Best Yet, Easiest Yet, Crusty Italian Bread
Look at that gorgeous crust. The first night when I served this, the crust was crispy, chewy on the outside, soft and luxurious on the inside. I wrapped the remaining loaf in aluminium foil the the crust softened, but the inside was still delicious and wonderfully soft on the inside. I can't wait to try this recipe as hard rolls to serve with soup or to use it as a pizza crust. I think it will be outstanding!
Nonna's Crusty Bread
(www.isicilian.bonrepublic.com)
4 cups, all-purpose, unbleached flour (I used King Arthur's flour)
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon yeast
2 cups warm water
Oven-proof baking dish or casserole containing 2-3 cups of water (to be used while baking the bread)
Combine the dry ingredients for the bread in a large bowl. Add the 2 cups of warm water and stir to combine and forms a sticky mass.
Cover the bowl and allow the bread ingredients to rise for about 4 hours on your counter. The surface of the dough will have bubbles about 1/4 inch in diameter.
Preheat your oven to 500*F. Put your bakeware with the 2-3 cups of hot water in the oven. Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and set aside.
Dump your dough out onto a well-floured surface, covering the outside surface with flour as the dough is wet and sticky. Handling the dough as little as possible (you're trying not to burst the bubbles) , shape your dough into your desired shape.
Bake in your preheated 500*F oven for 60 minutes, or depending on your oven, more or less time. For me, I found that 45 minutes was ample, but I also note that the ISicilian's bread is much darker than mine. I chickened out at 45 minutes, fearing that my bread would burn to a crisp.
For more hints about using this dough, I suggest you visit the post for Nonna's Crusty Bread. She has suggestions for keeping the dough in your refrigerator and for reheating the bread.
This crusty Italian loaf has to be the easiest, crustiest, and one of the tastiest loaves I have ever made. It is now one of my go-to loaf breads. And if that's not enough, there's no kneading. Just stir the ingredients together, wait four hours for the dough to rise on your countertop, shape into a rough loaf, baguettes, rolls or even pizza, and bake.
Nonna's Crusty Bread
(www.isicilian.bonrepublic.com)
4 cups, all-purpose, unbleached flour (I used King Arthur's flour)
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon yeast
2 cups warm water
Oven-proof baking dish or casserole containing 2-3 cups of water (to be used while baking the bread)
Combine the dry ingredients for the bread in a large bowl. Add the 2 cups of warm water and stir to combine and forms a sticky mass.
Cover the bowl and allow the bread ingredients to rise for about 4 hours on your counter. The surface of the dough will have bubbles about 1/4 inch in diameter.
Preheat your oven to 500*F. Put your bakeware with the 2-3 cups of hot water in the oven. Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and set aside.
Dump your dough out onto a well-floured surface, covering the outside surface with flour as the dough is wet and sticky. Handling the dough as little as possible (you're trying not to burst the bubbles) , shape your dough into your desired shape.
Bake in your preheated 500*F oven for 60 minutes, or depending on your oven, more or less time. For me, I found that 45 minutes was ample, but I also note that the ISicilian's bread is much darker than mine. I chickened out at 45 minutes, fearing that my bread would burn to a crisp.
For more hints about using this dough, I suggest you visit the post for Nonna's Crusty Bread. She has suggestions for keeping the dough in your refrigerator and for reheating the bread.
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