Almost No Knead Bread
But there is one thing that still really intimidates me, and that is BREAD. I’m not sure why, although I think it might be the whole thing with the yeast and the rising. It’s NERVEWRACKING! You stir up the yeast and the flour and the water and the salt, and there are all these dire warnings about measurements and temperature, and you spend the next few hours circling around it to see if the dang thing is going to RISE or not. Sometimes it does…and sometimes it doesn’t. It’s just all too anxiety-provoking for me, and yet I keep coming back to it all, because when it works, there is nothing quite as fabulous as a slice of warm, homemade bread and butter. Then I came across the Cooks Illustrated recipe for No-Knead bread, which was inspired by a recipe in The New York Times, [5] but being Cooks Illustrated, they took the recipe apart and put it back together again in a fool-proof way. Here’s the drill: you mix up flour, yeast, water, a little beer and a little vinegar in a bowl. Cover it with plastic wrap and then go do something else for 18 hours. (Yes, 18 hours). Then knead it about 10 times, just enough to make it come together into a nice smooth ball. Put it on a piece of greased parchment paper, cover it again and go find something else to do for another two hours. Thirty minutes before baking time, take your handy dutch oven and put it in the oven and set the temperature to 500. (Yes, 500.) When it is time to bake, take the Dutch oven out of the oven Very Carefully and using the parchment, lay the dough in the pot and cover it up. Put the pot back in the oven and lower the temp to 425. Bake with the cover on for 30 minutes, and then another 20 or so with the cover off. At the end of this lengthy process, you will have a perfect, round loaf of delicious country style bread. I think my days of being intimidated by yeast are over.
Ingredients Directions
Recipe adapted just slightly from Cooks Illustrated [8]
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