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Authors: James Beard

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BOOK: Beard on Bread
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Stale Bread

Stale bread can be very useful, so it is foolish to waste it. In fact, a sandwich of rather stale bread with thickly sliced onions is delicious. Otherwise, stale bread can be turned into
Melba toast,
croutons, or bread
crumbs. For Melba toast, slice the bread as thin as you can and dry it out in a 250° oven until just barely colored; store in airtight tins or jars. For croutons, cut the bread into dice or crumbs, place on a baking sheet, and proceed as for Melba toast; pack in plastic bags. It is a boon to have both plain and toasted bread crumbs on hand, and they can be kept in tins or jars at the back of the refrigerator. It is simple enough to make them by using a hand grater, but it is even easier to do them in a blender. In the latter case, cut the bread into small dice and blend only a little at a time, which is actually faster than loading the blender jar and waiting for all the dice to sift down.

Choosing the Right Bread

It is strange how few people, in planning a menu, ever consider what bread goes with what dish, yet I think this is as important as choosing any other item on a menu. Here are some of my recommendations (and you’ll find my recipes for each type of bread in the index.)

BREAKFAST BREADS

For simple bread and butter with tea or coffee and preserves:

Buttermilk White Bread

William Melville Childs’ Health Bread

Swedish Limpa

Irish Whole-Wheat Soda Bread

Pumpernickel

Basic White Bread

SWEETENED BREADS, TOASTED, REHEATED, OR AS IS

Monkey Bread

Sally Lunn

Kugelhopf

Egg Twists

Persimmon Bread

Sour-Cream Coffee Cake

Doughnuts

Maple Bars

Filled Doughnuts

FOR
TOASTING

Basic White Bread

English Muffin Bread

Challah

Italian Feather Bread

Brioche Bread

Oatmeal Bread

Whole-Meal Bread with Potatoes

Any of the Rye Breads

Cinnamon Bread

Raisin and Nut Bread

Portuguese Sweet Bread

TOAST AS A FOUNDATION FOR FINNAN HADDIE, CREAMED CODFISH, SCRAMBLED EGGS, AND OTHER SAVORY DISHES

English Muffin Bread

Basic White Bread

Rye Bread

Pumpernickel

Oatmeal Bread

Griddle Cakes

    Yeast Buckwheat Cakes

    Yeast Pancakes

BREADS
FOR LUNCHEON WITH HORS D’OEUVRES, SALADS, COLD MEATS, AND OTHER COLD DISHES

Rolls

Baking Powder Biscuits

Soda Bread

Raw Apple Bread

Thinly sliced Pumpernickel

Rye

Pizza Caccia Nanza

Pita, especially with filling

FILLED BREADS AS A COURSE FOR LUNCH OR LATE SUPPER

Lahma bi Ajeen

Pizza Loaf

Pissaladière

WITH HOT DISHES

Baking Powder Biscuits

Parker House Rolls

Jane Grigson’s Walnut Bread

Cornmeal Bread

Anadama Bread

Myrtle Allen’s Brown Bread

Sally Lunn

Helen Evans Brown’s Corn Chili Bread

Bread Sticks

SANDWICH BREADS

For sweet sandwiches

Carl Gohs’ Zucchini Bread

Banana Nut Bread

Pistachio Bread

For savory sandwiches

Brioche Bread

Finnish Sour Rye Bread

Bavarian Rye Bread

Whole-Meal Bread with Potatoes

BREADS
FOR AFTERNOON TEA OR COFFEE

These breads should be cut very thin, buttered with sweet butter, and arranged on a nice serving dish.

White Free-Form Loaf

Sour-Cream Bread

Mrs. Elizabeth Ovenstad’s Bread

Maryetta’s Oatmeal Bread

Water-Proofed Bread

Italian Holiday Bread

Raisin and Nut Bread

Norwegian Flatbread

Pistachio Bread

Swedish Limpa

Carl Gohs’ Zucchini Bread

Persimmon Bread

Gingerbread

Quick Cranberry Bread

Lefse

HOT BREADS

Girdle Scones

Crumpets

Potato Scones

Baking Powder Biscuits (tiny ones)

DINNER BREADS

With first courses. With oysters, clams, smoked salmon, smoked sturgeon, and other dishes—thinly sliced and buttered or made into very thin bread-and-butter sandwiches.

