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Italian wheat raisin walnut bread

zorgclyde's picture
zorgclyde

Italian wheat raisin walnut bread

This is my first bread from Beth Hensperger's book Bread Bible: 300 favorite recipes. What I liked when I browsed the book was that every recipe had hand mix instructions, and they seem well-thoughtout and reliable. This was going to be my first time making wheat bread. I had a few tries with white bread, but nothing too serious.

The bread that caught my eye was the Italian whole wheat raisin walnut bread. I found that I have become increasingly drawn to the nuttiness of whole wheat and multi-grain breads. When made properly, they have a delightful chewiness and sweet, concentrated flavor that sets it apart from white breads. The raisin and walnut combination sounded perfect to me.

The process for this bread was straight forward. The recipe calls for poofing the yeast, kneading and giving the dough two rises. Because I decided to start this recipe at 11pm at night, I decided to not wait until 5 am to finish the kneading in one setting. Instead, after the first raise I put the dough in the back porch, which I rated at about 20F at night, and will continue the second stage when I return from work the next day. The second day after I kneaded the dough I decided once again to sleep first and wait until third day to bake the bread. I crossed my fingers and hoped the bread turned out ok and not into a pungent fermented sourdough.

I finally got around to baking the third day. Mostly because it was the infamous blizzard and I didn't have anywhere else to go. Given that I had let the dough sit for two days without adjusting the yeast called for in the original recipe, I was expecting something that tasted like breaded sourkraut.

Here is the picture of the bread, sliced:

Italian raisin walnut bread

I was pleasantly surprised when I saw how beautiful the bread looked when it came out. The crust was even and chewy. The interior was moist and dense. It was obvious that the bread was slightly overly fermented as the bread had a sour tang and the air pockets reminds me of the yogurt bread. However, it was still one of the bread I ever tasted. The balance between the sweet raisins and crunchy walnut set in whole wheat bread was just perfect. I circumvented the sour problem by topping the bread with honey. The only other issue that I noted, besides the slight over-fermentation, was that I had to add a lot of flour (+ 1/2-1 cup) during kneading to prevent the dough from sticking too much. This threw off the sugar and salt balance slightly, and the bread did feel like it needed a bit more salt and sugar. Next time I may add a little less water to start with, and tried to follow the time instructed!

 

Amy

http://fromtarotopotato.blogspot.com/