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Submitted by crumbbum on April 5, 2005 - 9:27pm Honey-Whole Wheat Breadooooo, look! I figured out how to do thumbnails that link to the photobucket fullsize images! click the pictures. Honey-Whole Wheat Bread 2 cups whole wheat bread flour mix these dry ingredients together. heat to 120F: alternately, use 1 cup warm water and add 1/3 cup powdered milk to the dry ingredients. add the liquids to your dry flour/yeast mixture and blend until evenly incorporated. work 2 cups white bread flour, a cup at a time, into the dough. it should begin to hold together after this. if you're using a mixer, you can continue with that process, or turn the dough out on a floured surface and knead until the flour is incorporated and you have a smooth ball of dough. it will be slightly tacky, but shouldn't stick to the surface or your hands. grease a bowl, plop the dough ball into it, and turn it so it gets 'buttered all over', cover it with a kitchen towel, and set it to rise until doubled in bulk. depending on your ambient temperature, it could take 1-3 hours. when it's doubled, punch it down in the bowl, and turn it out onto a floured work surface. knead it a few minutes to work out the bubbles, add a little flour if it sticks to your hands, but this dough probably won't need it. flatten it out into a rectanglish-shape with your hands or a rolling pin, and roll it up tightly as you can, pinching the closing seams together, tucking the ends in if need be, and set to rise (covered) in a greased loaf pan. the second rise goes much faster, again, depending on ambient temperature, 30-60 minutes is typical. preheat your oven to 375F, and bake for 10 minutes, then reduce to 350F for an additional 30 minutes. keep watch on it, I think my oven runs about 25 degrees hot. if everything goes well, it should just roll out of the loaf pan when tipped on its side. cool it on a rack, resting on its bottom, and the rack will leave cutting guides for you. Notes
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I've tried this a couple of
I've tried this a couple of times (using the water and milk powder technique) and it seems really dry. After even 1/2 cup of the white flour it's getting too dry to knead. I don't know what I'm doing wrong :o/ The last one turned out really dense; we'll see how the one currently rising goes.