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Homemade Bread

by | Oct 10, 2019 | Snack | 0 comments

Home Made Bread

Absolutely delicious, there’s nothing quite like bread straight out of the oven!

I have made this bread with the 40 minutes rising time and it was delicious, but I found the finished loaf rather smaller than I wanted. This may have been because the dough didn’t rise to the top of the tin in the 40 minutes

So the next time I made it, I left the loaf to rise until it did reach the top of the tin. This took several hours, but resulted in a loaf that was quite a bit bigger, and the extra time proving provided extra flavour too

I realise that several hours every time you make bread is probably not feasible for busy families following the planner, so tried another 3 ways

Bread maker white bread

no knead bread made in a breadmaker

The first thing I tried was to use my breadmaker. Exactly the same mix, for 1 loaf only of course! The resulting loaf was very light and even bigger than the last one. If you are lucky enough to have a breadmaker, you could leave it on overnight, so that the loaf is cooked first thing. Leave it to cool and firm up while you’re at work

Do this several nights running, so you can build up a supply of bread. Putting each loaf, sliced and wrapped, in the freezer, ready for when you need it. Loaves are best sliced the day after they are made. They are rather soft on the same day and you end up with thick door steps

So, successful, but reliant on an expensive bit of kit

Leave it overnight, cook it in the morning

bread -overnight rise

The dough rose to this height, left to prove in the fridge overnight

The next thing I tried was to make the dough, put it in the tin, then pop it in the fridge, ready to be cooked the next day. I made it in the evening, about 7pm. At 8am the next morning, it looked like this. Still not at the top of the tin.

I just mixed everything together, without activating the yeast, using water straight from the tap, and without warming the flour, so cutting down on the time a bit

I cooked it at 180c fan, and allowed another 10 minutes as the dough was fridge cold.

It was surprising that there was no oven ‘spring’, but it worked just fine

You could of course do this the other way about, make the dough in the morning, put it in the fridge, and cook it when you get in. Or you could even make the dough when you’ve got time, and bake it up to 1.5 days later. I wouldn’t leave it longer than that, the yeast will make big holes, and maybe collapse at the top

You could make a batch and stick it in the fridge, covered,  where it will sit happily for a week without any further attention. After a week it will need a handful of flour and a splash of water as the yeast will need feeding. It will also start to turn into sourdough

When you’re ready, punch back and put into tins as you would usually do. Leave to rise to the top of the tin and bake in the normal way. You could bake 1, 2, 3 or 4 loaves at once this way, entirely up to you

Bread - overnight rise

Making bread in a slow cooker

no knead bread from slow cooker on High

 

The final way I tried was using the slow cooker.

I made a 1 loaf mix in my usual way, just bung everything in a bowl and stir, no need to knead. I had a large slow cooker, so decided to try baking it in the same tin I use for baking in the oven.

The dough was made at 8am and popped in the fridge. At 5pm, it was taken out and stood inside the slow cooker, on top of a folded silicone cake liner. I hoped the dough would rise a little more to the top of the tin in this time, which indeed it did. The slow cooker was not turned on yet.

After an hour, I flipped the slow cooker switch to on, on High. Bread needs to be cooked for about 2.5 hours in a slow cooker. Try it after that time, knock the bottom to see if it sounds hollow. If not, pop it back in for another half hour

That slow cooker has now gone bang and my new one is a lot smaller, 3.5 litres. My loaf tin wouldn’t fit in it, so I tried a different way.

I put a circular silicone cake liner in the base, and a silicone cake tin liner that fits the sides of a cake tin around the sides of the crock. Made the dough, popped it in and left it overnight for 12 hours. Not in the fridge this time – not enough room! Just left it on the worktop.

I used 500g of flour and 320ml water, as the loaf would have been a flat circle using the usual 380g

12 hours later the dough had risen beautifully, filling the crock pot just enough. Any more flour would have been too much. The slow cooker was turned on to High and left for 2.5 hours

It smelled wonderful. On turning out the loaf, it had stuck a little to the bottom where tiny bits had made their way through little gaps. So I think I’ll use a little baking parchment as well next time

The loaf didn’t sound hollow when I knocked it, so it was turned over to brown the top a bit and put back in for another half hour. On reflection that step wasn’t really necessary.The top and bottom never did sound hollow, but the sides were beautifully crispy with the required ‘knock’.

The long proving time gives slow cooker bread a good flavour and it couldn’t be any easier!

bread made in a slow cooker

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

no knead bread made in a breadmaker

homemade bread

5 from 1 vote
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 40 minutes
rising time: 40 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 25 minutes
Course:
Side Dish
,
Snack
Cuisine:
English
budget meals
,
cheap family recipes
Dairy Free
,
Low Fat
,
Vegan
,
Vegetarian
Servings: 64 slices from 4 loaves (16 slices per loaf)
Cost per portion 20p per loaf
Calories: 86kcal
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Ingredients

  • 1.5 kg white flour bread flour
  • 15 g yeast Allinson's
  • 3 tsp salt
  • tsp sugar
  • 1 litre very warm water 1.06 litres
  • A little oil to grease your tins

Instructions

  • Warm the flour in the oven on gas 1 first. This takes about 10 minutes
    flour warming in the oven
  • Activate the yeast according to instructions on packet. If your packet does not specify, activate by mixing the yeast and the sugar in a small cup of hand-hot water, using water from the total amount to be used, leaving it until it forms a foamy head as is shown in the picture.
    yeast proving in a jug
  • If you are not making the full quantity of the recipe, always use a minimum of 1 tsp (5g) of yeast
  • The water temperature should be between 40°C - 46°C (105° F to 115° F). Use an instant read thermometer if you have one, if not, test the water against the inside of your wrist by holding it under the tap it should feel very warm but not hot.
  • Add salt to the warmed flour and mix in well.
  • Add the warm water (including the water in which you activated the yeast), gradually until you get a not too slippy dough.
  • Mix by hand, or with a spoon. No need to knead.
  • Put a quarter of the dough into each of 4 greased or lined loaf tins. Silicone loaf tins are great if you have these already.
  • Leave in a warm place to rise for 40 ish mins til dough peeks about 1 cm above the top of the tin.
    Click here to start a 40 minute timer
  • Bake for 40 mins at 220C/200C fan/gas 7 or until browned on top and sounds hollow when tapped with a knuckle
    Click here to start a 40 minute timer
  • If the bread does not sound hollow when tapped, pop it back in the oven, direct on the oven shelf, for a few more minutes.
  • Try and resist eating it when hot and crispy out of the oven - although it IS one of life's great pleasures, so I won't blame you if you do!

Notes

If you are cooking fewer than 4 loaves, always use at least 10g yeast even if you reduce all the other quantities. i.e if you try to quarter all the measurements, don't go lower than 10g of yeast.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
homemade bread
Amount per Serving
Calories
86
% Daily Value*
Fat
 
1
g
2
%
Saturated Fat
 
1
g
6
%
Sodium
 
110
mg
5
%
Potassium
 
27
mg
1
%
Carbohydrates
 
18
g
6
%
Fiber
 
1
g
4
%
Sugar
 
1
g
1
%
Protein
 
3
g
6
%
Calcium
 
4
mg
0
%
Iron
 
1
mg
6
%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
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