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OATMEAL-BREAD - A yeast bread for people who like oatmeal
160 g uncooked oatmeal e.g., Quaker's Old Fashioned Oat-
meal
160 ml honey
30 ml salt
50 ml butter
250 ml boiling water
14 g active dry yeast
250 ml lukewarm water
160 ml milk
500-600 g unbleached flour (may substitute up to 200 g
whole wheat)
oil
(1) Put the oatmeal, honey, salt and butter in a large
mixing bowl. Add boiling water and mix together.
Let stand for 45 minutes, stirring occasionally.
(2) Following the yeast package directions, add the
yeast to lukewarm water, and let it soften for
about 5 minutes. Add the yeast mixture to the oats
and honey mixture. Mix in the milk and stir well.
(3) Stir in the flour, 50 g at a time. When the dough
is too stiff to stir, pour it out onto a well-
floured surface, and knead it firmly, adding a
little flour if necessary. Knead it until the
dough is smooth and elastic (about 6- 8 minutes).
Form the dough into a ball. Place the dough into a
large greased bowl, coating the entire ball of
dough.
(4) Cover with a damp cloth, and place in a warm,
cozy, humid place. (I put it in a cool oven, with
a small saucepan of hot tap water sitting on the
bottom of the oven.) Let rise for about 11/2
hours, or until the dough has doubled in bulk.
(5) Punch down the dough, and split in half. Spread
the dough into two greased loaf pans, coating the
dough as before, and cover with a damp cloth, and
let rise for about an hour in a warm, cozy, humid
place.
(6) Bake at 350oF for 35-40 minutes, or until loaves
sound hollow when tapped. Cool on a bread rack
for about ten minutes.
Kneading is difficult to describe in words, but many cook-
books have pictures. The idea is to exercise the dough and
work some more flour into it. Bread freezes very well; give
it an hour or so to thaw, then heat it up at 350oF for about
ten minutes.
Instant and quick-cooking oatmeal is not satisfactory in
this recipe. Besides the ubiquitous Quaker oats, you can
use any commercial rolled oats or steel-cut oats. If you use
the steel-cut oats, then soak for 1 hour in step 1.
Difficulty: easy if you already know how to knead dough,
moderate otherwise. Time: 30 minutes preparation, 41/2
hours waiting time. Precision: All amounts (including
times) are approximate.
Harry S. Delugach
University of Virginia, Dept. of Computer Science, Charlottesville, VA
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| Last modified: 9 May 2006 | 33 hits in May 2012 |