No-Knead Peasant Bread
Ingredients
- 2 1/2 cups unbleached bread flour*
- 1/2 cup whole-wheat
flour
- 1/2 teaspoon active
dry yeast
- 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
- All-purpose
flour, for dusting
Directions
Combine the bread
flour, whole-wheat flour,
yeast and salt in a large bowl. Add 11/2 cups lukewarm water (about 100 degrees
F) and mix with your hands or a spoon until the dough comes together (it will
be wet and sticky). Cover the dough tightly with plastic
wrap. If you have extra
time, refrigerate 12 to 24 hours; this is not necessary but will improve the
flavor of the bread.
Let the dough rise,
covered, at room temperature for about 18 hours; this rise is necessary whether
you refrigerate the dough first or not. The surface will be bubbly after
rising.
Generously dust a work surface with all-purpose flour. Turn
the dough out onto the flour, then sprinkle flour on top. Fold the top and
bottom of the dough into the center, then fold in the sides to make a free-form
square. Use a dough scraper or a spatula to turn the dough over, then tuck the corners under to form a
ball.
Line a baking sheet
with parchment paper and generously dust with flour. Transfer the dough to the
baking sheet, seam-side down, and sprinkle with more flour. Cover with a cotton
kitchen towel (do not use terry cloth) and let rise at room temperature until
doubled in size, 2 to 3 hours.
Position a rack in the
bottom of the oven and place a 2- or 4-quart cast-iron or enameled Dutch
oven (without the lid) on
the rack. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F for at least 30 minutes. When the
dough has doubled, carefully transfer the hot
pot to a heatproof
surface. Uncover the dough, lift up the parchment and quickly invert the dough
into the pot (shake the pot to center the dough, if necessary). Cover with the
lid and bake 30 minutes, then uncover and bake until brown and crusty, 15 to 30
more minutes. Turn out onto a rack to cool.
Total Time:
3 hr 15 min
Prep
2 hr 15 min
Cook
1 hr 0 min
Yield:
8 servings
There are many recipes
for this simple and tasty bread. This is just one of them. One can even make it
in a Dutch oven on a wood stove.
* Flour is just ground
up grain. Grain can be from more than wheat; like rice, corn, oats, or about
any of the other myriad kinds of grains we humans eat and enjoy.
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