Thu 14 May 2009
A Brave New World | Artisan Bread for Beginners
Posted by Bria under Baking
At the risk of sounding hopelessly smug, I’m going to tell you that we haven’t bought a loaf of bread in nearly a year. People sometimes ask me if we have a bread maker, and it takes all the control I can muster not to shout YES AND HER NAME IS BRIA. You do not need a machine to make what you can easily accomplish with a big bowl and your own two hands. Besides, bread machines take up precious counter space, cost a lot more than a bowl, and (depending on the model) can make absurdly-shaped loaves.
I am going to cut to the chase here and demand that you make this bread before a week has passed. This is fantastic stuff, and it is a perfect gateway bread that will build your confidence and earn you the admiration of friends and enemies alike. It will also airbrush your skin and help you make friends while losing lots of weight. Oprah eats this bread daily. I myself lost 30 pounds of belly fat by making this bread.
Or maybe it’s just delicious. These are beautiful, artisan loaves – no two will look alike, and they will grow and change in the oven to surprise you upon their completion. I lovingly call it Lazy Bread, as you don’t knead it or do much more than arrange it a few times and send it on its merry, baking way. The total duration of time involved is around 4 hours, but the hands-on time is really minimal. Get a batch of dough going and go about your day while it naps. The yeast will do its thing without you; just help it find a nice shape and get it into the oven. The bread will do the rest.
Enjoy as toast, with soup, or alongside a hearty pasta. Better yet, dip it in a fragrant olive oil as you sip wine and try to remember what life was like before you started making bread for yourself. If the picture is hazy, let it fade into your subconscious as a quaint remembrance of Life Before Good Bread.
Artisan Bread, d/b/a Lazy Bread
Makes 3 small loaves
Adapted from “Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day,” by Jeff Hertzberg and Zoë François (Thomas Dunne Books, 2007)
1 ½ T active dry yeast (two packets)
1 ½ T Kosher salt
6 ½ cups AP flour, plus more for dusting
3 cups warm (not hot) water
Cornmeal
Note: I’m introducing a new feature with this recipe. It’s call the Rundown. This is the birds-eye overview of where you are going in the recipe. It’s so easy to get mired in the details of a recipe without a clear, overarching view of where we’re going. I thought it might help to see the recipes holistically at the outset.
Rundown
- Mix the dough
- Rest for 2 hours
- Shape the loaves
- Rest for 40 minutes, heating the oven after 20
- Bake for 30 minutes
In a large bowl, mix the yeast and salt into the water. Stir in the flour and continue to mix until fully incorporated. The dough will be shaggy and soft, almost more like a batter than a dough. If you tried to pick it up, it would be very sticky. Cover with a dish towel and allow to rise at room temperature for at least 2 hours. If you need the time, you can let it keep rising for up to 5 hours.
Once the dough has risen, either bake it or refrigerate it. You can safely keep it in the fridge in a sealed container for up to two weeks. If you refrigerate it, allow to warm up on the counter for 30 minutes or so before following the rest of the steps.
Before shaping, sprinkle cornmeal on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Flour your hands and scoop the dough out onto a lightly floured counter or cutting board. To shape the loaves, sprinkle flour over the dough and cut into three equal pieces. You will then shape them into oblong-ish rounds. To do this, pick up one of the pieces in your hands and cradle it in your fingers. Using the slight tackiness of the dough, pull the dough gently around itself, stretching it as you go, until you have a smooth, rounded side underneath and a lumpy side facing up where you can gather together the excess. This lumpy bit is the bottom. If this just isn’t making sense to you, just try to get the dough into three relatively equal, relatively oval shapes. It’s very forgiving once it hits the oven, so if you find yourself starting at three big blobs that don’t fit your expectations, hang in there. The beauty will come in the baking. (Also, see the top loaf in the picture below…not exactly a looker, but it baked up to become the loaf on the right in the picture at the top of this post. Not too shabby, eh? And even if it’s ugly, just remember what Julia Child tells us in Mastering the Art of French Cooking in her delightful recipe for baguettes - it will still taste like bread.)
Place the loaf, lumpy-side down, on the prepared baking sheet and repeat with the remaining loaves. Cover with a clean dishtowel and allow to nap for 40 minutes. Be sure to space the loaves a few inches apart, as it will continue to rise during this time.
When the loaves have been napping for 20 minutes, move one oven rack to the middle position and one to the bottom. If you are using a baking stone, place it on the middle rack now. If you don’t have one, don’t worry about it. Place a broiler pan or cast-iron skillet on the lower rack. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. We want the stone and broiler pan to be really hot, so let this keep heating for the remaining 20 minutes until the dough is ready.
Dust the dough with flour or cornmeal (if you choose the latter, go light). Using a very sharp knife, make two or three diagonal slashes across the top of each loaf. Place the loaves in the oven (either leave them on the sheet where the are or transfer them to the stone with a baking peel). Carefully pour one cup of very hot water in the broiler pan and shut the oven door quickly.
Bake for 30 minutes, and resist the urge to open the oven door until then. Check the loaves – if they are deep golden brown, they are done. If not, let them cook for another 5 minutes or so until they are beautiful.
Allow the loaves to cool on a rack or a clean dish towel. Though it will be very difficult, try not to eat them for at least 20 minutes. The texture will be better if you wait.
