You might be wondering why am I listing all these unpronounceable words.
Well, if you are eating store bought breads, and enjoying them then most probably you do enjoy eating all those long sounding ingredients I just mentioned.
And not that I want to scare you or anything (really, I don’t) but calcium peroxide (something common in lots of bread brands out there especially the white flour kinds) is a chemical that can also be used as a fertilizer. Tasty, right?
When we make bread at home, usually our list of ingredients is flour, water, yeast, a little salt and some sugar or honey and maybe nuts. But count the ingredients on the label of your beloved store bought “healthy” bread – sometimes the count can go up to 40!
Also, just because it says “whole wheat” doesn’t mean it is, and the variety you maybe purchasing at the grocery store may be nothing more than white bread in disguise laden with nasty chemicals and artificial ingredients. Yummy.
That’s why I prefer baking bread at home. Or for that matter even other things at home from scratch, if I can. There is so much more control in what goes in. Of course, its not possible always. And I do buy bread from the store sometimes, though I make sure I read the ingredient list at the back and NOT just the what the package of bread says on the front. If I know and recognize all the ingredients, then I’ll buy it, else its back to the shelf.
But, if I can, I try to make my own bread at home.
Till recently, my homemade whole wheat bread was not a 100% whole wheat bread. I was always afraid of making it 100%, scared it would be too tough. So I stuck to my country seed bread (which I love by the way!)
Now, if you remember (I bet you don’t unless you are Marilu Henner), that I challenged myself to not buy anymore cookbooks till I don’t make at least three recipes from each of the cookbooks I already have.
I finally decided to take myself on that challenge and start a series Cooking with the Books. I will pick up a cookbook from my collection each month, and cook at least three recipes from it. This is an attempt to justify the title of a cookbook hoarder V has given me. I really don’t blame him, but all the cookbooks sound and look so nice and they just call out to me to buy them. I really can’t help myself.
And then I buy the book, and look at it. Admire the recipes and the stories. Bookmark the ones I would like to try. But actually end up making something that I saw on someone else’s blog (c’mon there are such amazing recipes out there), or if not that then something from the heart (isn’t that what cooking really about?). And that cookbook that I bought stays in the bookshelf with all the recipes bookmarked, biting the dust.
To be fair (to me), I do cook from these cookbooks sometimes, but not as often as I should. Hopefully this series will take care of it.
The first cookbook in the series is The King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion.
I was flipping through it the other day and found this whole wheat bread recipe. I used it the first time for the burger buns I made for my Soy and Chickpea Burgers. And I was in love.
I made it again few days back and love that all the things that I was scared for in my homemade whole wheat bread- being dense, dry and tasteless, this bread is none of that! Instead it is delightfully nutty, and moist. The molasses adds a faint sweetness to the dough, besides giving the bread a lovely hue.
It made for a great sandwich bread for my edamame cutlets (recipe soon) and were an excellent addition to our Sunday brunch!
Adapted from The King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion.
Makes one loaf, or 7 burger buns
Ingredients
Directions
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