Adventures in Bread Making: Artisan Bread in 5

After our discussion on my old school baking day, I had lots of great ideas for how I could get around actually buying a bread machine. One of our readers, named Noreen, suggested that I check out a book called, “Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day” which would help me get around the whole bread machine process and required no kneading.

As soon as I read her comment, I put a hold on it at our library and picked it up the next day. With a cup of iced coffee in hand, I read through the entire process and what I would need to complete it.

For copyright reasons, I will refrain from going into the recipes themselves, but I will explain the process of this method so that you can decide if this something you could/would do to make bread for your family. The master mix recipe I am using is actually located here so you could attempt the first recipe without even getting the book.

There are lots of different recipes in the book and then different ways of shaping the dough recipes. I attempted the master recipe which included just the basics- water, yeast, flour, and salt.

The difference between making this dough and the traditional dough is that you literally dump the ingredients in (no need to even proof the yeast) and use a wooden spoon to just mix everything together. The dough is very wet and easy to stir and you don’t even have to break out the mixer.

You cover the dough and let it rise for two hours and then you stick it in the fridge for a minimum of three hours and up to fourteen days. Yes, that’s right..fourteen days! According to the authors, the dough will taste better and better the longer the dough sits in there and you can even use some of your old dough as a starter for a new dough, much like the process of making a sour dough starter.
The first picture shows what this dough looks like when it is just incorporated- stringy and yucky looking. This second picture shows what the dough looks like after it rises. This master recipe was enough for four loaves so that is why it looks like there is so much. They have bigger recipes than this, but this is the amount of fridge space I could spare for the week.

I let this dough sit for two days before I made my first loaf. When you make your first loaf, you just “cloak the dough,” (sprinkle the dough on top with some flour) and then cut off a grapefruit section of the dough for your first loaf. Without any kneading or any real handling of the dough, you tuck the corners of the dough underneath and put it on a pizza peel (I used my extra pizza stone) that has been sprinkled with a little cornmeal. Now you let it rise and preheat your oven for 450 degrees. They suggested twenty minutes, comments on Amazon suggested preheating the entire forty minutes that the dough is rising to help achieve the best crust.

It should look something like the picture above. It is relatively smooth on top, but the corners are all tucked underneath. After you have shaped it like this and let it rise, you can slice the top two or three times.

You now slide the loaf (very awkwardly if you have no pizza peel) and then you fill a boiler tray with one cup of hot water and put it in the oven to help steam the oven up to give you a nice crisp crust. Don’t ever open the door and let it cook for thirty minutes.

When I took it out, it looked like this. Now remember, this is my first loaf so I am sure I will get better at it, but I am pretty impressed with how this first loaf looks. Next time I will score it a little more and I will probably make more than one loaf at a time. The exterior of this loaf is nice and golden, and it is solid and crusty on the outside. Perfection!

The interior was a bit gummy though so I may cook it for another ten minutes or raise the temperature. This will just require some tweaking on my part, but our family still thought it tasted pretty darn good.

Now that I have made this first loaf, I am so excited to try the other loaves in the book. The entire process took very little of my time and I had very little clean-up (my least favorite part of making bread) so it is a great solution for a busy mom who wants to make homemade bread, but doesn’t have the tools or time to make bread from scratch.

Let’s also talk about the cost savings too. In our town, our local market has artisan breads for sale that cost about $4 a loaf. I buy my ingredients in bulk at Sam’s Club and I am estimating that this loaf of bread costs me about forty cents or less. What a savings and how elegant is this to bring to parties and when entertaining? You just can’t beat it!

A big thank you to Noreen for the suggestion and I hope you can try this recipe and tell me what you think! I have a demonstration from the authors posted below- this might help explain the process further.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMxJgIpe38Q]

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  1. Christi — May 26, 2008 @ 7:46 am

    I love the idea of making bread without kneading! I’ll have to check out that book…

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  2. Shannon — May 26, 2008 @ 7:58 am

    WOW, five minutes? I used to bake homemade bread all the time before the boys were born. I stopped because it took so long, but this looks promising.