Because there is no added fat in the dough, this bread will not keep well more than three or four days. Then again, if you have a hard time making your way through this bread, please email me so we can talk about how exactly you are able to resist gorgeous, delicious artisan bread; I would like to bottle whatever it is you have as I think we could make millions in the weight loss products market.
369 Responses to “ A Brave New World | Artisan Bread for Beginners ”
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Thanks Bria! I am so tired of spending $3.79 for a loaf of bad bakery bread! I am so excited to try this. I’m even more excited that I can keep a constant supply of dough in the fridge to bake more when needed!
Fantastic, Lauren! Seriously, baking your own bread is one of those thresholds that can seem scary to cross, but once you do you’ll never go back. If you start making bread on a regular basis, you can make your life easier by getting a jar of yeast instead of buying tons of packets - just make sure you keep it in the fridge. One packet = 2 teaspoons plus a pinch.
More bread is coming, including challah, pizza dough, and the multigrain sandwich bread I make every Sunday.
When you are getting ready to pull some of the Artisan dough from the fridge to cook up, just make sure to get it going about 2 hours before you want to serve (30 min to warm up to room temp on the counter, 40 min to raise after shaping, 30 min to cook, a few to cool). Works beautifully. Enjoy your bread!
Yay! Thanks for posting this, Bria.
I have had a Salty Spoon couple of days - I made the Cowboy Quiche yesterday and Brian and I promptly sat down and ate half of the pan in less than 20 minutes. Then I spent the entire evening at work craving the rest of the pan!! So delicious.
And now, as I write this, my very first loave of homemade bread (I used this recipe, of course) is baking in the oven!!
I love, love, love your website and I check in all the time!! Thank you!! Can’t wait for everything to come,
Steph
Thanks, Steph! I’m so glad you’re having fun (and success!) with the recipes. Let me know how the bread turns out, and stay tuned for more good stuff.
Happy cooking!
Sooooo, the bread turned out great!
But, it’s just the two of us here and I’m wondering what’s the best method to wrap the extra loaves until we get to them tomorrow and the day after.
Also, can’t wait to try the multigrain bread (as soon as you get it posted — hint, hint).
Hooray! So glad the bread came out well. For bread with a bit of a crust, like this one, you don’t want to trap it in plastic. A paper bag is ideal. Moist breads, like sandwich breads (and, um, the multigrain bread) are fine in a big ziplock so long as you don’t let them get too warm. Ask my husband how many times we had to find moldy bread in a bag before we stopped keeping it in the bay window behind the kitchen sink!
Multigrain coming soon, I promise!
I just made this bread, and it turned out wonderfully (and I’m not much of a baker). Thanks so much for the recipe.
Bravo, Jennifer - welcome to the wonderful world of bread-baking! Stay tuned for more.
Hi Bria,
Thanks for your beautiful website. I have never baked my own bread before. I tried this recipe, and while it tasted great, my loaves spread out into thick disks in the oven rather than keeping that lovely loaf shape. Though I followed the measurements, is it possible that my dough too wet? I did have some trouble getting the dough from the bowl to the floured countertop. I’d love some advice for my next try.
Thanks!
It’s possible the dough was too wet, but if you followed the measurements, I’d guess that it might have something to do with where you’re baking. Are you at high altitude? If so, the problem is that the yeast is going nuts at first, then falling flat. You can help remedy this by helping the yeast slow down a bit. Start by a) decreasing the yeast to 1 tablespoon and b) adding a tad more salt. If that’s still not working, then try that process with c) letting it rise in the fridge overnight after 2 hours on the counter.
Let me know how it turns out - good luck!
Everything went perfect until I used the knife to make the slashes. My dough flattened quite a bit as soon as I did it where did I go wrong? Or is it supposed to do that?
Hi Jen! If it falls flat when you slash, it might be overproofed. Try shaping it after a shorter raise and see how things work out. You could also trim the time they rest after shaping.
Thank you! I will try that next time. This was my first go at it and even though they’re a little wide and flat… I’m proud as a peacock. I have been terrified of yeast one more question… I used a cast iron skillet in my oven. When I took it out it was bone dry. Should the cup of water last the whole 30 min or should I use more water or add some if it dries out. Not sure if that’s safe for the pan? Thanks again. I will be baking lots more bread!!
You’re welcome! No reason to be terrified of yeast - it’s just yeast! I promise it won’t bite
Add more water next time. It shouldn’t be a problem for the pan to be hot and dry, but if you add more water up front you’ll have more steam.
Happy baking!
Do you have a good homemade baked Sourdough recipe?
I was wondering if it’s ok to let it rest for longer? Overnight for example? And also, what does AP flour stand for?
Elizabeth - if you let the dough rise substantially longer than it calls for, you run the risk of over proofing. This will give you deflated loaves. AP flour = all purpose flour.
Daniella - I use a few recipes from the King Arthur Flour website for sourdough. Do you have a sourdough starter? If not, you can buy one or start your own. I have one from King Arthur that gives a great flavor. I also made one from spent beer yeast a few years ago. Sadly, it died when we moved last summer. Here’s a link to the KAF sourdough recipe page - http://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/sourdough/bread-pizza-and-flatbread and here’s an article with instructions for starting your own - http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/19/dining/19pizzarex5.html?_r=0
I’ve been using your recipe for a few months. I started with white flour, but I am now using 1/2 multigrain flour. So simple and amazing. Thank you!
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I would like to half the recipe. What would the baking time be if I make 1 loaf?
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