apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Recipe Review: Oatmeal Toasting Bread

2008_10_02-OatBread2.jpgAn egg on a crispy slice of toast is an essential part of our morning routine. We usually buy whole grain or oatmeal bread, but when we ran out of bread a few days ago, we decided to plunge into baking a sandwich loaf.

 
 

Bread-baking in our household has mostly been limited to the irresistibly easy and delicious No-Knead Bread; when you know you can spend approximately four minutes and bake a loaf that tastes better than anything from any boulangerie in town it's a little hard to experiment with something else.

But the lean, rustic dough of no-knead bread is not well-suited to a sandwich loaf. It's designed to have those big, delicious air pockets inside, and a chewy middle with a crispy crust. Non-enriched, simple doughs also have a very short shelf life.

We wanted something that would last for a few days as we slowly toasted it up for breakfast, and also have a softer, finer crumb that would hold together for toast and sandwiches.

We stumbled across a bread recipe, then, that promised all of these things. What's more - it involved oats. We were instantly hooked. We love the toasty, hearty taste of oats in our sandwich and toasting bread; they have a soft sweetness that always comes through. They're incredibly good for you too, of course. Plus, this recipe, from Farmgirl Fare, is specifically designed for toasting. We were in!

2008_10_02-OatBread.jpg• Get the recipe: Oatmeal Toasting Bread

A trip to the co-op ensued; we got oat bran and whole wheat bread flour for extra healthy points. The dough mixed up easily in our new KitchenAid mixer - all three loaves! Even in spite of our klutzy addition of two much water (and, subsquently, too much flour and yeast) this bread turned out beautifully, reinforcing our private opinion that it's really, really hard to screw up bread.

It rose into yeasty unbaked loaves, beautiful in the pans, and baked in less than 40 minutes into the loaves you see here.

And how does it taste? Scrumptious!! Chewy, soft, and moist - thanks to the oats, butter, and a little brown sugar. The oats sit and soften for awhile in boiling water before the dough is mixed up; they make this bread so tender and delicious.

2008_10_02-OatBread3.jpgAnd hello! This bread makes maybe the best toast ever - nutty, crunchy outside, soft inside.

We're very glad we baked three loaves; we're giving one away, but hoarding the other in the freezer. Although, really, it won't be so hard to whip up another batch.

Have you baked bread lately? Give this a try! Or try out one of our easy no-knead recipes.

No-Knead Bread in a Hurry
Recipe: No-Time Bread

(Images: Faith Durand)

Tags

Recipe Review, Healthy, Breakfast, Baked Good, baking, oatmeal, bread

Related Links

Share

Comments (5)

This is one of my favorite bread recipes! I have even made several variations of it, one of which is now my go-to cinnamon bread. It also makes killer cinnamon rolls.

posted by kitchenMage on October 2nd 2008 at 1:41pm
view kitchenMage's profile

I have made this bread several times and it is great! It stays fresh for several days and my kids love it with goat cheese and jam.

posted by sar3j on October 2nd 2008 at 5:09pm
view sar3j's profile

yes! I have just baked a loaf of basic white bread the other night after watch Alton Brown's good eats on bread baking.

here are the pictures: http://www.hoching.com/guineapig/?p=1128

Now I really want to make the oatmeal bread!

posted by reggiesoang on October 2nd 2008 at 5:19pm
view reggiesoang's profile

Hi Faith,
I'm thrilled that you're loving this bread-and that it inspired you to bake your first sandwich loaves! Thanks so much for the glowing review.

Sar3j,
Goat cheese and jam sound delish!

P.S. This dough makes scrumptious little dinner rolls, too.

posted by Farmgirl Susan on October 3rd 2008 at 3:59am
view Farmgirl Susan's profile

In an effort to save money, I've been baking more bread lately but have also limited myself to Bittman's no-knead variety. I wondered how it would do as a sandwich loaf and after reading your comments, glad I never tried it as such. However, I WILL try this recipe. Sounds delicious and easy enough. Thank you and I'll let you know how it turns out.

posted by rosebud on October 4th 2008 at 4:55am
view rosebud's profile