VERY PLAIN DIRECTIONS TO A QUITE INEXPERIENCED LEARNER FOR MAKING BREAD

The English bread-book · Eliza Acton · 1857
Source
The English bread-book
Yield
2.0 loaves
Status
success · extracted 12 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (6)
For making the sponge (leaven)
For making the dough
For preparing baking pans
Instructions (32)
Setting a sponge
  1. Put the flour into a large earthenware bowl or deep pan.
  2. Hollow out the middle of the flour with a strong metal or wooden spoon, but do not clear it entirely away from the bottom of the pan.
  3. Put the brewer's yeast (solidified with cold water and settled for a day and night) or fresh German yeast into a large basin.
  4. Mix the yeast with three quarters of a pint, or a whole pint, of just warm milk and water, or water only, until it is as smooth as cream. Add liquid by spoonfuls at the beginning and stir well to mix before adding the remainder to avoid lumps.
  5. Pour the yeast mixture into the hole in the middle of the flour.
  6. Stir in enough flour from the sides to make a thick batter with no lumps. Beat out any lumps with the spoon.
  7. Strew plenty of flour on top of the batter.
  8. Cover the bowl with a thick clean cloth.
  9. Set it in a warm place, raised from the floor and protected from draughts, but not too close to a large fire.
  10. After about an hour, check if the yeast has risen and broken through the flour, and if bubbles appear. This indicates it is ready to be made into dough.
Making the dough
  1. Place the pan on a strong chair, dresser, or table.
  2. Pour about half a pint of warm milk or water into the sponge (adjusting quantity as needed, total of 1.25 pints for the quartern of bread). Be careful not to make the dough too moist.
  3. Stir in as much flour as possible with the spoon.
  4. Wipe the spoon clean with fingers and set it aside.
  5. Throw plenty of the remaining flour on top of the leaven.
  6. Begin kneading with the knuckles of both hands. Use strong, steady kneading, not quick movements.
  7. Keep throwing the flour from underneath and around the dough onto the top to prevent sticking.
  8. When most of the flour is kneaded in, draw the edges of the dough towards the middle to mix thoroughly.
  9. Continue kneading in every part, spreading it out, turning it from the side to the middle, and pressing knuckles into and over it.
  10. Knead until all flour is incorporated, the outside is free from flour, lumps, and crumbs, and it does not stick to the hands.
  11. Cover the dough again with the cloth and let it rise a second time.
  12. After three-quarters of an hour, check if the dough has swollen significantly and begun to crack. This means it is light enough to bake.
Shaping and baking the loaves
  1. Turn the dough onto a paste-board or very clean dresser.
  2. Divide the dough in two with a large sharp knife.
  3. If baking on a flat tin or oven floor: dust the board with flour, form the dough lightly into dumpling shapes, drawing cut parts together and turning them downwards. Shape by working round quickly between hands without raising from the board, pressing slightly. Draw the edge of a knife around the middle of each loaf without cutting deeply. Make one or two slight incisions across the tops.
  4. If baking in earthen pans: rub the pans thoroughly with butter on a piece of clean paper to prevent sticking. Lay the dough into the pans. Cut the dough with the point of the knife just below the edge of the dishes.
  5. Dispatch the shaped loaves to the oven.
Post-baking
  1. As soon as the bread is drawn from the oven, turn it upside down or on its side to prevent the underside from becoming wet and blistered from steam.
  2. Leave the bread until it is perfectly cold before putting it away and covering it down.
Alternative method (quick dough)
