The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

No Oven challenge - take 2 (success!)

Lazy Loafer's picture
Lazy Loafer

No Oven challenge - take 2 (success!)

Christmas Eve, I tried baking a loaf in the wood stove again, having learned a lot from Take 1. Same basic set up, with a few key changes. One, I waited until the coals had died down a bit more than the first try. Two, I used a 6-inch Fat Daddios cake pan inside the cast iron pot, and proofed the loaf in this as a bread pan.

This worked well to provide a bit of insulation between the hot iron pot and the loaf, and also made it easier to handle the dough (a simple 123 sourdough with about 75 grams of stone-ground whole wheat flour). I made a sling of parchment to lower the pan into the pot, then removed the parchment so it wouldn't incinerate like last time.

I put the pot in the stove and baked it for 20 minutes with the lid on. I then used a barbecue fork to carefully lift off the lid - the loaf looked very good, almost done! I put the thermometer probe into the loaf, closed the door and watched it like a hawk. This picture is a bit fuzzy as the camera focused on the ash on the stove door instead of the pot (should have cleaned the door glass first).

The temperature went up more quickly than I thought it would, and reached 200F in about 8 minutes. I'm glad I was watching it so closely this time!

When I turned it out of the pan, it looked fabulous, though the side closest to the back of the wood stove was a little dark.

The bottom crust was perfect though, so the pan-in-a-pot theory seemed to work well.

The crumb was excellent - moist and chewy with good oven spring. It was so good, we had it for lunch on Christmas Day!

It's so nice to know we can have good bread even if the power goes off. As long as it's in the winter. Next No Oven try - the barbecue!

Comments

leslieruf's picture
leslieruf

and such a success!  I bet it was tasty and it makes it extra special for Christmas day!  

Happy baking Lazy Loafer!

Leslie

cgmeyer2's picture
cgmeyer2

what a beautiful loaf of bread Lazy Loafer

Claudia

Isand66's picture
Isand66

Looks great!  Nice job.

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

wintertime and the stove on to heat the house, I would think this would be the preferred way to bake bread around your homestead!  Well one 

Happy baking and Merry Christmas 

nmygarden's picture
nmygarden

Well done! Your plan just needed a little calibration. And a bit of pacing, I suspect. Now you have a tried and true method at your disposal. Enjoy every slice (and the crust) of this fine loaf!

Happy Holidays!

Cathy

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

I am totally impressed with how you tweaked your technique to get amazing bread! Well done!

PalwithnoovenP's picture
PalwithnoovenP

The spring, crust, and the crumb are so great. A little change but a great impact on the final result! You will be a legend to your great great great grandchildren; that, their ancestor used to bake some great bread in the wood stove during winter! :)

Ru007's picture
Ru007

Great job.

I'm so glad the second try worked out so well.

Love that crumb.

Happy baking 

Ru

Lazy Loafer's picture
Lazy Loafer

I really appreciate your comments and support; it's so nice to have other bread geeks who think this is cool! :)

Funny thing - Pal's comment about being a legend to my descendants. When I was a little girl I learned to bake bread from my grandmother who baked in a sawdust- and coal-fired stove. Mind you, that was a kitchen range with an oven separate from the burner box, but still, it's funny how difficult it is for us to give up all our modern toys and learn to bake the 'old' way which should be simpler! Flour, water, salt and fire!

Wendy

Lechem's picture
Lechem (not verified)

Looks better then my oven bread. 

That is one fine looking loaf. 

Lovely!

joc1954's picture
joc1954

You found the optimal temperature for your bake, congratulations!

Well done and Merry Christmas!

Joze

 

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

:)  Happy  New Year!