Recipe Collection from Household Management

Ari's Bread Machine Notes & Basic Bread Recip Recipe

Home
Recipe Index
Breadmaker Recipes


To make the most of this Ari's Bread Machine Notes & Basic Bread Recip recipe, always use the finest quality ingredients you can buy.



This Ari's Bread Machine Notes & Basic Bread Recip recipe is located in the Breadmaker recipes section.

 

There are over 80,000 recipes in our collection. Please use the menu at the bottom of this column to choose a different recipe section.





 


Ari's Bread Machine Notes & Basic Bread Recip Recipe







Ari's Bread Machine Notes & Basic Bread Recip Ingredients:

1 Text Reference

 

Ari's Bread Machine Notes & Basic Bread Recip Preparation:

Here are my favorite tips and basic bread recipe:

1. Don't by those tiny packets of active-dry yeast. Get it in bulk
in a health-food store. They charge at least 10x more for those tiny
packets -- you're paying almost entirely for the packaging. (Store
yeast in the fridge.) 1 packet = 1 TB.

2. Wheat gluten is very useful in helping the dough rise. I add
around 1 TB per cup of non-bread flour ingredients.

3. Oil is NOT necessary and actually detracts from the taste. All you
really need for good bread is flour, salt, yeast, and water.
Everything else is optional.

4. The best breads are simply a mix of flours (whole wheat, rye, oats,
corn, buckwheat, rice, or whatever you like). Remember thought that
wheat flours are necessary for the gluten content, unless you add
gluten separately. Adding fruits and herbs and flavored liquids are
interesting but I prefer "pure" breads. I prefer graham flour over
regular whole wheat.

5. Each machine is different and my recipes are usually not exact --
if the dough looks sticky and isn't forming a ball then it's too wet:
add more flour; if it looks dry (ball doesn't have a relatively
smooth surface, for example) add more liquid a tablespoon or two at a
time.

OK, so with all that idealism taken care of here's my basic bread
recipe:

1 TB active dry yeast
1 1/2 cup bread flour 1 1/2 cup graham (whole wheat) flour 1/2
cup rye flour (use the coarse grind, preferably) 2 TB wheat gluten
(sometime called vital wheat gluten)
1 tsp salt 1 TB honey
1 2/3 cup water

Add ingredients in order suggested by your bread machine manual.

This is intended for a 3 cup bread maker, if your machine is smaller
just scale it accordingly. Similarly, your bread maker may suggest
using less than 1 TB yeast.

For a particularly festive bread try adding 1 TB basil 1 TB tarragon
1 tsp rosemary chopped garlic...

Posted by Ari Kornfeld <ari@perspective.com> to the Fatfree Digest
[Volume 15 Issue 23] Feb. 23, 1995.

Individual recipes copyrighted by originator. FATFREE Recipe
collections copyrighted by Michelle Dick 1995. Formatted by Sue Smith,
SueSmith9@aol.com using MMCONV. Archived through kindness of Karen
Mintzias, km@salata.com.

1.80á




"A man accustomed to American food and American domestic cookery would not starve to death suddenly in Europe, but I think he would gradually waste away, and eventually die."
'A Tramp Abroad', Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens) (1835-1910)



“This root [the potato], no matter how much you prepare it, is tasteless and floury. It cannot pass for an agreeable food, but it supplies a food sufficiently abundant and sufficiently healthy for men who ask only to sustain themselves. The potato is criticised with reason for being windy, but what matters windiness for the vigorous organisims of peasants and labourers?”
Denis Diderot (1713-1784) L'Encyclopedie (1751-1772)





If you liked this Ari's Bread Machine Notes & Basic Bread Recip recipe, you may like to browse the following sites:

Recipe Databases at Looksmart
Recipe Database collections at Looksmart

Important Note: This Ari's Bread Machine Notes & Basic Bread Recip recipe was either located in the public domain or contributed by one of our site visitors. Any nutritional information presented has not been idependantly verified. If you have specific dietary requirements please use your own judgement in deciding which recipes are suitable for your particular diet.