Oat Bread – New Recipe Posted

This is the first recipe in the third collection in the recipe subsection of my personal website: Oat Bread. Click through for the same recipe as below with a photo illustration.

[Update 2006-10-30: a high-resolution version of the photo illustration for my oat bread recipe is available from my teensy portfolio at iStockPhoto.]

A new ebook containing all ten recipes from the second collection will be available shortly.

sponge ingredients:
1/2 C leftover mashed potatoes, cold
1 C 2% milk, scalded
1/4 C unbleached flour
1/2 C old-fashioned rolled oats
   (not instant or quick)
2-1/4 tsp active dry yeast

remaining loaf ingredients:
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 C corn oil
2 C unbleached flour

flour for kneading

Non-stick cooking spray

2% milk

old-fashioned rolled oats

1. Combine sponge ingredients in large mixing bowl. Stir briskly to mix thoroughly. Cover with damp cloth and place in warm location to proof. (Sponge is proofed when the surface looks curdled.)

2. Add salt & corn oil to sponge; stir briskly with wooden spoon. Add flour to sponge in half-cup increments, stirring to mix after each. Dough should form a ball. (You may need a bit more or a bit less than the two cups, depending on local weather conditions such as humidity.)

3. Turn dough onto well-floured board and knead until smooth, about ten minutes. Add flour as needed to prevent sticking. (“Smooth” is not absolute. This dough is roughly textured and will never get as smooth as a plain wheat-bread dough.)

4. Form dough into ball, place in mixing bowl sprayed with non-stick cooking spray, cover with damp cloth and let rise until doubled.

5. Punch down risen dough, turn out onto floured board, and form into loaf. Place in baking dish, cover with damp cloth, set in warm place and let rise for 20 to 30 minutes.

6. Just before baking, score the top of the loaf, brush lightly with 2% milk, and sprinkle with uncooked rolled oats. Bake at 350°F for 30 to 40 minutes, until browned. Loaf is done if it sounds hollow when pinged with a finger or gently knocked.

7. Turn loaf out of baking dish onto cooling rack. Allow to cool for 5 minutes before trying to slice.

Makes one good-sized rounded loaf.

Note 1: I scald milk for a single loaf of bread by microwaving on high using the “beverage” setting at 1 cup.

Note 2: the second rising is not meant to allow the loaf to reach its full height. It should “pop” in the hot oven when the gas created by the yeast in the second rising expands as it heats.

I will submit this to the Carnival of the Recipes.

The first collection of recipes is available as a free downloadable ebook from either the recipe section or the ebook section of my personal website.

“One from the heart, one for the Gulf Coast.”

You are invited to visit the CoHR, Christmas shopping edition. “CoHR” is the Carnival of Hurricane Relief, a grassroots online effort to maintain awareness of the Gulf Coast as its people work towards recovery from the 2005 hurricane season.

If you are an individual, small business or non-profit directly and adversely affected by the 2005 hurricane season, you may request a listing free.

If you are shopping for Christmas, you are encouraged to find one item from your Christmas list from among the items and services available from Gulf Coast individuals, small businesses and non-profits.

“One from the heart, one for the Gulf Coast.”

Do you find news here worth reading? Do you agree (or disagree) with my slant on that news? Buy me a cup of coffee! My recipe for a daily cup: 8 ounces of 2% milk, 2 shots of espresso, 4 shakes of ground cinnamon, 2 teaspoons chocolate syrup, 1 teaspoon vanilla extract and a topping of light whipped cream. Drop a tip in my jar — whatever amount you want, whatever amount you think I've earned.

Click an icon to share this post through a social bookmarking site:
  • del.icio.us
  • digg
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • TailRank
  • Technorati
  • YahooMyWeb

One Response to “Oat Bread – New Recipe Posted”

  1. Carnival of the Recipes Halloween Edition…

    Welcome to the Halloween Edition of the Carnival of the Recipes, otherwise known as CotR #115. With Halloween just around the corner, we have some really scrummy (that’s scrumptious AND yummy, in case you’re wondering) recipes for you to try…

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

BlogBurst Add to Technorati Favorites