I read the various blogs and the forums on the freshloaf.com. People raved about this recipe. They even compared it to Peter Reinhart's pain al' ancienne. The recipe was featured by Mark Bittman. I really like his recipes. I decided to give it a try. The recipe uses very few ingredients and makes a small loaf so it not so much of an investment if it turns of disastrous.
NY Times recipe here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/08/dining/081mrex.html
Better recipe straight from the Sullivan Street Bakery website:
http://www.sullivanstreetbakery.com/recipes/noknead.html
I started off by adding 3 cups of bread flour, 1/4 teaspoon of instant yeast, 1 1/2 teaspoon of salt into a bowl. I stirred everything with a wooden spoon. I then added 1 1/2 cups of filtered water. The recipe as printed in the NY Times had a typo. The article listed 1 5/8 cups. No one measures this way. I had an additional 1/2 cup of water since someone mentioned that they had to increase it to 2 cups at high altitude. After I dumped almost the entire half cup in, I regretted it. I should have added it slowly to see if I needed the entire half cup. My dough ended up a little too wet. If you read other blogs who use 1 5/8 cups of water, their dough is too wet. I watched the Bittman video and my goal was to get a dough with a similar viscosity. I ended up slowly adding a little more flour. The recipe says to produce a wet, shaggy dough. The dough below is wet and shaggy.
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Wednesday, January 21 at 5:20 pm - I left work a little early and immediately check the dough. Lots of bubbles. Bubbles are bigger with a higher hydration dough.
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I really like this recipe. True it takes a very long time but you can still go on with your life while you let time and a little yeast work its magic on the gluten. I actually like recipes that you can do steps ahead of time. When I made the cinnamon rolls, I had to complete a few steps, leave it alone, constantly check on its progress, do the next step, leave it, continue to check periodically, proceed to the next step...
What I would have done differently:
- I'm not sure what size dutch oven I have. I wouldn't mind a taller loaf that I can use for sandwiches. The height of this loaf is more like the ciabbata bread that Cucina Calore serves with their olive oil. Maybe I can double the recipe and bake in the same dutch oven to get a taller loaf.
- Someone suggested adding a little bit of milk or even a little bit of sugar. I'm not sure how it would effect the chemistry.
- I will put the rounded dough in an oiled bowl instead of on a floured towel. Maybe the towel will work if I use a dry towel.
What I would have done differently:
- I'm not sure what size dutch oven I have. I wouldn't mind a taller loaf that I can use for sandwiches. The height of this loaf is more like the ciabbata bread that Cucina Calore serves with their olive oil. Maybe I can double the recipe and bake in the same dutch oven to get a taller loaf.
- Someone suggested adding a little bit of milk or even a little bit of sugar. I'm not sure how it would effect the chemistry.
- I will put the rounded dough in an oiled bowl instead of on a floured towel. Maybe the towel will work if I use a dry towel.
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