Is there a particular food smell that magically transports you
across time and space? For me it’s the smell of homemade bread baking. It smells like home, like the kitchens where
I spend so many hours learning how to cook and bake with my mother and
grandmother. It’s the smell of a treat
soon to be enjoyed – the warm crusty heel of the bread, fresh from the oven,
slathered with sweet butter and my grandmothers homemade strawberry preserves.
Bread was always so much more than just flour, yeast, sugar and
salt. It was comfort, it was sustenance
on a level beyond filling physical hunger; it was ritual, tradition, love.
With a full time job and a million day to day responsibilities I stopped
making homemade bread decades ago. I
didn’t do it on purpose, it just happened.
And then I got a Deep Covered Baker – a stoneware Dutch oven of
sorts – a simple, magical piece of cookware that transported me 3000 miles and
40 years back to my grandmother’s kitchen. I dug out my grandmother’s recipe
binder and there in her faded precise cursive was her Cuban bread recipe.
It didn’t take long to modify the recipe for the Deep Covered
Baker and when the Round Covered Baker was introduced this spring I modified in
once again to create the Easy Artisan Bread recipe I’m thrilled to share with
you today. If you don’t have a covered
stoneware baker a similar heavy covered roaster or baker will do.
Easy Artisan Bread:
The quickest
yeast bread you'll ever make. Warm, fresh, crusty on the outside and soft on
the inside, delicious home made bread in just over an hour and for under a
$1. This recipe makes a 6.5-6.75 inch diameter loaf that's perfect
for sandwiches and bread bowls!
Ingredients:
2.5-3 cups
all-purpose flour (you can substitute whole wheat flour for .5 or 1
cups)
1 tablespoons dry
yeast (regular, NOT rapid rise, yeast)
1 tablespoon
sugar
1/2 tablespoon
salt
1 cups hot water
(120° to 130°) Note: water temperature is critical to proper yeast activation
Directions:
1. Grease
the Round Covered Baker and the bowl that you'll let the bread rise in.
Set aside.
2. Combine 2
cups of the flour, the yeast, sugar, and salt in a large mixing bowl. Add
the hot water and beat three minutes with a mixer (or 70 stokes by
hand). Add the remaining flour (I've never needed to add more
than 1/2 cup) until the dough is no longer sticky. Knead* the
dough for 3-4 minutes on a floured surface, adding flour as needed to
prevent sticking.
3. Place the dough
in the greased bowl and cover with a damp towel. Let rise 15
minutes. Remove dough to floured surface, punch or fold down** (3
minutes should do it) and shape into a loaf.
4. Place the
dough in Round Covered Baker. Cut 2-3 slits about 1/2 inch
deep along the top of the loaf and 2-3 slits at a 90% angle to the first
slits. It will look a bit like a number sign (#) when you're done.
5. Put the lid on the
baker and place in a COLD oven. Turn oven to 400° and bake for 47 minutes.
Remove from oven, uncover, gasp in amazement, remove loaf from baker to cool on
a rack.
Cook's Tip: to slice
bread rest it on it's side and cut with a serrated bread knife. By
cutting from the side you avoid crushing the flaky top crust.
Double this recipe for
the Deep Covered Baker and increase your mixing time to 100 strokes if mixing
by hand and increase kneading time to 5 minutes, and cooking time to 50
minutes.
Need a little help?
These videos help illustrate kneading and punching down the bread. Note that
videos are referenced to illustrate techniques only, they are NOT part of the
recipe.
* Kneading bread:
http://youtu.be/dWj8oHMPFm0
** Punching down
bread: punching or folding down bread is an important technique for I prefer
the gentler folding and rolling down process, but either will do.
http://youtu.be/tsCqZMCLqnU
About me:
A New Englander by birth and upbringing, I fled
the cold weather and moved to Southern California
20+ years ago. I have a crazy high
stress full time day job and am a Pampered Chef Consultant in my spare time.
It’s fun, good for my sanity and allows me to generate some additional income
every month that I can contribute in support of various charities that are near
and dear to my heart. I love helping
others near and far!
I hope you’ll drop by
and visit me at www.facebook.com/PamperedChefConsultantCarolsCorner
Subscribe to my e-newsletter to receive free recipes, special offers,
time and money saving tips and tricks, and new ideas every month www.tinyurl.com/pccbnewsletter
2 comments:
I agree, there is nothing better than the smell of fresh homemade bread! I love the recipe, it sounds, and looks delicious:-) Take care, Terra
How did you grease your round baker! I have a brand new one that has never been out of the box so I am not sure how to use it. Thanks.
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