I love the feeling of getting my hands involved when making bread.
This was the very first recipe I ever learned, back when I was five or six. We used milk to froth the yeast, a dash of honey, and whole wheat bread flour.
Whichever bread recipe you use, these pictures still show the order of events so to speak. Happy baking! And better yet, happy sandwiching afterward!
(P.S. Bread is the best to make when you’ve got a days of random tasks around the house. Mix yeast and milk. Weed veggie garden, check email. Mix dry ingredients and wet ones, form dough and knead. Do laundry, walk dog, blog. Set oven, knead again, bake. Change sheets, mess around on Facebook. Set aside to cool. Go on a quick jog. Make sandwiches and enjoy!)
SO, HERE GOES!
Start with good ingredients. I use organic whole wheat flour, raw milk, free range eggs, rock salt, local olive oil (California Rocks!)…




Measure out your milk and place in a warm, not windy, spot.

Dust the packet of yeast over the milk’s surface

Don’t worry if it falls in and looks a bit messy – resist the urge to stir it and just walk away, returning in about 10-15 minutes to see if it is ready, i.e. foamed up

It’s foamy! Yippie!

Now, measure out the dry ingredients in a separate bowl.


Make a well in the dry ingredient bowl…

and add in your Wet Ingredients to the Well, including the foamy yeast mixture.

Stir with your hands

It’ll start to ball up and form a dough


Flour up your surface – I got this great piece of marble from a design studio that no longer needed it – I strongly suggest you ask around if you don’t already have a nice stone surface to knead on!

Knead the dough until there is a smooth consistency about it – depending on the pressure used it can take as little as five minutes and as much as 15.

Continually spin dough, press with heels of hand, then flip and spin again to get a good action going. After the dough is a good smooth consistency ball it up.

Then oil your bowl and dough ball and put it in that same warmish but not windy place to rise.

Cover it up!

Dough has risen! It usually take 30-45 minutes.

Now fit it into a loaf pan or two…

Paint it with oil and salt or an egg wash…

Hash the surface and bake according to your recipe

Yippie! Bread is done after cooling!

AND, here’s an approximation of the recipe I first learned at Waldorf School Kindergarten!
1 packet yeast
1 c warm water or milk
1 t. honey
6c flour- 4c bread flour, 2c whole wheat (or all whole wheat)
1-2 t. salt
3c water
1/3c honey
1/3c oil or melted butter
proof the yeast in small amount of water and honey until it gets bubbly.
mix water salt honey and oil in another bowl. Add yeast mixture to liquids and allow child with wooden spoon to stir while you add flour one cup at a time until it is too hard to stir. get your hands messy by mixing/kneading the rest in by hand until the flour is smooth and easy to work. knead for awhile until the dough is smooth and ’shiny’, put in clean bowl with a small amount of oil in it and cover with a damp towel. allow to rise double
punch down, make snakes, mountains, rocks, and loaves and allow to rise again.
350 oven for 40 min or so depending on the size of the loaves.