  1. Mix all the flour at first with the yeast and liquid into a firm, smooth paste.
  2. Knead this paste thoroughly down when it has become quite light.
  3. Leave it to rise a second time before preparing for baking.
Original Text
VERY PLAIN DIRECTIONS TO A QUITE INEXPERIENCED LEARNER FOR MAKING BREAD. If you have never yet attempted to make bread, and wish to try to do it well, and have nobody to show you the proper manner of setting about it, you may yet succeed perfectly by attending with great exactness to the directions which are given here; but as a large baking is less easily managed than a small one quite at first, and as the loss would be greater if the bread were spoiled, I would advise you to begin with merely a loaf or two. Take, then, let us say, half a gallon of flour, or a quartern, as it is called in some places. This will weigh three pounds and a half, and will make two loaves of nearly two pounds and a quarter each. There are two ways, as I have already stated, of making the dough. If you are sure of the good-ness of the yeast you use, it will not much matter which of them you follow. The quickest and easiest mode is to wet it up at once; the safest against failure is to set a sponge thus:—Put the flour into a large earthenware bowl or deep pan; then with a strong metal or wooden spoon, hollow out the middle, but do not clear it entirely away from the bottom of the pan, as in that case the sponge (or leaven, as it was formerly termed), would stick to it, which it ought not to do. Next, take either a large table spoonful of brewer's yeast, which has been rendered solid by mixing it with plenty of cold water, and letting it afterwards stand to settle for a day and night; or nearly an ounce of fresh German yeast. Put it into a large basin, and proceed to mix it so that it shall be as smooth as cream, with three quarters of a pint, or even a whole pint, of just warm milk and water, or water only, though even a very little milk will much improve the bread. To have it quite free from lumps, you must pour in the liquid by spoonfuls just at the beginning, and stir and work it round well to mix it perfectly with the yeast before you add the remainder, otherwise it would probably cause the bread to be full of large holes, which ought never to be seen in it. Pour the yeast into the hole in the middle of the flour, and stir into it as much of that which lies round it as will make a thick batter, in which, remember, there must be no lumps. If there should seem to be any, you must beat them out with the spoon. Strew plenty of flour on the top, throw a thick clean cloth over, and set it where the air is warm; but if there is a large fire, do not place it upon the kitchen fender in front of it, as servants often do, for it will become too much heated there; but let it always be raised from the floor, and protected from constant draughts of air passing over it. Look at it from time to time, when it has been laid for nearly an hour; and when you perceive that the yeast has risen and broken through the flour, and that bubbles appear in it, you will know that it is ready to be made up into dough. Then place the pan on a strong chair, or dresser, or table of convenient height; pour into the sponge a little warm milk or water (about a pint and a quarter will be required altogether for the quartern of bread, so if three quarters of a pint was mixed with the yeast at first, there will be half a pint to add. Sometimes a little more will be needed; but be always careful not to make the dough too moist); stir into it as much of the flour as you can with the spoon, then wipe it out clean with your fingers, and lay it aside. Next take plenty of the remaining flour, throw it on the top of the leaven, and begin, with the knuckles of both hands, to knead it well. Quick movement in this will do no good. It is strong, steady kneading which is required. Keep throwing up the flour which lies under and round the dough, on to the top of it, that it may not stick to your fingers. You should always try to prevent its doing this, for you will soon discover that attention to these small particulars will make a great difference in the quality of your bread, and in the time required to make it. When the flour is nearly all kneaded in, begin to draw the edges of the dough towards the middle, in order to mix the whole thoroughly; and continue to knead it in every part, spreading it out, and then turning it constantly from the side of the pan to the middle, and pressing the knuckles of your closed hands well into and over it. When the whole of the flour is worked in, and the outside of the dough is quite free from it, and from all lumps or crumbs, and does not stick to the hands when touched, it will be done, and may be again covered with the cloth, and left to rise a second time. In three quarters of an hour look at it, and should it have swollen very much, and begin to crack, it will be light enough to bake. Turn it then on to a paste-board, or very clean dresser, and with a large sharp knife divide it in two, when, if it has been carefully and properly made, you will find it full throughout of small holes like a fine sponge. When it is thus far ready, make it up quickly into loaves, and despatch it to the oven. If it is to be baked on a flat tin, or on the oven floor, dust a little flour on the board, and make them up lightly into the form of dumplings, drawing together the parts which are cut, and turning them downwards. Give them a good shape by working them round quickly between your hands, without raising them from the board, and pressing them slightly as you do so; then take a knife in the right hand, and turning each loaf quickly with the left, just draw the edge of it round the middle of the dough, but do not cut deeply into it. Make, also, one or two slight incisions across the tops of the loaves, as they will rise more easily when this is done. Should it be put into earthen pans, the dough must be cut with the point of the knife just below the edge of the dishes, after it is laid into them. To prevent its sticking to them, and being turned out with difficulty after it is baked, the pans should be rubbed in every part with a morsel of butter laid on a bit of clean paper. When they are only floured, the loaves can not sometimes be loosened from them without being broken. All bread should be turned upside down or on its side as soon as it is drawn from the oven: if this be neglected, the under part of the loaves will become wet and blistered from the steam, which cannot then escape from them. They should remain until they are perfectly cold before they are put away and covered down. The only difference between this and the other way of making dough mentioned at the beginning of these directions, is, the mixing all the flour at first with the yeast and liquid, into a firm, smooth paste, which must be thoroughly kneaded down when it has become quite light, and then left to rise a second time before it is prepared for baking. A pint of warm milk and water, or of water only, may be stirred gradually to the yeast, which should then be poured into the middle of the flour, and
Notes