Easy But Good Bread
Submitted by alrd
No-knead bread loaves with scalded milk dough, baked over a steam pan for a crackly crust. Simple everyday bread that works with half whole wheat flour too.
YIELD
1 loafPREP
15 minCOOK
45 minREADY
1 hrsThis is the kind of loaf you bake on a Tuesday because you ran out of sandwich bread and the grocery run feels far. No stand mixer, no kneading, no sourdough math. Just flour, water, a little milk, and a packet of yeast.
The one serious move here is the steam. A pie pan with half an inch of boiling water sits on the oven floor while the bread bakes, creating the humid environment that lets the crust stay supple long enough to expand before crisping up. It’s the same trick bakery ovens use, scaled down for a home kitchen.
Scalded milk matters too. Heating it past a simmer deactivates a whey protein that otherwise weakens the gluten, so the loaves hold a taller rise and softer crumb. Cool it to lukewarm before the yeast goes in, or the heat will kill the rise.
Kitchen Tips
- Test doneness by tapping the bottom crust. A hollow thump means the inside has fully baked. A dull thud means a few more minutes.
- Use the poke test on the second rise. If the indent springs back halfway and no further, the loaves are ready for the oven.
- If using half whole wheat flour, hold back a splash of water. Whole wheat drinks differently than white flour, so the dough tightens up fast.
Variations
- Brush the tops with beaten egg before baking for a glossy, golden crust.
- Sprinkle sesame or poppy seeds on the egg wash for a deli-style finish.
- Swap the sugar for honey or malt syrup for a deeper, slightly sweet flavor.
Ingredients
Directions
Mix 2C flour with 1 teaspoon salt (I use ½ whole wheat flour and adjust water) Scald ½ cup milk.
Add in 1½ cup boiling water and let cool to lukewarm.
Dissolve 1 package yeast in ¼ cup lukewarm water.
Add the dissolved yeast to the milk/water and add to the dry ingredients, along with 1 tablespoon sugar and 1½ tablespoon oil.
Mix well but don’t knead.
Cover and let rise until almost doubled in bulk.
Punch down.
Form into two sort of flat shapes. Roll each (sort of jellyroll like) into two loaves. They’ll be a little longer and thinner than average bread. Cover and let rise again until almost doubled in bulk, or until a finger indentation doesn’t disappear after a few minutes. Place on oiled cookie sheet. Place a pie pan with ½ inch of boiling water on the bottom of the oven. Bake 15 minutes at 400 and 30 minutes at 350. You know it’s done when it sounds hollow when tapped on crust.
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