Tag Archives: yeast bread

Bacon Bread

Mention bacon and I will start salivating. Bacon is the stuff that dreams are made of – an aroma and flavor that tempts even the most dedicated vegetarian.

bacon bread

I should know, I was once a dedicated vegetarian. I will agree with anyone that says bacon is good with almost anything – except Jack. Jack-in-the-Box came out with a bacon shake that Ethan and I had to try.

Try it we did and at first sip I found my mouth filled with scorched vanilla. There wasn’t much bacon (if any) but they had added a glug of artificial smoke flavoring to a vanilla shake. Imagine drinking a vanilla shake as you were leaving a burning building.   Just because you can doesn’t mean you should. However…candied bacon in cookies and breads, crisp bacon in side dishes, bacon on the plate? I heart it all.

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S’Mores Monkey Bread

Monkey bread. One of those weird food names that seems to have always been around but no one can find the origin of. It’s a fun bread whether you make it sweet or savory –  this one as you may have guessed) is sweet.

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S’mores are the perfect combination of marshmallow, graham cracker and chocolate. Warm and gooey, crispy-crunchy, rich and sickeningly sweet, s’mores are the stuff that childhood memories are made of. What better way to relive all those old memories than a warm, gooey s’mores breakfast bread? Continue reading

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Molasses Oatmeal Walnut Bread

This bread is a rustic bread. You can make it in a loaf with great success or make  a free form loaf or boule. It makes incredible toast, awesome sandwiches (try a thick slice of ham) and great bread to go with soup. Add to that that it is easy to do and healthy and you will want this on your repertoire of bread recipes.

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Be sure to give this plenty of time to rise. Due to the heaviness of the oats the bread will probably rise more slowly than traditional light white bread. Be sure to give it plenty of time to bake or it will be doughy inside as well. Continue reading

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Buttermilk Yeast Bread

Real buttermilk yeast bread is not found in any store or bakery. There is no way to get the full, delicate flavor and the incredible texture except by making it yourself and trying not to eat the entire loaf before it is cool. This bread has a delicate sweetness and a slight tang, and is fantastic toasted, slathered with butter, and spread with homemade jam….or honey…or…

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It is just as good toasted and spread with mayo, and then topped with a couple of crisp pieces of bacon, a really ripe tomato, and some lettuce. But you can also just tear it apart and eat it caveman style…totally up to you. I have partaken of it in each of those ways and none is better than the other.

There is not much to it, as far as a yeast bread goes. It is a great yeast bread recipe for the first time baker, or someone inexperienced. Just do the stuff in order, and you will be fine. The only caution is about adding too much flour. It will make this light, airy bread heavy and dense.

A note about yeast. I hate instant yeast. I don’t think the flavor develops well, and I don’t think the texture of the resulting bread is as good. You can use it if you like but I do not recommend it.

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Buttermilk Yeast Bread

Prep Time: 3 hours

Cook Time: 30 minutes

3 hours, 30 minutes

Yield: 2 loaves

Carbs: Carbs: 165.5 per LOAF

Calories per serving: 898 per LOAF

Fat per serving: 14.5 per LOAF

Delicately tangy yeast bread with a soft crumb and a delicious crust.

Ingredients

  • 1 envelope yeast
  • 1/4 c lukewarm water
  • pinch of ginger (helps activate the yeast)
  • Stir together in a bowl and set aside for five minutes.
  • 2 c warm buttermilk (not low fat!)
  • 1/3 c sugar
  • 1/4 c melted butter, lukewarm not hot
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 3/4 tsp baking soda
  • 6 c organic white flour

Instructions

  1. Mix buttermilk, sugar, salt, baking soda in with the yeast mixture.
  2. Add three cups of flour and mix until smooth. On an electric mixer it is about 5 minutes on low speed.
  3. Mix in butter until it is totally incorporated into batter.
  4. Now, begin to add the rest of the flour, one cup at a time, keeping mixer on low speed.
  5. When dough pulls from the sides of the bowl remove it from the mixer to a floured surface and knead until elastic and smooth.
  6. Place in greased bowl, turn to grease the top, cover and allow to rise for 1 1/2 hours.
  7. Punch down and form into two loaves. Place in greased loaf pans and grease tops.
  8. Cover, and allow to rise for 45 minutes.
  9. Brush tops with egg yolk mixed with a teaspoon of water to make it glossy.
  10. Preheat oven to 400F. Bake for 30 minutes, covering tops with foil if they brown too fast.
  11. Remove loaves from oven and allow to cool in pans for 10 minutes.
  12. Turn out and cool completely on a rack. Cover the loaves if you want soft crusts.

Notes:

Nutrition information is per loaf - just divide the total by the number of slices you cut the loaf into for per slice information.

http://www.restlesschipotle.com/2008/04/buttermilk-yeast-bread/

 


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Whole Wheat and Molasses Bread

Some recipes just connect me with the past…relatives, generations, friends, even characters from books I have never actually met except through their story.  Every time I get my hands in sticky, fragrant whole wheat bread dough I am transported to a large farm kitchen, somewhere in the Midwest, with checked curtains and cows grazing in the distance.  I could be Caroline Ingalls, or Caddie Woodlawn’s mom, or any of a million other women who have created something from almost nothing and kept their families well fed down through the ages.

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I am not a feminist by any means, nor am I much more than a woman who is comfortable in her own skin, but it seems to me that there is a magic in that ability that working at a keyboard will never capture.  There is a confidence and satisfaction that you can’t get from a paycheck, a business meeting, or even being a size six.

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Bread is made often in our kitchen, by myself or one of my daughters.  We will easily go through a loaf a meal and so it is not a weekly job but a daily one. Molasses as the only sweetener in this hearty loaf gives it a special sweetness and a fragrant scent that lingers in the kitchen for the day.  If you are going to take the time to make a really good bread, take the time to get a really good organic flour. There is a difference.

If you are new to bread making and kneading then use  unbleached white flour for  half of the whole wheat flour. It will help you to create a better load from the beginning.  Whole wheat is difficult to manage until you are used to the stickiness of it.

 Whole Wheat and Molasses Bread 

4 c potato water, lukewarm

2 pkgs dry yeast

Dissolve the yeast in the water and let stand for 5 minutes

1/4 c Grandma’s unsulfured molasses

1 tbs fine sea salt

1/4 c melted butter

7-8 cups of whole wheat flour or a mix of whole wheat and unbleached white.

Add all ingredients to the yeast mixture.  Add 3 cups of flour and mix well.  Let stand 20 minutes.

Stir down and add enough of the rest of the flour to make a dough that leaves the sides of the bowl.  Knead by hand for 10 minutes or with your mixer and bread paddles for 3-5.  If mixing with mixer be sure to finish the kneading by hand..there really is no substitute.

After kneading dough should be elastic, smooth, slightly sticky and springy. Form into a ball, oil and put in a large oiled bowl covered with a tea towel to rise in a warm place for 1 1/2 hours,or until  double.

Punch down.

Form into 3 loaves, place in greased bread pans and allow to rise for 1 hours,or until almost double.  Bake at 375 for 35-40 minutes or until loaves sound hollow when tapped.  Turn out and cool completely.

Makes 3 loaves

 

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