no knead bread

baking

Bread Winner: The Easiest Loaf You'll Ever Bake

If bread is the staff of life, then this cook has been wobbling on shaky legs for much of her culinary career.

If bread is the staff of life, then this cook has been wobbling on shaky legs for much of her culinary career. What is it about baking bread that's so daunting? I suppose I've rationalized my bread-baking evasion by telling myself it takes too long and my spaghetti-noodle arms can't knead well enough. But I recognize those are silly excuses, so this week I set about tackling the easiest bread recipe I could find.

About five years ago, New York Times journalist Mark Bittman introduced the baking-phobic world to Jim Lahey's no-knead bread recipe and — in typical Bittman fashion — wowed us again by reducing the 24-hour process to a mere five hours. Camilla valiantly (and very successfully, I might add) took a stab at the original, but for those of us who can't plan further ahead than tonight's dinner, this may be the closest we'll come to a lovingly leavened, rustic loaf.

Bittman's recipe calls for a wet dough with plenty of yeast and leverages that high water content to steam the dough in a heavy lidded pot before browning the loaf. This process results in that crisp, crackly crust and fluffy, chewy interior that you crave in a rustic loaf, and all this without a single kneading stroke. Someday I'll pursue the weight training that will get my arms in bread-kneading shape. But until then, I thank Mr. Bittman for fostering my lazy side. For the recipe, keep reading.

recipes

Bread Winner: This No-Knead Bread Will Rock Your World

Good things come to those who wait.


Good things come to those who wait. And by "good things" I mean a loaf of bread so delicious, you may find yourself daydreaming about it long after it's been gobbled up. The key ingredients for bread-making are patience, precision, a little bit of luck, and, in most cases, a strong arm for working the dough. But if that last bit turns you off, then you've come to the right place.


Jim Lahey's recipe for no-knead bread has made the rounds in the food blogging world, but I'd been somewhat intimidated by it. In an effort to try new things and satisfy a crazy craving for homemade bread, I set about tackling it. For 18-plus hours, I nervously waited for my dough to rise and bubble, convinced the whole time that I would screw it up.

The next day, to my surprise, I woke up to a bowl of sticky, bubbly dough that perfectly fit the description in the recipe. How thrilling! The next few steps required a delicate touch, a lot of flour, and more waiting.

For more, plus this famous bread recipe, keep reading.

Link Time

Yummy Links: From Grant Achatz to Savory Cabbage

  • Grant Achatz is sick of food bloggers snapping photos at his restaurant.

  • Grant Achatz is sick of food bloggers snapping photos at his restaurant. — Eater
  • Budget-friendly ideas for your Easter kids' table. — Hostess With the Mostess
  • Scientists have developed a cheese that tastes like bubble gum. — Eat Me Daily
  • This Passover, make your own gefilte fish. — Chow
  • Confessions of a picky eater. — The Atlantic
  • Five kitchen tools that are great multitaskers. — The Epi-Log
  • Learn how to make no-knead bread. — Serious Eats
  • Bartenders discuss whether vodka deserves their hate. — Grub Street SF
  • Everything you need to know about savoy cabbage. — Cooking With Amy
baking

Have You Ever Made Bread?

Have You Ever Made Bread?