Looking for a whole wheat bread recipe
Replies
-
I searched high and low for a good whole wheat bread recipe (like Great Harvest). I eventually gave up and just buy it now but here's the best one I found in my search...
http://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/classic-100-whole-wheat-bread-recipe0 -
Unfortunately, 100% whole wheat bread recipes turn out very dense and heavy. I'm a really good bread maker and the only halfway decent whole wheat loaves I've ever made have had more white flour than whole wheat. I've tried the King Arthur recipe and it was okay toasted, but I wouldn't make it again.0
-
We bake our bread at home, 1 loaf (approx. 80g equals 165 cal). How can I send you the recipe?0
-
One basic ratio that works for bread is:
1 cup flour (measured by stirring the flour to uncake it, scooping, then levelling)
1/3 cup water
1/3 tsp active yeast
1/3 tsp salt
optional 1 tsp of something sweet (honey, molasses, sugar)
This makes approximately 1/2 lb of bread. Double, triple or otherwise increase the number of units you use depending on the size of your pans or bread machine.
We typically use a 50:50 mixture of whole wheat and "bread machine" flour to get the texture right. If you wanted to try 100% whole wheat flour, I recommend adding some vital wheat gluten to the mixture, but even then it might turn out rather dense.
With honey, this run approximately 80 cal/oz bread.
0 -
This is a really great website. You can find all kinds of beginner-friendly bread recipes.
http://www.thefreshloaf.com0 -
hanymamdouh wrote: »We bake our bread at home, 1 loaf (approx. 80g equals 165 cal). How can I send you the recipe?
Just copy and paste it into the body of your post.
0 -
tinascar2015 wrote: »Unfortunately, 100% whole wheat bread recipes turn out very dense and heavy. I'm a really good bread maker and the only halfway decent whole wheat loaves I've ever made have had more white flour than whole wheat. I've tried the King Arthur recipe and it was okay toasted, but I wouldn't make it again.
My experience as well. My best breadmaker breads are 50/50 white flour and whole wheat. I've also experimented by adding a tablespoon of Xanthan gum, which does help with the springiness. Use stone ground whole wheat or else sift the flour to remove the bran. Many commercial whole wheat flours add the bran back in to make it "whole wheat" but those bits of bran cut the gluten fibers, resulting in a dense, dense loaf. I save the sifted bran and sprinkle on top of the loaf before it bakes.
Try this:
1 cup (240mL) water
2 large eggs, beaten
1/4 cup (54g) vegetable oil
4 cups (512g) bread flour (2 cups white, 2 cups whole wheat)
4 Tbsp. sugar
1 tsp. (5.6g) salt
2-1/2 tsp. (7g) active dry yeast
0 -
hanymamdouh wrote: »We bake our bread at home, 1 loaf (approx. 80g equals 165 cal). How can I send you the recipe?
Just copy and paste it into the body of your post.
I attached snapshot from recipe tool. Notice that these ingredients are for 125 loaves.
0 -
sistrsprkl wrote: »I searched high and low for a good whole wheat bread recipe (like Great Harvest). I eventually gave up and just buy it now but here's the best one I found in my search...
http://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/classic-100-whole-wheat-bread-recipe
This is the recipe that I use. Make sure you do the extra step of letting the dough rest for 30 minutes prior to kneeding. This helps soften the bread. Otherwise, it comes out like a brick.
You can also do a batter bread if you don't have a stand mixer (i'm not kneeding stuff by hand). I usually use the 4 grain betty crocker recipe, but I found this one you could try.
http://breadbaking.about.com/od/batterbreads/r/All-Wheat-Batter-Bread.htm0 -
tinascar2015 wrote: »Unfortunately, 100% whole wheat bread recipes turn out very dense and heavy. I'm a really good bread maker and the only halfway decent whole wheat loaves I've ever made have had more white flour than whole wheat. I've tried the King Arthur recipe and it was okay toasted, but I wouldn't make it again.
I have great luck with most all wheat or partial wheat bread recipes by adding 1-2 tablespoons of vital wheat gluten to it. Works great in the bread machine too:)0 -
Okay! Here is mine. I make rolls with it.
1 cup very warm water
1 pkg (or 2.25 tsp) yeast
2 Tbsp sugar
1 tsp salt
1/4 cup oil
3 cups flour... I use half whole wheat and half white bread flour but you can use all whole wheat.
Dissolve yeast and sugar in water, then place in mixer bowl. Add salt and oil; slowly work in flour until dough is no longer sticky but is not dry.
Knead 5 minutes. You can knead by hand, but I use the mixer because I'm arthritic. While this is going on, heat your oven to its lowest setting.
Turn oven back off. Place dough in greased bowl, and cover with plastic wrap. Leave in warmed oven for 45 to 60 minutes.
Shape dough into round or baguette loaf, or cut into 12 pieces for rolls. Rewarm oven while shaping. Place bread on greased pan (metal or glass is fine), and cover with plastic wrap. Turn oven back off. Leave shaped bread in the warm oven for about half an hour. Then pull off the plastic wrap and turn the oven on to 350 degrees F. Bake for about 28 minutes, 30 if you like it a little browner.0 -
125 loaves or 125 slices? I'm running the maths and it seems that the amount of bread flour should make about four loaves.0
-
125 loaves or 125 slices? I'm running the maths and it seems that the amount of bread flour should make about four loaves.
I don't understand the difference between both. I made 125 pieces each piece weighs around 70 grams of flat bread, like very thin tortilla wrap. Forgive me as my first language isn't English. Hope I could described it correctly.
BTW don't forget to add water weight because we add water for the dough.0 -
AHA! A flat bread. That explains it. Thank you.0
-
-
Here's a recipe of mine: http://www.justapinch.com/recipes/bread/other-bread/whole-wheat-sandwich-bread.html
Bread is basically flour, water, salt and yeast. That's it. You don't need anything more for a good bread. Lately I've been making a 50/50 white/whole wheat bread that is just those four ingredients.
It's true, 100% whole wheat is denser than 50/50 white/whole wheat but that doesn't mean it's bad. 100% rye is even denser.
When I make a 100% whole wheat bread, I make a dough with 85% or more hydration. Whole wheat needs more water than white. In other words, if I used 600g of flour, I'd use 510g of water. This would be too wet to knead in the standard way but would work very well using a no-knead recipe or stretch-and-fold.
0 -
I use this one and it doesn't get any easier! It uses white and whole wheat flour.
http://m.allrecipes.com/recipe/24932/whole-wheat-beer-bread/?page=00
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.8K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 176K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.6K Fitness and Exercise
- 430 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8.1K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.4K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 22 News and Announcements
- 1.2K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions