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Casareccio (Rustic Wholewheat Bread)

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Casareccio is a rustic Italian wholewheat bread made with biga starter, yielding 3 crusty loaves with a chewy crumb. Fold in walnuts, pistachios, or black olives for your own twist.

YIELD

3 small loaves

PREP

15 min

COOK

45 min

READY

7 hrs

This is the bread you’d find cooling on a stone windowsill in the Italian countryside. Casareccio is a slow-rise, no-knead-style loaf built on a biga starter that gives it that tangy complexity and open, airy crumb you only get from patience.

A mix of whole wheat and white flour delivers an earthy, nutty flavor with a crust that crackles when you tear into it.

The dough is wet and sticky by design, so trust the process. Three to five hours (or an overnight rest in the fridge) does all the heavy lifting for you.

Fold in walnuts, pistachios, or pitted Italian black olives before shaping to make each loaf your own.

Kitchen Tips

  • Keep your hands wet when handling this sticky dough. Flour will toughen it up.
  • The overnight refrigerator rise develops the deepest flavor. Pull the dough out and let it come to room temperature before shaping.
  • Pull the parchment paper out at the 15-minute mark so the bottom crust crisps directly on the baking sheet.
  • Tap the bottom of a finished loaf. If it sounds hollow, it’s done.

Variations

  • Walnut Casareccio: Fold in a third of a pound of chopped walnuts for a rich, earthy crunch.
  • Pistachio Casareccio: Half a cup of shelled pistachios adds buttery sweetness and gorgeous green flecks.
  • Olive Casareccio: Pitted Italian black olives bring a briny, savory punch that pairs beautifully with aged cheese.

Ingredients

1 5
TEASPOON ML YEAST, ACTIVE DRY
¼ 59
CUP ML WATER
warm
3 ½ 828
CUPS ML WATER
room temperature
13/16 192
CUPS ML BIGA PUGLIESE
see recipe *
3 ¾ 887
3 ¾ 887
1 15
TABLESPOON ML SALT
151.2
POUND G WALNUTS
or
½ 118
CUP ML PISTACHIO NUTS
or
79
CUP ML BLACK OLIVES
italian, pitted *

Directions

Stir the yeast into the warm water and let proof for 10 minutes. Add the remaining water, biga, then the flours and the salt.

Mix with a wooden spoon for 5 minutes. The dough will not pull away from the side of the bowl.

Wet your hands and knead on a lightly floured board to ensure that all the ingredients are well mixed.

Turn into a lightly oiled bowl, cover with plastic wrap and let rise at room temperature until it has almost tripled in volume, 3 to 5 hours.

This dough works very well if left to rise overnight or in the refrigerator. Let it come back to room temperature before shaping.

Flour your work surface very well and flour a scaper. Turn the dough onto the work surface, but do not punch down.

Divide into 3 equal pieces. Work in your filling if using by flattening the dough and sprinkling equal amounts of filing over the dough.

Turn in the sides of the dough and roll each piece into a ball, being gentle but at the same time pulling the skin taut.

Place the loaves on floured parchment paper set on baking sheets, cover with a heavy cloth and let rise until doubled, about 1 hour.

Preheat the oven to 450F. Bake the loaves for 15 minutes. At this point the dough should be set you can remove the paper. Slide the loaves directly onto the baking sheets and bake until crusty and golden, about 30 to 35 minutes.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 511g (18.0 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 1132 26% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 33g 50%
Saturated Fat 3g 13%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 1764mg 73%
Total Carbohydrate 60g 60%
Dietary Fiber 21g 85%
Sugars g
Protein 81g
Vitamin A 1% Vitamin C 2%
Calcium 10% Iron 66%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
Low Cholesterol, Cholesterol-Free, Trans-fat Free, High Fiber
 
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