November 05, 2010

Bread machine undergoing first test

After a bit of shopping angst I have the right raw materials or equivalents to try to make my first loaf of white bread, and it's underway.

All I had in the house was all-purpose flour, and the machine's manual is insistent that that variety doesn't have enough gluten to make the perfect bread. So I went down to Safeway and discovered that's the only variety the store sells. "Rats," I said, but then remembered that there's a Down to Earth veggie market at the bottom of my hill. I trundled down there but discovered that, while they have lots of flours, none were specifically bread flours. They had a finely-ground whole wheat which the clerk assured me would work the same, but I didn't feel comfortable with that, since the manual and the recipes I've seen made distinctions between the two varieties. I bought a couple of pounds of it for future use, but I wanted to find flour clearly labeled for bread making.

That was yesterday. Today I went to that teeny-tiny niche market known as the Pearl Harbor Commissary. Goodness! The place had way more kinds of flour than Safeway did, including Gold Medal's Better for Bread. I bought two five-pound bags of the stuff and brought it home.

So I was ready to go, right? Ha! I had gone to one of the local used bookstores looking for a bread machine cookbook and found Bread Machine Bounty from Better Homes and Gardens. It was published in 1992 (an oddity: since it's 18 years old the Resources pages have toll-free numbers but no websites; that looks really strange now), and all its recipes want shortening rather than oil. I have no shortening!

Fortunately I realized margarine = solid fat just like shortening, but I might have slightly overdone the amount (I used 2 tsp, which is the amount of shortening called for). I then added milk, the bread flour, sugar, salt and yeast. We'll see what happens in about 3 hours.

I'm trying basic white bread; for one thing, if I'm gonna bake much I need to lay in a supply of things like brown sugar, molasses, raisins, and other stuff I currently don't have lying around the pantry.

I'm excited to see the results!

Posted by Linkmeister at November 5, 2010 03:16 PM | TrackBack
Comments

Um ... not to rain on your bread fest, but they make mixes for all kinds of bread machine bread. Sourdough, multigrain, wheat, white ...

May your bread rise up to meet you ... :)

Posted by: tomorrow at November 6, 2010 08:12 AM

I've been making bread in a breadmaker (I'm on my second one) since the 1990's. It's worth the effort. And there are tons of recipe books available.

Good luck!

Posted by: cassie-b at November 7, 2010 11:46 AM