Monday, November 11, 2013

Good "ole" White Bread


Chef Brad's Mother.  
 
     This is my mother.  I miss her.  She passed away a couple of years ago, way to early for me.  We still had things to resolve and work out and things I wanted to share with her.  This picture is how I will always remember her.  It is not the best picture, but it is the best memory that I have of her.  She was beautiful,  the kind of woman that turned heads.   Not only was she beautiful, she was a really nice person.  Everyone loved her.

     She was a wonderful cook and baker.  I grew up back in the day were everything was made from scratch.  No box stuff for us.  Although we did eat TV dinners once in a while.  I do believe that they were not packed with chemicals like there are today and we heated them in the oven,  we did not even own a microwave.  I loved those days.  I loved the days before microwaves and all the packaged foods.  

     One of my fondest memories,  Ok my fondest memory of my mother is bread.  She was a great bread maker.  Her bread was fantastic.  It made the best toast ever and often we ate it just in a bowl with milk.  We called it bread and milk.   Bread and milk was a staple in our home.  Bread and milk plain, or bread and milk with a chunk of long horn cheese, or bread and milk with green onions.  I loved it.  Bread and milk for me was mom's bread, and it was white bread.  Good Ole White Bread.  

    Her bread was amazing.  It made the best toast ever.  We loved toast.  Our toaster was a gas broiler.  We put the bread under it and it toasted perfectly.  We did have to turn it over and watch it carefully or it would burn.  Our favorite was cinnamon toast.  We would toast the bread and butter it and cover it with about 1/4 of an inch of cinnamon and sugar and put it under the broiler again.  Oh it was heavenly. 

       Nothing can compare to Good Ole White Bread.  The tragic thing is in the name of nutrition and all that is good we don't eat it hardly ever.  At least the way my mother used to make it.  She used white sugar and Crisco and white flour.  Over the years I have changed the sugar to honey or Xagave and the Crisco to butter or healthy oil and the flour to fresh  ground wheat.  The bread is great and my family loves it, but it is not like mothers.  I crave her bread and I make so I make it and still try to make it healthier.  I use honey and butter with the white flour and we enjoy it, but it is not like moms Good Ole White Bread.   

     This morning I was talking to my sister about moms bread.  She didn't remember it so I told her the recipe and after I hung up the phone,  I  went to the kitchen and found the Crisco that I never use, the sugar, and white flour and I mixed up a batch of Good Ole White Bread.  Crisco and all,  It was amazing.   The texture was amazing.  I could hardly wait for it to come out of the oven.  That was my favorite memory of bread,  the loaf right out of the oven,  mother would slice it and we would smother it with butter, honey and or moms fresh made jams.  That was as good as it gets as a child.  Fresh baked bread right out of the oven.  My heart breaks with the thought that some children never get the chance to eat fresh baked bread.   

     So here is the recipe that my mother baked for me.  If you are totally against Crisco, step off your band wagon and experience life.  Don't do it all the time.  I don't, but there are some things in life worth experiencing.  And Good Ole White Bread is one of them.   Chef Brad~America's Grain Guy







     This is the dough right out of the Bosch Mixer.   My mother took hours to make this bread, but with the modern mixer I can have 6 loaves out of the oven in about one hour and ten minutes from start to finish.  My mom took 3 to 4 hours to bake her bread and it was a lot of hands on work.  Most of my time is rising and baking.


      I use a little oil on the table and fold the dough over to create a large wonderful dough ball.  This I will divide into pieces.
     


        With a dough divider I cut the dough into 2 pound pieces.  I have a scale to weigh the dough.   I get six two pounds loaves from my batch.











      Here are the doughs in two pounds of dough ready to shape into loaves.



     


       Here is the shaped loaf in the bread pan.  I spray the pan so the bread will not stick.




        Here are the six loaves of bread.  Notice they fill the pan about 3/4 full.  With room to let it grow double.




     I am really a flour snob.  I use only the best white flour I can find totally free of  chemicals.  Honeyville's artisan,  King Arthur's all purpose and Wheat Montana's Natural White.  I love these flours and only use them.



      I cover the bread with a cloth to keep it warm and to keep it from drying out.  It rises fast, from 25 to 25 minutes.











     I preheat at 400 degrees.  I do that so that the oven will be hot to give it a good rise.  Once I put the dough into the oven I drop the oven to 325 and bake it until it is done.



     The Bread is ready to place in the oven.  Perfect.
Good Ole White Bread






 Good Ole White Bread

8 cup hot water
1 cup sugar
1 cup Crisco
2 tablespoons salt
20 to 24 cups of white flour
1/2 cup yeast

Place water, Crisco, sugar, salt, and half the flour into the Bosch Mixer Bowl.  Turn on mixer and add flour until dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl.  Only add enough flour to pull dough away.  Do not add all the flour if not needed.  If you need more add more.  Mix for 6 minutes and remove from bowl and place on an oiled surface.

3 comments:

  1. Add the yeast with the flour. Enjoy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I am getting ready to make this right now...all of this will fit in my Bosch? I guess I'll know soon enough.

    ReplyDelete