
Bread baking has always intimidated me – the exact measuring, the kneading, the rising (I am terrible at guessing when a blob of dough has doubled in size), all the steps where something can go wrong, not to mention the fact that it takes all day and once you start the process you’re locked in for several hours. When you add in all the trial and error adjustments that have to be made when baking at high altitude, the potential for failure has always been too high for me to consider making bread from scratch except on the rarest of occasions. A while back I bought a bread machine, and while I love the convenience of it, I don’t love the weird-shaped loaves with all that hard crust, or the gluey, steamed texture of the crumb. So I mostly use the dough cycle and then shape the loaves or rolls myself. It takes away the guesswork on rising, and the work of kneading, but it still takes half the day. So, I was over the moon when I found this book:

Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day by Jeff Hertzberg and Zoe Francois. It seemed too good to be true, but it really works, and it is so easy! In a nutshell, you mix together all your dough ingredients, let it sit at room temperature for two hours, and then stick it in the fridge. When you want to bake some bread, you grab a hunk of dough from the refrigerated blob, do a minimal amount of shaping, let it rise, and then bake it. It takes about ten minutes to measure out and mix the ingredients for the blob, and then the process on baking day from start to finish takes about an hour and fifteen minutes (five minutes to grab a hunk of dough and shape it, 40 minutes to rise, and 30 minutes to bake) – a reasonable amount of time for homemade bread even on a week night after work.

I used my stand mixer with the dough hook attachment. I poured 3 cups of warm water into the bowl, and then stirred in 1 1/2 Tablespoons of granulated yeast (from the little jar, but you could use the kind in packets if you prefer) and 1 1/2 Tablespoons of coarse salt. I added 6 1/2 cups of unbleached all-purpose flour (next time I’ll substitute whole wheat for part of it), and turned on the machine. Once the dough was combined I put it into a large plastic container, set it in a warm spot with the lid sitting on top (but not sealed), and waited two hours. You wouldn’t have to wait till the weekend to do this – it could be done while you are busy with other things on any day of the week. Breaking up the time investment and then making bread several times with one batch of dough is what makes this method actually feasible for me.

It rose quite nicely, and when the two hours were up I put it in the fridge (again, with the lid on, but not all the way sealed, to let the dough breathe). The dough will keep for about two weeks in the refrigerator, which gives you a lot of flexibility on when to use it. When I wanted some fresh bread, I pulled off a chunk (about a pound), shaped it, and let it rise for forty minutes while I preheated the oven to 450. I made slash marks on the surface of the dough (this makes it puff up more during baking) and put it into the preheated oven for 30 minutes. I baked it on one of those pizza stones, which I had put in the oven to preheat.
Once you have a blob of bread dough in your refrigerator, ready to go, you will find that there are a hundred different things you can do with it. You can make a large loaf, or smaller individual sized ones, or even crusty rolls. You can make pizza or calzones. I have even made a breakfast dish of scrambled eggs (undercook them so they don’t turn rubbery in the oven) and cheese tucked into thinly rolled bread dough and baked till golden brown. A couple of nights ago I made a garlicky bubble bread with parmesan cheese sprinkled on top. Cheese-stuffed bread sticks, focaccia, ciabatta, the list of possibilities goes on and on.




























