Awesome Everyday Loaf

Want great results every time? This is brown bread at its best.

Tasty, soft and light enough to seem professional but with enough texture to be decidedly home made, I bake this loaf several times a week.

I bake one for my neighbour at the same time, too, and I have it on (her) good authority that it's better than even the poshest supermarket bread.

It's good with just butter, great for scrummy sandwiches, makes mouthwatering buttered toast and works with cheese or jam: anything goes.

So, with that enormously overdone introduction out of the way, let's get to the actual recipe.

It's 30% wholemeal flour, which I find gives it a silky texture whilst not becoming too dry and heavy.

If you are tempted to increase the quantity of wholemeal flour, don't forget to adjust the amount of water too for the correct dough hydration.

Awesome Everyday Loaf

150g/5 oz/1 cup wholemeal flour
350g/12 oz/2 ⅓ cups strong plain flour
1 tsp instant dried yeast
2 tsp salt
315ml/11 fl oz/1 ⅓ cups water

1. Put all the ingredients in a large bowl and squidge them together with one hand. There may be a moment when it doesn't seem as though it's all going to go together but it will.

2. Tip the dough out onto a clean surface. There's no need to put any flour down, this dough is lovely and clean and very easy to work with. Knead the dough for ten minutes. Ok, if you haven't got ten minutes, one or two will do but try and stretch the dough as much as you can. Ideally, it should have a smooth, elastic consistency when you've finished.

3. Leave the dough to ferment for 45 minutes under the upturned mixing bowl. If you can't leave it that long, just leave it as long as you can. Equally, if you can't get back to it after 45 minutes, just revisit it when you are able to. It's quite forgiving. I once left mine for several hours and it was fine.

4. Give the dough a brief knead to degas it. Form the dough into a loaf shape and place it in a 2lb loaf tin. Leave it to prove in the tin for 45 minutes, or until it reaches the top of the tin.

5. Bake at 180oC/360F for 30 minutes or until nicely browned. A cooked loaf sounds hollow when you tap on its bottom.

Allow the loaf to cool on a wire rack for about 20 minutes before cutting into it.

Stored in an airtight container, it will keep for several days in a cool place.

Want More?

You can find my easiest bread recipes here.

There are more detailed instructions, photographs and videos about bread making to improve your technique here.

I've written more about the science behind bread making to help you gain confidence and understand the keys to success here.

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23 comments:

  1. I made this today and it was delicious! It did the lid lifting thing - I must have to let it prove for longer next time - but yum, scrum it was good. Which is just as well as we had run out of bread at home and it was my last hope :)

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    1. Great! I'm delighted to hear that it was a success. My favourite thing about homemade bread is that I don't have to have been to the shops. Even if there's nothing for tea, I usually have flour in the cupboard, so I make pizza. And if it's really close to lunchtime and I'm totally disorganised: doughballs!

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  2. In the recipe you say to add water. Does the water need to be warm or is cold water OK?

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    1. Cold will do fine but if you make it hand-hot that might speed the yeast up a bit.

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    2. Thanks. Used cold and it's turned out fantastic. First ever attempt at a loaf. Gonna try the sultana loaf tomorrow

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    3. Brilliant!
      Toasted sultana loaf is one of my favourites!

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    4. Three loaves in three days!!! My wife is calling it the "magic loaf" because as soon as we make it, it disappears. It's so easy to make. I'm currently recuperating from open heart surgery and the physiotherapist recommended making bread as a good way of exercising (and keeping busy) after the operation. I had never made bread until this week and now I'm making it every day. I can't believe more people don't make their own bread. It really isn't as scary as you think - these recipes make it really easy so thanks Rachel.

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    5. Mark that is wonderful! Your comments really made my day! And I wish you a speedy recovery from your operation too!

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  3. There isn't any salt in this recipe as there is in "The Formula for Great Dough." Is that on purpose? My experience with homemade sandwich bread in the past that doesn't have salt is that it is pretty.... astringent? Not sure of the best word for it.

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    1. It works with or without salt. Try adding 5g as per The Formula. Or a little more if you like the flavour to be more salty.

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  4. I thought you had to have sugar for the yeast to rise?

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    1. Well, it's true that yeast consumes sugar (glucose) to make energy for growth and reproduction. It is that process which produces carbon dioxide (gas) as a waste product and that gas is what causes the bread to rise. Flour contains starch which breaks down to sugars: this happens when the flour and the enzymes within the flour are hydrated. Yeast can work on the sugars from the flour. People have been making bread for centuries, whereas refined sugar has only been around for a few hundred years. Our ancestors made bread without adding sugar. Modern humans add sugar to bread dough and that certainly has the effect of hurrying the yeast up, making it rise faster and giving the yeast some easy food to start off the process. Maybe modern humans enjoy (are addicted to?) the flavour of any sugars left behind in the process, too. Perhaps the bread industry exploits this taste for sugar by making their bread with sugar so we come back for more? Maybe it speeds up their industrial process too, for fluffier bread? Ok, I'm sounding like an old sceptic here. But actually the yeast can work perfectly well without added sugar. The rising process might take a little longer, but not hugely so, and some people would argue that this enhances the flavour as it develops more over time. So, no, you don't have to have sugar for the yeast. Try it! You could add a little yeast to a flour and water mixture and watch for bubbles. Compare with the same mixture with the addition of a little sugar. I predict that the sugary one will bubble up more vigorously but that both mixtures will be active. In bread making, you can avoid adding sugar. Slow and steady wins the race. The natural flavours of the flour and yeast will outweigh any cheap fix involving sugar. In my humble opinion :)

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    2. Great bread recipe. Incidentally, table sugar(sucrose) is a disaccharide and the molecular structure is 50% glucose and 50% fructose, is case anyone is interested - probably not :)

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    3. I am interested! Thanks for the info!

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  5. Can you just use white bread flour as I don't have any wholmeal in the cupboard?

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    1. Yes, definitely! Or use all wholemeal, if that's what you've got on another day. Any combination will work.

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  6. What speed do you use a kitchenaid stand mixer on?

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    1. Ooh I don't know: I knead by hand. You'll have to experiment! But it might be a good idea to use the mixer in short bursts, letting the dough rest for a couple of minutes in the gaps, because kneading dough puts quite a strain on the mixer and resting the dough lets it relax a bit and become less stiff to mix.

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  7. Quick question please - is your 180c oven temperature fan assisted?

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  8. The dough was so sticky I had more on my hands than on the counter. It's the same problem I always have.

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    1. Ok, two suggestions Gaye:
      1) You could experiment with using less water. For some reason(s): altitude, climate, type of flour etc you may need more or less water than me.
      2) Persist with kneading the dough and after 10 minutes or so (hopefully less!) it should come together nicely and be smoother and more manageable. If kneading isn't your thing, try an 'autolyse' - by which I mean leave the dough to its own devices for at least 20 minutes before attempting to knead and you will usually find that it is less sticky and more workable.
      Hope that helps.

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