PETE’S WHOLE WHEAT BREAD
Source: “PeteFL” Cooking.com Forum
2 cups whole wheat flour, sifted
4 to 5 cups bread flour, sifted
2 Tbs granulated sugar
1½ tsp salt
1 Tbs yeast (a rounded Tablespoon)
2 ounces honey
1 2/3 cups water
2/3 cup milk
½ stick unsalted butter
1. In a large mixer bowl, whisk together flours, sugar, salt and yeast.
2. In a medium bowl, combine honey, milk, water and butter, and heat to 105 degrees in the microwave.
3. Stir liquids to melt the butter and add, all at once, to the dry ingredients in the mixer bowl.
4. With the dough hook installed on your stand mixer, mix dough. Add more flour by the Tablespoon, as needed, until the dough comes together and clears the bowl. Mix for 5 minutes with the dough hook and remove to counter surface.
5. Knead by hand until no longer sticky, adding flour as necessary.
6. Cover bowl with plastic wrap, let rise in a warm place for 30 minutes. Remove from bowl and divide dough in half. Make each half into a 10 x 12 rectangle and roll each up like a cigar. Pinch the seams. Roll on the counter top to make a uniform log and place in an oiled breadpan seam-side up. Shake the roll to oil the bottom, turn the pan over, catch the dough and reinsert it into the pan, seam-side-down.
7. Return to warm place and let rise an additional 30 minutes or until at least 1 inch above the pan top. Bake in a preheated 400°F. oven for 25 minutes. Remove from pans and cool on rack.
Yield: 2 loaves
Cooking Tips
*To create a nice, warm place for your loaves to rise, turn on oven for 60 seconds and then turn it off. Turn the oven light on too. The temperature should be just about right for your loaves to rise nicely.
*If you do not plan to consume both loaves right away, they freeze beautifully. Wrap loaf with foil as soon as it comes out of the oven- just foil, nothing else- the wrapping-while-hot trick retains the moisture so when thawed it’s very fresh tasting.
Baking bread is something that I would like to master, but realize realistically that this will take years. My first attempt at sandwich bread seemed to take all afternoon, but Pete's Whole Wheat Sandwich Bread was worth the wait. It seemed to take forever to rise for the second time, but finally it reached past the edge of the pan. Unfortunately, it deflated a bit when I took it out of the warm oven to heat it to 400 degrees. I blame this on the rainy day and the cold temperature of my house. Although the loaves were not as tall as I would have liked, the texture of the bread was light and airy. Terry and Jon ate an entire loaf with butter when they returned home from the UCLA basketball game. It's a good thing that Pete's Whole Wheat Sandwich Bread recipe makes two loaves! We have been enjoying the second loaf, making turkey and ham sandwiches. I will make this recipe again as soon as we run out of this last loaf.
-Heather
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