Home
Recipes
Software
Store
Discuss Food!
Video
Help
Log in
and post recipes free!
find
in
Anywhere
Recipe Title
Videos
Discussion Groups
Food Dictionary
Product Support
search
Whole Wheat Loaves
Try this Whole Wheat Loaves recipe, or post your own recipe for Whole Wheat Loaves
tell us
Be the first to
submit a photo
for this recipe.
Win $100.00
by posting the best original food photo this month!
Recipe look good to you?
Whole Wheat Loaves Ingredients
2 1/4 c Warm water; (105?F to 115?F)
3 c Whole
wheat
flour
1 tb Active dry
yeast
1 tb
Canola oil
1/4 c
Honey
1 tb Malt extract
3 2/3 c Bread
flour
or unbleached
1 tb
Salt
Instructions for Whole Wheat Loaves
Makes two 1 3/4-pound loaves. Theres just enough honey and malt in this recipe to bring out the natural sweetness of the loafs whole wheat flour. A tall crowned loaf with some chew and stretch in the crumb, this bread has the flavor and heft to stand up to strong cheeses and spicy cold cuts, making it first-class sandwich fare. Like the White Loaves, these are good loaves for bread-baking tyros: The techniques are basic, the rewards many. Mixing and Kneading: Pour 1/2 cup of the water into the bowl of a heavy-duty mixer fitted with a dough hood and add the yeast and honey. Whisk to blend and allow the mixture to rest until the yeast is creamy, about 5 minutes. Combine 3 1/2 cups of the bread flour and the whole wheat flour and keep close at hand. Working in the mixer with the dough hook in place, add the remaining 1 3/4 cups water, the oil, malt extract, and about half of the flour mixture to the yeast. Turn the miser on and off a few times just to get the dough going without having the flour fly all over the counter and then, mixing on low speed, add the rest of the combined flours. Increase the mixer speed to medium and beat, stopping to scrape down the bowl and hook as needed, until the dough comes to gether. (If the dough does not come together, add up to 2 tablespoons more white flour.) Add the salt and continue to beat and knead at medium speed for about 10 minutes, until the dough is smooth and elastic. If you prefer, you can mix the dough in the machine for half that time and knead it by had on a lightly floured surface for 8 to 10 minutes. As with many whole wheat doughs, this one will be a tad sticky even after proper and sufficient kneading. First Rise: Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface and shape it into a ball. Place it in a large buttered or oiled bowl (one big enough to hold double the amount of dough). Turn the dough around to cover its entire surface with butter or oil, cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap, and let the dough rest at room temperature until it doubles in bulk, about 1 1/2 hours. Shaping the Dough: Butter two 8 1/2- by 4 1/2-inch loaf pans and set them aside. Deflate the dough and turn it out onto a lightly floured work surface. Divide the dough in half and, using the palms of your hands and fingertips, or a rolling pin, pat each half into a large rectangle about 9 inches wide and 12 inches long, with a short side facing you. Starting at the top, fold the dough about two thirds of the way down the rectangle, then fold again so that the top edge meets the bottom edge; seal the seam by pinching it. Turn each roll so that the seam is in the center of the roll, facing up, and turn the ends of each roll in just enough so that the rolls fit in the loaf pans. Pinch these seams to seal, turn the loaves over so that the seams are on the bottom, and plump the loaves with your palms to get an even shape. Second Rise: Drop the loaves into the buttered pans, seam side down, cover with oiled plastic wrap, and allow them to rise at room temperature until they double in size again, growing over the tops of the pans, about 1 hour. While the breads rise, center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 375?F. Baking the Bread: When the breads are fully risen (poke your finger into a bread; the impression should remain), bake for about 35 minutes, or until they are golden and an instant-read thermometer plunged into the center of the bread (turn a loaf out and plunge the thermometer through the bottom of the bread) measures 200?F. (If you like, 10 minutes or so before you think the loaves should come out, you can turn the loaves out of their pans and let them bake on the oven rack so they brown on the sides.) Remove the loaves from their pans as soon as they come from the oven and cool the breads on racks. These should not be cut until they are almost completely cool. Storing: Once completely cooled, the breads can be kept in a brown paper bag for a day or two. Once a loaf is sliced, turn it cut side down on the counter or a cutting board and cover with a kitchen towel. For longer storage, wrap the breads airtight and freeze for up to a month. Thaw, still wrapped, at room temperature. NOTES : Recipe and Information Source: Baking with Julia Child Posted to Bakery-Shoppe Digest by Ron West
Feb 19, 98
Main Ingredient:
Wheat
Cuisine:
Uncategorized
More like this...
Yummy Whole-Wheat Loaf
Whole Wheat Irish Soda Bread (Large Loaf)
Whole Wheat Loaf
100% Whole Wheat Bread (Machine) - Large Loaf
Granola and Maple Whole Wheat Loaf
Ingredient Insight - look inside this recipe
Canola Oil
Flour
Honey
Salt
Wheat
Yeast
Daily
Loaves
Wheat
for
flavor
and
categorization
Recent searches:
30 minute almond chicken
tofu marinades
chicken curry coconut milk
catfish fillets
orange sherbet cake
stewed beef
rosemary garlic rotisserie chicken
internal temperature pot roast
pork loin roast
normande poulet
strawberries eagle brand condensed milk
soup potato red
fajita marinade
sesame eggplant
cornflake tart
beach plum
chicken sage mushroom
lettuce cheddar mushrooms
cool whip raspberry pie
fresh stewed tomatoes
O P T I O N S
Rate or Comment
Suggest to Friend
Add to Menu
Email Recipe
Print Recipe
I M P R O V E
Submit Photo
Link to Recipe
Post a Recipe
Invite Friends
Post a Video
R E M E M B E R
Try Soon
Favorite
G R O U P S
log in first
Create your own personal cookbook!
Learn more
Download
our cooking software and
do more
with this recipe!
BigOven for Windows won Best Cooking Software, 2008 from TopTenReviews.com