Continuing on with my bread making series – I’m baking this one :
Buttermilk Wheat Bread – Succulent, extremely light texture with whole wheat goodness. Sandwiches-a-plenty !
LOAF SIZE | 1 Pound Loaf | 1 1/2 Pound Loaf | 2 Pound Loaf |
Buttermilk, 80 deg F | 6 1/2 fl oz (3/4 c + 1 tbsp) | 10 1/2 fl oz (1 1/4 c +1 tbsp) | 14 fl oz (1 3/4 c) |
Butter or Margarine | 1 1/2 tbsp | 2 tbsp | 2 tbsp |
White Bread Flour | 2/3 c | 1 c | 1 1/3 c |
Whole Wheat Flour | 1 1/3 c | 2 c | 2 2/3 c |
Brown Sugar, packed | 1 1/2 tbsp | 2 tbsp | 3 tbsp |
Salt | 1 tsp | 1 1/2 tsp | 1 1/2 tsp |
Baking Soda | 1/8 tsp | 1/4 tsp | 1/2 tsp |
Active Dry Yeast | 1 1/2 tsp | 2 tsp | 2 1/4 tsp |
Destructions
Can be cooked without but – I use a breadmaker to take out all of the hard work. Here’s a simplified generalised guide :
- Put wet ingredients into machine
- Put dry ingredients into machine (I draw a line in the flour and put salt on one side, yeast on the other)
- Set to program based on loaf size, type of flour, type of yeast (fast or slow acting)
- Press start, wait however long the program is, enjoy fresh bread.
Notes :
- Extras like seeds, nuts, garlic or dried fruits, you may need to pause the breadmaker after dough is mixed, and mix these in yourself. Then return dough back into breadmaker and unpause. For cheese it’s recommended to grate the cheese and freeze it first. My breakmaker has an extras tray, but I never use it (it never really worked that well)
- You might also want to remove the stirrer/paddle whilst the dough is out of the machine (so loaf doesn’t have a hole in the bottom). If so you may need to do a manual “punchdown” if the loaf rises too much, in which case just gently poke with your finger and loaf will drop a little.
For more info – you can find my guides with everything you need to know about bread making here :
Baking Bread And A Break From Sitting At This Computer
4 Steps To Easily Making And Baking Homemade Bread
And last but not least (more satire than serious) …
Simple Steps For Making Bread Without Dough Conditioners
Hope you are safe and stays that way.
Cheers
(InSincere thanks to Chef Kevin Ashton of “Grumpy Old Men” blog, for the cooking inspiration, you’re one of a kind)
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Comments
Comments are often welcomed, provided you can string a legible, relevant and polite sentence together. In other cases probably best shared with your therapist, or kept to yourself.
This was aces, thanks.
Good to know – I’ll try and post some more recipes over the weeks.
Thanks for this recipe!
looks good. Hope you are well.