Friday, January 13, 2023

No-Knead Multigrain Whole Wheat Bread

Behold!  This is one scrumptious loaf of goodness.


Here's what a slice of this
yummy bread looks like.

Recipe from Artisan Bread with Steve 
Husband-Tested in Alice’s Kitchen
Makes 1 Loaf

I’m thinking this is my favorite no-knead bread.  Because it’s no-knead, it’s a cinch to make.  Though this bread is VERY easy to make, you must plan to begin the day before serving.

16 oz. cool water
1 ½ teaspoons salt
¼ teaspoon yeast (Instant Yeast or Active Dry Yeast)
1 Tablespoon sesame seeds (I use a mix of sesame seeds and black sesame seeds.)
1 Tablespoon flax meal (or flax seeds)
1 Tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
2 cups bread flour
1 ½ cups whole wheat flour
½ cup old fashioned oats (I’ve also made this using quick-cooking oats.)
¼ cup old fashioned oats for the second rise
1 Tablespoon sesame seeds (optional for second rise)

Place the water, salt, yeast, sesame seeds, flax meal into a large bowl and give it a quick stir.  Add the 2 cups bread flour, the 1 ½ cups whole wheat flour and then the ½ cup oats on top of the flour.  Stir until the dough forms a shaggy ball scraping the sides of the bowl as you stir.  Stir until the flour is absorbed and scraping the sides of the bowl as you stir.
Cover with plastic wrap (I like to use a shower cap for this.) and allow to sit on the counter for 8-24 hours. (I think it’s best to allow the dough to sit for the full 24 hours.)
Remove the plastic wrap.  Spray an 8 ½” X 4 ½” loaf pan*** with cooking spray.  
Stir the dough to deflate.  Scrape the sides of the bowl clean.  Sprinkle the dough the ¼ cup old fashioned oats and the sesame seeds, if using. Stir so that the dough ball is covered with the extra oats and sesame seeds. Roll the dough into the loaf pan.  
Cover with another loaf pan turned upside down onto the loaf pan with the dough.  Use binder clips to clip the loaf pans together creating a “poor man’s Dutch oven.”  
Allow the dough to rise again for 30-60 minutes.  (If your home is cool, like it might be in the winter, it may take a full 60 minutes for it to rise.  If your home is warm, like it might be in summer, the dough may only take 30 minutes or so.)
As the dough is rising, move the oven rack to the lower third of the oven.  Preheat the oven to 400F.  
Bake for 40 minutes with the top on and 3-15 minutes with the top off to finish (browning) the crust.  
The bread is done when the internal temperature is 190F.  Remove the bread from the pan onto a cooling rack.  Cool completely before slicing.  (If you slice it too soon, the bread will be gummy and doughy inside.)

***Because I was baking more than one loaf of bread, I placed the dough into an 8” diameter springform pan.  Then, I covered it with an upside down 8” cake pan for the “poor man’s Dutch oven.”  I didn’t use any clips.  I just rested the upside down cake pan on top. The loaf turned out beautifully and it was round!

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