bread, bread , bread :)
I am a bread addict. I love every type of bread and I love to bake it, too. Recently I tried a new recipe of white bread and surprisingly it tasted really good ; ok .. I have to admit that my mom helped me.
Just for short note : you can find literally ANY recipe for ANY bread at this website.
Moreover, it really looks nice and it is fun to browse the side.
I decided to try this one because it sounded really nice and easy.
Even though you can click on the link , I'll post the recipe here so it is easier for you :
[Ingredients:
4 cups (1 lb, 4 oz /
566 grams) organic all-purpose flour
2 Tablespoons granulated or brown
sugar
2 Tablespoons safflower oil (or your
favorite neutral oil, or melted butter)
4 cups (2 pounds / 908 grams) warm organic
milk (or water), about 85° F
About 6 cups (1 lb, 13 oz / 825 grams)
organic bread flour (or organic all-purpose flour)
1½ Tablespoons (22 grams) salt
Instructions:Mixing and
Fermentation (first rise)
In a very large bowl, stir together the
all-purpose flour, yeast, and sugar (I use a wooden spoon). Make a small well in
the middle of the flour mixture and pour in the oil and the milk.
Mix well, then continue to stir vigorously,
slowly adding 1 cup of the bread flour at a time and stirring it in, until
you've added 3 to 4 cups of bread flour and have a sticky, shaggy dough; this
should take several minutes.
Cover the bowl with a damp tea towel (not
something fuzzy like terrycloth) and let it rest for 20 minutes. (I keep a stack
of flour
sack towels in my pantry and use them constantly all around the
kitchen). This rest period is called the autolyse.
Add the salt and 1 more cup of bread flour and
stir it in as best you can. Add another cup of bread flour if the dough is still
too sticky to knead. Turn the dough out onto a floured work surface and knead it
with floured hands until the dough is soft and smooth, about 8 to 10
minutes.
As you're kneading, sprinkle a little more flour at a time as
needed to keep it from sticking to your hands or the work surface. You want
the dough to be as soft as possible without being sticky; you may not need the
entire six cups of bread flour, or you may need a little extra.

Sprinkle flour in the dough bowl, place the
dough in it, liberally dust it with flour, and cover it with a damp tea towel.
Update: Or you can let it rise in a straight sided, food
grade plastic container with a snap-on lid, which is what I do now.
There's no need to grease or flour the container. Use a felt tip pen or piece of
masking tape to mark the spot on the container that the dough will reach when it
has doubled in volume. (Click here
and scroll down to see an example.)
Set the dough somewhere that is preferably
between 70°F and 75°F until it has doubled in size, about 60 to 75 minutes.
Ideally, the dough itself should be between 70°F and 75°F. It's fine if your
dough is cooler; it'll just take longer to rise and will end up even
tastier.
On hot days I use cold milk to make my dough,
and on cold days I heat the milk to about 100°F (don't make it any hotter or
you'll risk killing the yeast). If you keep your flour in the freezer (it's the
best place to store whole grain flours), use warmer milk, or let the flour come
to room temperature first. It's easy to check the temperature of your dough and
ingredients with an inexpensive instant
read thermometer.
When the dough is ready to be shaped, you
should be able to push a floured finger deep into it and leave an indentation
that doesn't spring back. Unless your dough is rising in a straight sided
container, it can be difficult to judge whether it has doubled in size,
which is the guideline most recipes use. I find the finger poking method to be
more reliable.
Shaping and Proofing (second rise)
Turn the risen dough out onto a lightly floured
work surface, flattening gently with your hands to break up any large air
bubbles. Divide the dough into three equal pieces. The easiest way to divide up
dough into loaves or rolls is with a stainless
steel dough scraper, also called a bench scraper or pastry scraper.
I have three, and they're always in constant use. Nothing works better for
cleaning up the counter after working with dough or pastry.
If you're using a baking
stone, put it in the oven now and heat the oven to 375°.
Place the loaves seam side down in greased loaf
pans and dust them with flour (I use Spectrum
Naturals high heat canola spray oil on all my baking pans). How do I
get my sandwich breads so nice and tall? I cram a lot of dough into the pan.
I love my Chicago
Metallic commercial 1-pound loaf pans, which are a joy to use, come
with a lifetime warranty, and will probably last forever if you treat them well.
I've been using some of mine for several years and they still look new. They're
approximately 8½"x4½"x2¾" and I often bake 2-pound loaves of bread in
them.
Cover the loaves with a damp tea towel and let
them rise until the dough springs back just a little when you gently poke it
with a floured finger, about 40 to 60 minutes.
If you let the loaves rise too long, they may
not have enough energy left to rise once they're in the oven, and they may even
collapse. I was always so afraid this would happen that for years I unknowingly
under-proofed my loaves of Farmhouse White.]*
Maybe you are going to try it on your own as I did, believe me it is worth your time !! : )
*taken from the website !!!