Bavarian Rye Bread

Myrtle Allen’s Brown Bread

Pumpernickel

Norwegian Whole-Wheat Bread

Verterkake

With soup

Melba Toast made from George

Lang’s Potato Bread, Buttermilk White Bread, or Cornmeal Bread

Bread Sticks

Thinly sliced and toasted English Muffin Bread

Main-course breads

Alvin Kerr’s Zephyr Buns

Parker House Rolls

Helen Evans Brown’s Corn Chili Bread

Gingerbread

Irish Whole-Wheat Soda Bread

Baking Powder Biscuits

French-Style Bread

Saffron Buns

Breads with cheese

French-Style Bread

George Lang’s Potato Bread

White Free-Form Loaf

Cheese Bread

Pizza Caccia Nanza

Dark Herb Bread

Cracked-Wheat Bread

BREADS
FOR SPECIAL DIETS

Gluten Bread

Salt-Free Water-Proofed Bread

BASIC YEAST BREAD AND OTHER
WHITE-FLOUR BREADS

Basic White Bread

This is my idea of a good, simple loaf of bread—firm, honest in flavor, tender to the bite yet with a slight chewiness in the crust, and excellent for toast. The ingredients are just flour, water, salt, and
yeast, with the addition of a little sugar. It is a recipe I use constantly, although I vary it from time to time, and I have chosen it as my first recipe here because I think it will provide any beginner with the basic techniques of breadmaking. In fact, it is one I have taught to my pupils through the years. Once you have mastered the procedures given here, you can go on to more complex recipes without difficulty.

As I have said in the introductory observations, there are many variables in breadmaking. As far as
flours are concerned, for example, since I know that the hard wheat flour producing the best results in wheat breads is not always easy to come by, in this recipe we’ll use a common unbleached (or bleached) all-purpose flour. And since compressed yeast is often difficult to find and the dry variety is available everywhere, throughout this book we’ll use “active dry yeast” and refer to the measure by package, although occasionally I will suggest the alternative of compressed yeast, since many people enjoy working with it. Some breads call for milk or fruit juice; some, like this one, are made with water. The salt content of bread is adjustable too: I use a rule of thumb of 1 tablespoon for each pound (3¾ cups) of flour; you may alter this to your own taste. There are several ways to knead dough, several ways to shape it into a loaf, and it can be given one or more risings. There is also a choice of washes you can use on the loaf before it goes into the oven, and you can slash the top in different styles or leave it as it is. Even the weather has an effect on breadmaking. The degree of humidity and warmth will govern the absorption quality of the flour and the action of the yeast.

Here, in this first recipe, we’ll reduce decisions to a minimum and put all of these extra factors into footnotes. You should be able to make this loaf successfully the first time around without referring to a single one of the notes. But they will come in handy as you vary ingredients and develop your own style of baking. For instance, if you have small hands, you will probably prefer to use two hands for
kneading. The approach to making
every loaf of bread is essentially the same, and for that reason you should implicitly have this recipe in mind throughout the rest of the book, as I will not keep spelling out fundamental procedures, such as how to proof or how to knead.

[1 large loaf or two smaller loaves]

1 package active dry yeast

1½ to 2 cups warm water (100° to 115°, approximately)

2 teaspoons granulated sugar

3¾ to 4 cups all-purpose flour (approximately 1 pound)

1 tablespoon salt

1½ to 2 tablespoons softened butter for buttering bowl and pan

This recipe will make 1 large loaf using the approximate 9 × 5 × 3-inch pan, or 2 smaller loaves, using the approximate 8 × 4 × 2.

First, proof the yeast, which means testing it to make sure it is still active. To do this, pour the contents of the package into ½ cup of the warm water (about 100° to 115°), add the sugar, stir well, and set aside. After a few minutes the fermentation of the yeast will become apparent as the mixture swells and small bubbles appear here and there on the surface.
1

While the yeast is
proofing, measure 3¾ cups unsifted flour into a 2-to 3-quart bowl with rounded sides. (Save the other ¼ cup flour for kneading, if necessary.) Add the tablespoon of salt and blend well.
2
Pour approximately ¾ cup warm water
3
into the flour and stir it in with a wooden spoon or with your hands. Add the yeast mixture, and continue stirring until the ingredients are thoroughly blended and tend to form a ball that breaks away from the sides of the bowl. (If the dough is very stiff, add a
tiny bit more water.) Transfer the dough to a lightly floured marble slab, bread board, or counter top.

BOOK: Beard on Bread
9.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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