More Loaves and Fishes – with Recipe

I just sent the recipe for this no-knead bread to chow and it occurred to me that there’s no reason for me not to share it with you.  So, my apologies for reposting but if you’re interested in the recipe for this bread, you’ll find it below.

The oven rarely cools down as I turn out another loaf of bread every few days.  I’m becoming comfortable with the pale ale pot boule recipe in “Kneadlessly Simple” and am experimenting with the recipe a bit (after I mastered the original recipe, Sheldon) and am now mixing in small amounts of rye flour, corn meal and oats.  It makes for a very interesting, flavorful bread.

P1200258.JPG

P1200260.JPG

Before and after shots of one of my recent loaves.  It turned out beautifully.  We’re having panini at least one night every week and toast with our oatmeal every morning.

Have I explained the no-knead process to you?  It is tremendously easy.  You stir the ingredients together in a bowl, cover the bowl with plastic wrap, and then allow it to rise in a cool temperature (we’re placing it right under the air conditioner so it is at about 70 F) overnight or until doubled.  You can precede that rise with a rest in the refrigerator of up to eight hours, which gives the dough more time to develop flavor.

You can then shape the dough into whatever shape or pan you want it in, let it rise at normal room temperature until it has almost doubled again, then bake it.  Start with a very hot oven and then cool it down after putting the loaf in.  This gives you a big initial “poof” in the loaf, then allows it to finish cooking through without burning the exterior.

Added content below:

Here’s the recipe with a few process modifications based on what I’ve learned.  The original recipe comes from the book “Kneadlessley Simple: Fabulous, Fuss-Free, No-Knead Breads” by Nancy Baggett.  No-knead breads gained some interest after Mark Bittman wrote a column about them.  CI did a follow-up recipe in which they came up with some improvements (less in the recipe than in the technique).  I’ve incorporated those into Baggett’s recipe for a crusty pale ale pot boule.

Crusty Pale Ale Pot Boule
Yield: 1 large loaf, 12-14 slices

4.5 cups (22.5 oz) all-purpose white flour
3 T granulated sugar
Scant 2 t table salt
3/4 t instant yeast
1 bottle (12 oz) well-chilled pale ale or beer (I use Singha)
1/2 cup ice water or more if needed
Vegetable oil or oil spray for coating dough top
3 T sesame or poppy seeds (optional)

In a large bowl, thoroughly stir together the dry ingredients.  Vigorously stir in the ale and water, scraping down the bowl sides completely and mixing until the bubbling subsides and the dough is thoroughly blended.  If it is too dry to mix together, gradually stir in just enough more ice water to blend the ingredients.  Don’t over-moisten as the dough should be stiffer than normal bread dough.

Brush or spray the top of the dough with oil.  Tightly cover with plastic wrap and place in refrigerator for 3-10 hours.  Then let rise at cool room temperature for 10-18 hours or until a bit more than doubled.  If convenient, vigorously stir once about halfway during the rise.

Gently lift and fold the dough in towards the center, shaping into a boule.  Place on a long (about 18-inch) length of parchment paper placed in a cake pan or pyrex pie plate so the dough doesn’t spread too wide.  If necessary, spray/brush the top of the dough with oil and loosely place plastic wrap over the top to keep the dough from forming a skin.  Allow a 1.5-2.5 hour regular rise at warm room temperature or until doubled. 

About 20 minutes before baking, put a rack in the lower third of your oven.  Put a heavy metal pot or Dutch oven (with cover) on the rack and pre-heat to 450 F.  While the oven is preheating you can slash the top of your loaf with a sharp knife.  You can also add the optional seeds, spraying the top of the loaf with water and then sprinkling the seeds generously.

Once fully heated, remove the Dutch oven (working carefully – HOT!) and transfer the loaf to the pot by lifting the corners of the parchment paper.  Gently shake the pot so the dough settles.  If it is a bit uneven, that’s okay – it will work out during the baking.  Give a good spray or two of water on top of the loaf then put the cover back on, placing the pot back in the oven.

Reduce the heat to 425 F and bake for 30 minutes.  Remove the lid of the pot, reduce the heat to 350 and bake for about another 15 minutes or until the internal temperature of the loaf reaches 208-210 F on an instant-read thermometer.  Remove from the oven and cool in the pan on a wire rack for about ten minutes before removing the loaf to cool on the rack.

Notes:

  • Regarding the flour, I regularly mix in up to a cup of whole grain flour, usually rye, with good effect.  I’ve also added up to a 1/4 cup of cornmeal which also adds a nice texture.
  • If you live in a warmer climate or it is summertime, for the second rise after shaping you could use the refrigerator for a rise of up to 24 hours, setting out just at the end. 
  • I place a baking stone in my oven to help keep the heat stable when I open the oven door.
  • I’ve tried baking this without the Dutch Oven and the crust doesn’t turn out as nice, even if I put a dish of hot water at the bottom of the oven.  If you want a softer crust, though, then feel free to bake it in another container or directly on the baking stone.
  • If your Dutch oven doesn’t have a tight fitting lid, it is a good idea to put a sheet of foil under the lid.  This keeps the moisture inside the Dutch oven, creating a steam environment and making for a nice crust.
  • The timing will depend on your oven.  Sometimes after the initial thirty minutes I will remove the loaf from the pan and cook it directly on the baking stone.

