Our Bread Bakers challenge for July celebrates America's semiquincentennial, and 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence, with American breads. With a country is comprised of so many different cultures banded together in one nation, that's a challenge in itself! So many American traditions have their start in their immigrant originators. English muffins are quite American, yet came from an British immigrant as a fork-split version of a "toaster crumpet". Monkey bread came from Hungary; the quintessential New York Bagel came from Jewish immigrants, along with challah and deli rye. San Francisco sourdough has French tradition, and sourdough can be strongly traced through the gold rush into something very American. There are so many Old World recipes that have American adaptions and that's what is so great. Old traditions kept, adapted to new ingredients, grains, and shared culture, celebrated as something both old and new in the new land of opportunity. So in that fashion, all of those old world adapted recipes totally count as they have become part of American tradition. I do think of Southern biscuits as strictly American. Even with roots in biscotti and hardtack, they are so far removed from those origins as to be a completely new creation. You could compare them to scones. You could... but you would be wrong. And you would never find a Brit putting sausage gravy on a scone. Unless of course they had visited the South and fallen in love with the idea, which does tend to happen!
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| Different pan, different shape. |
No Knead (Batter) Bread
adapted from Red Star Yeast
Makes 1 loaf
340g (290g with 100g total sourdough starter) water (110-115°F) (1½ cups without sourdough)
14g (1 tbsp) butter, melted
420g (370g with sourdough) bread flour (3¼ cups without sourdough)
10g 1¼ tsp) sea salt
13g (1 tbsp) sugar
8g (2¼ tsp) instant yeast
butter (for brushing on top)
In large mixer bowl, thoroughly combine half the flour, the yeast, sugar, and salt. Add the water, unfed starter if using, and melted butter to the flour mixture. Mix on low speed until moistened; then increase to medium speed for 3 minutes. Gradually stir in the remaining flour with a dough whisk or large wooden spoon to make a stiff batter. Cover and let rise in a warm place until doubled, about an hour.
Stir down the batter with a spoon. Spread the dough evenly into a greased bread pan, either 9x5-inch or tall sided 9x4 inch. Cover and let rise in warm place until the batter reaches the top of the pan, 45-60 minutes. Bake in a preheated 375°F oven for 35 to 40 minutes until golden brown. Unmold and place on a wire rack to cool. Brush with butter straight out of the oven, and cool before slicing.
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| Kind of a sloppy, wet, battery dough. |
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| Be sure to let it really double for best results. |
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| Smooth into the pan as evenly as possible. |
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| With a slack dough or batter like this, the tall pan really worked best for me for shaping. The 8x4-inch pan didn't give it enough room to fully rise so it was a shorter loaf. |
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| Still room for oven spring, even with rising to the rim. |
Check out some more American traditional breads:
- All American Batter Bread with Discard: A Messy Kitchen
- American Parker House Rolls: Sneha's Recipe
- Mount Vernon Breakfast Gems: Food Lust People Love
- Spoon Rolls: Karen's Kitchen Stories
#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a
month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. You can see all
our lovely bread by following our Pinterest board right here. Links are
also updated after each event on the #BreadBakers home page. We take
turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.







This looks so fluffy and soft! I agree with you about the roots of our breads! I’ve recently become a big fab of that Pullman loaf. Perfect for sandwiches!
ReplyDeleteIt's definitely my favorite loaf pan, even if I don't use the lid often! Unfortunately hubby stuck it through the dishwasher so it etched the finish a bit, but it still works great. I have their square pans too and just got a 9x13. Love the brand, they just work and clean up so nicely.
DeleteAs you say, Kelly, this was quite a challenge. After a few rabbit holes of research, I found a loaf recipe I was going to make from the actual cookbook that Martha Washington used - found a scanned copy online - but then I remembered that I don't have an oven right now! Since I took the time to calculate the measurements, maybe I'll still make it someday.
ReplyDeleteThe crumb of your batter bread is perfection! Such a pretty loaf!
Oh no, no oven! I usually don't bake much in the summer unless I have to since we don't have house AC. I'm going to be trying out baking in the Traeger! It's convection like an oven, so I figure it could work pretty well. Going to bump up 25º for lid loss.
Delete