But for a couple of years now I've been baking up many, many variations on a basic loaf of white bread. The whole family's in on the quest. We want a loaf that's soft...but not too soft. Sliceable...but not too dense. It should hold up to sandwiches both cold and hot. I should be able to toast it. While I've found some loaves that come close to what we're looking for. THIS particular recipe is the closest.
It's soft, yet sliceable. It holds up to toasting...and sandwich fillings. And it doesn't taste like airy cardboard. Always a bonus. It's the perfect vehicle.
Basic White Bread
by
Prep Time: 1½ hours
Cook Time: 30 minutes
Keywords: bake bread
Ingredients (2 loaves)
- 5 c. (~680 g) all-purpose or bread flour
- 3 Tbs. sugar
- 2 tsp. salt
- 1 pkg (2¼ tsp.) instant dry yeast
- ½ c. dry milk powder
- 2 c. hot water (120°-130°F)
- 3 Tbs. vegetable shortening, room temp
Instructions
Combine all ingredients in your stand mixer fitted with the dough hook and mix for ~3 minutes on low to combine. Turn it up to medium speed and knead for ~5 minutes. Adjust hydration (w/ more water or more flour), if needed.
Turn dough out onto a lightly floured work surface and finishing kneading until you have a lovely soft dough. Form into a ball and place in a lightly oiled bowl. Cover with plastic wrap or a clean kitchen towel and let rise for about an hour.
Punch down dough and divide into two equal pieces.
Shape each into a loaf by pushing into a flattish oval and folding it in half or rolling it. Tuck nicely into greased loaf pans, seam sides down, and cover. Let rise another 45 minutes.
Preheat oven to 400°F during last 15 minutes of rise time.
Bake for 10 minutes and then reduce temperature of oven to 350°F and bake for another 20 minutes or so, turning loaves halfway through to allow for even coloring. The internal temperature should register 200°F and you should get a hollow sound when you knock on the bottoms. Remove from pans and let cool on racks.
*adapted from Bernard Clayton's New Complete Book of Bread via Living in the Kitchen with Puppies
*adapted from Bernard Clayton's New Complete Book of Bread via Living in the Kitchen with Puppies
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Yeastspotting
It is a Beauty! don't you love to research so you can find that Best recipe?
ReplyDeleteRita
This bread look amazing, really love it heather!
ReplyDeleteThat is one beautiful loaf of bread!
ReplyDeleteLooks great a great white loaf. Will have to give it a go. Vegetable shortening on shopping list? Tick
ReplyDeleteUn pan de 10, te ha quedado una miga de lujo.
ReplyDeleteSAludos
Heather - this may be a simple/basic white bread recipe, but your loaf is perfectly made! Absolutely PERFECT
ReplyDeleteThat does look like a nice sandwich loaf.
ReplyDeleteI does look like a perfect loaf of bread. I'll have to try this one too.
ReplyDeleteI'm still making your Cuban bread about every other week...we love it.
Oh, Heather! This is exactly the kind of bread my Mr. Rosemary would marry me all over again for. I must try it. (And I must not fail!)
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking this might be THE ultimate PB+J bread!
ReplyDeleteLooks perfect! I will be trying this next time I look for the perfect basic recipe. There always seems to be one thing off, but this looks great.
ReplyDeleteThat doesn't look like a basic loaf to me -- totally legit!!!
ReplyDeleteThis is the same basic recipe I've used for decades, except I double the amount of yeast that you call for. It really is a wonderful bread. Since there is just the 2 of us these days, I make a full recipe, then slice it and freeze it. The slices pop apart easily (while frozen) and take just a few minutes to thaw (or they go right in the toaster while frozen). GREAT photos.
ReplyDeleteWow! Such an easy recipe that produces such perfect bread! Bookmarked, baby! I so admire your bread baking skills! Fantastic!
ReplyDeleteMaybe I could feel better about the abundance of sandwiches I eat if only I made the bread myself! Hah...
ReplyDeleteHi Heather,
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful loaf of Bread, the texture is amazing. I can almost smell this bread coming out of the oven. The next time I make bread I will be trying this recipe. Thank you so much for sharing with Full Plate Thursday and hope you come back real soon!
Miz Helen
This sounds wonderful. I've been thinking about baking my own bread. The husband prefers white, but I don't like the ingredients on white store-bought bread.
ReplyDeleteThanks for linking up to Friday Food at Momtrends.com!