Magic (No-knead) Bread

Partially raised by my maternal grandmother, who baked her own bread every week, I am no stranger to the smell of yeast emanating from beneath a cotton floursack towel sheltering rising loaves of dough on the back of a stove. There is nothing that says comfort to me more than a slice of freshly baked bread, still warm from the oven, slathered simply with melting butter. I know I am not alone in this. Bread is elemental in a way few other things are. When I began to bake my own bread as an adult – a habit that has been admittedly sporadic – I gloried in the act of it. Kneading. Waiting. More kneading. More waiting. For a working girl, bread-making is the product of a lazy Saturday, something to be done when there is nothing pressing, no urgent errands beckoning, no social obligations to call one away from the kitchen. It is an opportunity to curl up on the couch with a cup of tea and savor a book between kneadings, to make a pot of soup to masquerade as main course. Because of course, the real main course is the bread, which only needs the soup to reinforce its purpose: nourishment of the most fundamental part of one’s humanity.

For a long while now, it has seemed that everywhere I turn – the Dining section of the New York Times, the latest cookbooks, popular food blogs – Jim Lahey‘s no-knead bread pops up. A bread that requires no kneading seemed nothing more than dubious to me, a cop-out, a departure from the art of bread-making which is so beautifully hands-on and so requiring of both patience and attention. Why bother?

But the reality of life with a six-month-old (and a reminding link on some blog post back to Mark Bittman’s New York Times article) caused me to re-think my objections. My Saturdays don’t afford much time for bread-making at this point. Feeding times or unexpected changes in my darling but unpredictable little girl’s schedule could mean over-raised dough or even burnt bread, and the need to start over.

So I finally decided to try the no-knead method. I mixed flour, salt, yeast, and water in a bowl, covered it tightly with plastic wrap, and walked away. For about 18 hours, maybe a little more. The next morning, I simply gave it a couple of folds, shaped it into a ball, covered it with a towel, and left it for yet another two hours. I preheated a pot in the oven, placed the dough in the scalding pot, and put it back in the oven for half an hour. And this – this – is what that simple process birthed, this gorgeous thing:

I was – am still – in awe. The rustic boule shape, the golden crests and waves of the crust (created by the seam where the dough came together), the artisanal pattern of the flour baked onto its exterior, the moist and airy crumb, the delectable aroma were too good to be true. This truly is magical bread, both by way of its effortlessness and its quality. It is worthy of accompanying any meal, or of being eaten on its own, toasted with some butter and jam, for breakfast. I’ve been eating it for lunch with this soup all week.
Jim Lahey’s No-knead Bread

3 cups flour (all-purpose, bread flour, or a mixture of whole grain and bread flour. I used 1 cup of white whole wheat flour and 2 cups bread flour)
1/4 teaspoon yeast
1-1/4 teaspoons salt
1-5/8 cups water (room temperature)
In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, yeast, and salt. Stir in the water, mixing until the dough takes on a rough, clumpy appearance and the loose flour has been incorporated as much as possible. It should look something like this:
Cover tightly with plastic wrap and let the dough rest for 12-20 hours (seriously, the time is that flexible).
When you are ready, turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. Gently fold it a couple of times until it is a smooth mass. Cover with the plastic wrap and let rest 15 minutes.
Working quickly and with as few moves as possible, shape the dough into a ball. Use your hands to coat it lightly with flour. Place seam side down on a cotton towel, and cover lightly with another cotton towel. Let rise for two hours. It should nearly double in size.
Ninety minutes into the rising time, preheat the oven to 450ΒΊ. Place a lidded oven safe casserole (preferably cast iron or enameled cast iron) into the oven to get hot.
When the two hours is up, place the dough seam side up into the preheated casserole, cover with the lid, and bake 30 minutes. Remove the lid. If the bread is golden brown and the crust is firm, the bread is done. If not, continue to bake, checking the bread at five-minute intervals, until it’s done.
Remove the bread from the pan and place on a cooling rack, covered with a cotton towel.

For the printable version, click here.

Happy baking!

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4 Comments

  1. I think I will try it this weekend. I haven’t made bread in forever and a traditional recipe with a 3 month old? Forget it. This might be the ticket πŸ™‚

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