and toasted pecans (optional)
Cream all
ingredients except nuts together and set aside.
For the cinnamon rolls:
Dust the
refrigerated dough with flour and cut off a grapefruit sized portion. Carefully stretch the dough by tugging
slightly while rotating the dough in your hands a quarter turn. On a large surface lightly dusted with flour,
roll the dough out into a long 1/8 inch thick rectangle. You could lay down wax or parchment paper or
cover the surface with plastic wrap for easy clean up and to aid in rolling up
the dough if you don’t have a bench scraper.
Spread the
filling evenly over the top of the dough and sprinkle with nuts if using. Starting with the long side, roll the dough
into a log. With unflavored dental floss
or a very sharp knife, slice the log into eight pieces, or if you want smaller
or larger ones, how many pieces suit your needs.
Twenty minutes
before baking, preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. If you aren’t using a pizza stone to keep the
temperature beneath the pan, 5 minutes is adequate. Bake for 40 minutes, rotating once halfway
through, or until they are brown and firm in the center. While they are still hot, run a knife around
the edge to loosen them and invert onto a large serving tray. Ice them while warm if necessary.
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