 

Continuing with the original post:

P1200275-1.JPG

Some of the employees at the coffee shop at which my Thai tutor and I have been meeting for more than three years, Bitter Brown on Soi Asoke, have a talent for latte art.  This isn’t a normal occurrence but the other afternoon I was about to add sugar to my latte when Khru Kitiya (“Teacher” Kitiya) pointed out the fish.  Cute, isn’t it?

 

0 thoughts on “More Loaves and Fishes – with Recipe

  1. Oh neat, where did you pick up this technique from?Does it work with all yeast doughs? I’d like to give this a shot. How does the proofing temperature affect the final product here? The reason I ask is because my weather is like your weather, and I have no AC right now =/

  2. At a couple of points in time, I used to bake about a loaf of bread every week!  The first time I ever baked bread, it wasn’t ready till 3 am — I timed it a little better after that, and the bread machine helped later on with perfect timing!  Loved it, but I don’t eat enough bread now to make it worthwhile

  3. I bet your neighbors can tell when you are in the process of cooking up a meal, in this case, baking a delicious looking bread. Well, coffee shops in the Big Mango has come a long way, they have fancy latte art now! LOL

  4. @chow@ireallylikefood –  Tell you what, when I have a little more time this weekend let me message you the whole recipe and my thoughts about how you could modify it for your situation. What are the nighttime temps you have inside your house without AC? Mid-70s?@Wangium – Actually, Jason, it is just a regular shallow cake pan not a springform. I use that as it is the same dimension as the Dutch oven in which I bake the bread, creating kind of an “oven within an oven” effect. The parchment paper does go into the oven, too. It serves as a handle, making it easier to pull the hot loaf out of a scorching hot cast iron Dutch oven.@yang1815 –  @Dezinerdreams –  @TheCheshireGrins –  I generally don’t see a lot of latte art here. There is a place in Vancouver that I would go to when I was up there on business that was famous for its latte art. Some of its baristas had placed in int’l competitions.@osmundaregalis –  @agmhkg –  @kunhuo42 –  My grandmother used to bake bread regularly and so I associate the smell of freshly baked bread with visits to my grandparents’ house. Yes, the smell is wonderful and I wish I could capture it and just turn it on at whim!@CurryPuffy – Gary, considering that I have a neighbor who cooks stinky tofu on a regular basis, I try to be very careful about what I subject my neighbors to! =D@slmret –  I had a bread machine back in the US. When I moved into an apartment in SF my British roommate got quite ticked off as the sound of the machine kneading in the middle of the night would wake her up!

  5. Hahaha! I love how I got called out in the post. :PFunny enough, after the advice I gave you last time about NOT adjusting recipes, I had to adjust a recipe the other day for my cupcakes! The breads looks DELICIOUS!! Me need some fresh bread and butter!

  6. @christao408 – Hey Chris, sorry it took me a while to reply. Weekends are ridiculously busy for me. Thank you, but take your time šŸ™‚ Or if you have a link I could look at, it would save you a lot of typing.Nighttime temps are generally around 73 or 74 I’d say. Lately they’ve been insanely high, near 90. But now that we have the trade winds back, it’s not so bad anymore.

  7. @chow@ireallylikefood – Yikes – 90 at night with no air con.  Don’t think I would be able to handle that.  Even with a few fans going.  If you are getting to the 73-74 range you should be okay, especially if you let the dough rest in the fridge for a good eight hours beforehand.  I’ll send you the recipe.

  8. I love freshly baked bread…but I also know my limitations…I am NOT a bread maker!!! It is too bad that we don’t have “smell-a-posts”…I would love to have a whiff of that yummy bread!!! Ruth Ann

  9. Hi, chow recommended me this recipe and may I say it looks delicious!! I baked my first couple loaves of bread this past weekend and was really impressed, so now I think I’m the master or something haha šŸ™‚ I do have one question on your suggestion regarding the flour: “Regarding the flour, I regularly mix in up to a cup of whole grain flour, usually rye, with good effect.  I’ve also added up to a 1/4 cup of cornmeal which also adds a nice texture.”I’m a beginner but this is probably a stupid question regardless… do you mix in up to a cup of whole grain flour in PLACE up to a cup of regular flour in the actual recipe, or do you put it in ADDITION to the original flour measurements??

  10. @andilynn77 – Hi there – I’m glad Michael sent you this way.  Baking bread is hugely rewarding.  Your question is a very reasonable one and I wasn’t clear.  The whole grain flour and/or cornmeal would be in place of the regular flour.Happy baking!

Leave a reply to yang1815 Cancel reply