Cause seriously, what else are you supposed to do when it’s cold and snowy outside? This gets easier and easier for me. When you consider that people (read: women) have been baking bread for their families for hundreds and hundreds of years without access to the local Panera…we’ve been brainwashed into thinking it’s rocket science – it’s not! I’m so lazy now that I don’t even use the stand mixer ’cause I’d have to wash it. Just dump the yeast, salt and water into the container, then mix in 6 ½ cups of flour (I’m now using unbleached all purpose). When it gets too hard to mix, I just smoosh it around with my fists and pretend it’s a family member getting what fer! After having gone through at least ten of the current high-fashion artisan bread-making books, I’ve gone back to the original Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day: The Discovery That Revolutionizes Home Baking. If you’re the type of cook/baker who prefers weight over volume measures or you need gluten-free recipes, then buy The New Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day: The Discovery That Revolutionizes Home Baking which has whole chapters on that. I would not recommend the Kindle versions, unless you are completely comfortable with electronics in the kitchen – – I sure am not!
Tag Archives: baking bread
Cooking with the cheapo – bread, part 2
Between vampire and zombie books I’ve been squeezing in more artisan-style bread cookbooks, learning why most people give up when they learn that the 12-step program refers to bread making!
Previous dough rose in the refrigerator at least overnight. I also used a pan of water in the oven to create steam and baked on a hot pizza stone. Very pleased with the results, but wanted to try something a trifle different. Made the same basic dough (which I’ve been using for English muffins a lot!) but left it out on the counter over night, didn’t refrigerate it. I dumped the entire container on a floured board and very lightly kneaded it to basically just form a nice round loaf shape; then I lightly floured the top and covered with a slightly damp towel (not terry ’cause gross things will stick). Left it for a few hours to rise again. About 30 minutes before baking, I turned the oven to 500º and put a clean Dutch oven on a rack about 1/3 from the bottom.
Told you cast iron rocks! Flopped the loaf in the pot, scored the top to allow steam to escape, the put the lid back on and put in the oven, reducing the heat to 450º. After about 20 minutes, I checked and the top was all pale and shiny, which is just what it was supposed to look like (gah). Bake uncovered for another 20-25 minutes, until it’s a nice dark brown and you’ll end up with a loaf that looks like this.
The taste is incredible: PITA has already had two slices and DH, after first asking why I’d make such a large loaf of bread, has already finished his first slice with more to come.
Next time (and there will be one), I’ll “try” to wait a little longer before taking it out of the oven, so the crust is even darker.
Cooking with the Cheapo: ze baguettes!
Same dough, just different shape and prep. Instead of cornmeal, it rests on flour and you wash the surface slightly with water to allow diagonal slashes with your serrated knife without sticking. Into 450º oven for about 20-30 minutes and let cool on rack. That’s it! And I can see why you have to bake daily – they don’t last very long around here! Here’s the link to yesterday’s bread-baking post in case you feel pioneer-y.
Cooking with the Cheapo – making & baking bread
We like good bread, but even with a voucher or coupon, the stuff is crazy price. We’ve all been brainwashed into thinking that bread is something time-consuming and a lot of effort, when nothing could be further from the truth! Up until a few days ago, I believed that, too! Then I read an article that referenced the ease of making artisan breads and I immediately got a book from the library. It wasn’t the one I from the article, which worked out great! The book I’ve been using is called Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day by Jeff Herzberg and Zoë François. They just released a revised edition adding chapters on gluten-free baking. The whole idea behind five minute breads is that your dough sits quietly waiting for you in a covered (but not air-tight) container in the refrigerator and you only grab enough for what you’re baking. Yesterday’s loaf disappeared rather quickly, so tossed another one in the oven, which you see here.
So let’s start at the very, very beginning. I’m lazy and use a stand mixer; makes the entire mixing step take about five minutes.

This is all you need for the basic dough recipe: unbleached flour, coarse salt, water and yeast. It doesn’t matter what brand of flour or what form of yeast – they all work the same. The only thing you have to be careful of is to keep the water tepid or cooler because otherwise you kill your yeast. You can even use cold water, it just takes longer for the dough to rise.
6 1/2 cups flour (they recommend the scoop and level method, where you scoop out the flour, then use a knife to level the top).
3 cups tepid water
1 1/2 tablespoons yeast
1 1/2 tablespoons salt.
Add the water to the bowl, then yeast and salt, then all the flour at one time. I use a stand mixer with dough hook and it takes about 3 minutes before a dough ball forms. Take it out and place it in a 5 qt (approximately) covered container that is not air-tight. Since I don’t want to be up all night baking bread, I stick it in the refrigerator to rise – takes overnight, but who cares?
I’m adding the last cup of flour to the bowl in this picture, then I’ll turn on the mixer on. If you’re really lazy, you could just mix it in the storage container, I suppose, but that’s reallllly lazy!
Within a couple of hours the dough will at least double in volume. At that point you can flour your hands, reach in and grab a hunk of dough about grapefruit size – you might want to slice it off with a serrated knife. I fold it over on itself, forming a ball, then place it on a cutting board dusted with cornmeal for about 40 minutes. I used to have a peel (those big wooden paddles bakers use), but it kinda absorbed too much sewer water…so I make do without. After about 20 minutes, turn on the oven to 450º and get a small pan ready to go into the oven at the same time as the loaf. You need steam, so you’ll fill that pan with hot tap water – brilliant! One thing you will need is a baking stone (which are perfect for frozen pizzas btw) which should always stay in the oven so you won’t forget until it’s too late and you end up just saying the hell with it and going to bed. Not that that ever happened to me. well, okay, mebbe one or two times. okay maybe more…what are you, my mother!!!
The next step is to dust the ball lightly with flour, then take a wet serrated knife and make a cut or two on the top. I really don’t understand the why of this but I’ve baked it both with and without the cuts.
After about 30 minutes check and see if the crust is nice and brown. If it is, take it out with a spatula (you don’t wanna be grabbing this hot thing) and place the loaf on a rack to cool; put it on a plate or counter and it’ll get mushy. That’s it – except for letting it cool thoroughly before slicing – – and good luck with that!
Get the book or go to their website and see how easy it all is – I plan to make baguettes and dinner rolls over the weekend.