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  3. Stefani — May 26, 2008 @ 8:26 am

    A friend of mine turned me on to this book and I absolutely love it! I make bread every week now. My favorite ones are the herbed master loaf and the olive oil bread.

    I have been making our pizza for pizza night with the olive oil dough and I can’t even begin to calculate the savings! As an added bonus, it tastes WAY better than delivery!

    Enjoy your new bread making process!

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  4. Clio — May 26, 2008 @ 9:35 am

    Thanks for posting this. I’ve been considering making my own bread. This was good insight. Now to check out that book.

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  5. Sarah — May 26, 2008 @ 10:53 am

    Wow! Thanks for sharing this with us!

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  6. Avlor — May 26, 2008 @ 11:14 am

    I had to put the book on hold at the library too. This just sounds so cool! (My family loves sourdough!)

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  7. Mandy — May 26, 2008 @ 11:33 am

    I got this book for myself for Mother’s Day because our local library didn’t have it, and it has received such awesome reviews. I love it – it is very straight forward, and I love having bread great bread, but for a lot cheaper than buying it. Cooks Illustrated (the magazine accomanying America’s Test Kitchen on PBS) looked at one of the basic No Knead Bread recipe from Mark Bittman of the NY Times that has been pretty popular, and came up with an awesome version. It’s called “Almost No Knead Bread, 2.0″. What’s interesting is their method of cooking the loaf in an preheated, enamled dutch oven in order to get a great crust and shape.

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  8. Jenn @ Frugal Upstate — May 26, 2008 @ 2:11 pm

    I took out this book and tried it. I’ve been alternating between this type of bread and regular style in my breadmaker.

    There is an errata out on the book, so you might want to check that out. some of the rise times are wrong etc.:

    http://www.artisanbreadinfive.com/?page_id=73

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  9. Gina @ MoneywiseMoms — May 26, 2008 @ 8:01 pm

    This sounds great–I can’t wait to try it! Are there any recipes that include whole wheat, or are most of the loaves going to be French-bread-type breads to serve alongside a meal?

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  10. Anonymous — May 26, 2008 @ 8:38 pm

    Amy,

    I am so glad that you tried this. When I first heard of the book, I thought it would be something you might be interested in for your blog. I have had the book for months and still haven’t tried it. This week I am going to do it! I will let you know how it turns out.

    Noreen

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  11. Amy — May 26, 2008 @ 9:02 pm

    Gina- This book has a ton of different recipes including ones for calzones, peasant breads and pizza dough recipes.

    Under the whole wheat category there is a light whole wheat bread, 100 percent whole wheat sandwich bread, and a whole wheat sandwich bread inspired by Chris Kimball (who publishes Cooks Magazine)

    Stefani- I will definitely have o try those other recipes you mentioned. I ordered a copy of the book and a dough scraper with a gift card that I have been saving. Thanks for the recommendations!

    Mandy- I will definitely have to try that Mark Bittman recipe too. The whole world of no knead breads is new to me!

    Jenn- Thanks for letting me know about that. I have been playing around with this recipe so I will go read that entry too. Thanks for the tip.

    Avlor- Let me know what you think! I can’t wait to hear your experience with this!

    Noreen- Thank YOU for the suggestion. Let me know what you think when you try it and thanks for breathing some inspiration into my life!

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  12. Tiff — May 27, 2008 @ 12:01 am

    WOW I have about five minutes in between messes so that would be perfect. I will have to check this book out too!

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  13. Mrs. U — May 29, 2008 @ 11:42 pm

    Oooh!! I LOVE making all kinds of bread!! Thank you for sharing the link for the book and the starter recipe, too. I can’t wait to try this! It looks sooo yummy!

    His,
    Mrs. U

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  14. Grandmother Wren — June 3, 2008 @ 3:20 pm

    Super! Now I need this book too!
    Well, first I’ll try the recipe that you have linked for us, then I’ll buy the book.
    (but I already know I want it…)

    Thanks for this post – it’s definitely one that I will use.

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  15. Anonymous — June 9, 2008 @ 5:30 pm

    Thanks for the tip! I got this from the library and we’ve had fresh bread from it the last two nights, we’re hooked!

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