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Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day

Step 3Shaping and Baking

Shaping and Baking
The next day, or even a few hours later, the dough from the fridge will be much easier to handle.
About an hour before baking, pull the bin of dough out of the fridge, remove the lid, and dust the surface of a corner of the dough with a bit of flour. Dust your pizza peel (or cutting board, or rimless baking sheet) as well.

Make sure your hands are well floured. Reach into the bin and pull out a grapefruit-sized hunk of dough, cutting it off with the serrated knife.

GENTLY pull the outer surface of the dough around to the bottom of the ball, forming a gluten "cloak" around it. Less is more here. Don't manhandle or squeeze the dough. This should take less than 30 seconds. Don't worry about what the bottom looks like.


Place the loaf on the peel and let it sit for about an hour. It won't rise much at all, and this is normal and O.K.

Half an hour before baking, turn the oven on to 450 Fahrenheit, placing the stone on the middle rack, and the broiler pan below it.

After the loaf has rested for an hour (don't worry if it hasn't raised much), fill a cup with 1 cup of hot water from the tap and set it beside the stove. Dust the top of the loaf with a bit more flour and slash it a few times with the serrated knife.


Slide the loaf onto the stone in the over and immediately pour the cup of hot water into the broiler pan. Shut the door quickly, and set the timer for 35 minutes.


When the bread is done, thumping it on the bottom with your thumb will sound hollow, and as it cools there will be a surprisingly loud crackling sound from the crust.

If you plan on slicing the bread or eating it later, let it cool fully before doing so, but I'll bet that you won't be able to resist tearing into it immediately!
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21 comments
Apr 24, 2010. 11:02 PMdivalea says:
I just made my first loaf. It has been out of the oven less than three minutes and I am eating a piece with butter and I am in BREAD HEAVEN.

My variations: I used an airbake-type cookie sheet, and I used unbleached flour (unbleached is what I had). I did use the roasting pan and water. Decent oven spring, amazing crust top and bottom, and great crumb.

Thanks so much for his Instructable! I LOVE making bread, but didn't often because of the work involved. Now? Bread every day!
Apr 25, 2010. 8:11 PMdivalea says:
Sorry, I meant BLEACHED. I used bleached flour. I blame my head cold for the mistake!

Anyway, I made another loaf today using a $1.50 "pizza stone" (unglazed red tile) from Home Depot. I had to handle the loaf again to get it off the sheet it was rising on, but the spring was STILL better than last night. (Do I correctly credit an "older" dough and a stone instead of cookie sheet?)


May 20, 2010. 12:10 AMKaki says:
I have a lot of bleached flour at home, did you just follow the recipe exactly or did you change it? I'm afraid that it might be a big difference with the whole bleached/unbleached flour thing! :P
Dec 8, 2011. 7:24 AMpolkadotsy says:
Loved it !! Cant believe I can make such awesome bread at home.

The only problem that I have is while slashing the bread a few time right before putting in the oven, I do not get the neat cuts. I use a serrated knife, flour it too.
Oct 1, 2011. 4:03 PMRane says:
Well, I started reading all the comments AFTER I had the dough rising on the counter. Hopefully it isn't ruined. I'm using an Airbake pan rather than a stone (I couldn't find a stone). The things I did wrong:

1. Used table salt, and used 3tablespoons of it.

Also, I have some questions:

1. Why don't you have to give the yeast sugar? I mean I can understand it feeds on the flour anyway, but I've always been taught to proof it first.
2. Will the dough in the container continue to rise slowly over a period of time while in my fridge?
3. Is it a problem to divide this recipe?
4. Is it really better to weigh the ingredients rather than measure them with the scoop and swipe method?

Whatever happens, I'm going to continue to bake my own bread, and I'm buying the book.

I'm sure I will have more questions/comments.
Feb 1, 2011. 3:29 PMSplaxx says:
Just made our first one and already ate half... :P awesome instruct-able and awesome recipe.
Jul 18, 2009. 7:35 AMallenrob108 says:
Well I pulled the container out of the frig. this morning and the dough is way way too wet! There is no way I can form a ball to make a loaf. Also when I took a spoon to the dough, after I took out the amount suggested to make a loaf, there is actual liquid in the bowl. It appears to me that the ratio of liquid is WAAAAAY off. I counted the number of cups of flour accurately, I didn't lose count and I measured the liquid accurately. I added an additional cup and a half of flour to the dough this morning hoping that will firm it up and I'll try it again tomorrow. I made a loaf this morning but I had to add at least an additional cup of flour to the small amount of dough suggested for a loaf and it still appears to me to be too wet. I'm going to bake it in about 30 minutes but I'll be surprised if it works out.
Jul 31, 2009. 3:18 AMPhoghat says:
BTW, have you ever tried this using Bread Flour? Supposed to have a higher concentration of gluten, don't ya know.
Jul 20, 2009. 7:01 AMallenrob108 says:
The problem was that the dough,when I pulled it out of the bowl, looked nothing like the dough that you pulled out of your container. It would not shape at all and was just a big blob of very wet dough. I had to add a lot of flour,probably close to a cup, to my ball just to get it in a condition to be able to shape it at all. My estimate is that the recipe, in my area and under my conditions, is at least three cups of flour short. So everyone please be aware that the ratios here are VERY general and in all likelihood you will have to vary from the recommended ratio by a good amount. After adding a lot more flour to my dough ball I was able to get a baked loaf, baking it for 40 minutes, that was quite good. A mellow but very nice taste. Just don't expect to follow the directions to the letter and have everything be perfect. It is very dry where I live right now so you would think the water recommended would be perfect under such dry conditions but it was too much. So be prepared to make adjustments! Thanks for the recipe and once I get the ratio figured out, it should be something I'll use for many years.
Aug 11, 2009. 1:56 AMKalabas says:
Go by weight. The recipe calls for 65 oz. of flour. I had the exact same problem as you until I bought a scale and now it is perfect. My dough was coming out way too wet. That is because the scoop and sweep method is far too unreliable. Just go by weight and it will always be consistent.
Aug 11, 2009. 7:10 AMallenrob108 says:
Thanks I'll give that a try. The method described in the instructions sure as heck do not work.
Jul 8, 2009. 9:09 PMarossphoto says:
Do you have to make round loafs, or could you also shape it into a traditional baguette? Thanks.
Jul 9, 2009. 6:39 AMarossphoto says:
That's great, and I will definitely check out the book. Do you know if it's possible to freeze portions of the dough? I live alone and would be worried that I wouldn't use all the dough, and would hate to see any of it go to waste. I guess you could make smaller portions as well, but freezing some of it might be a nice option too. Cheers and thanks again.
Jul 31, 2009. 3:24 AMPhoghat says:
I've seen "parbaked" bread for sale on Fresh Direct and else where.f the full baking time is ~ 35 minutes, how much time to parbake? I feel a little like " how much wood could a woodchuck chuck"
Jul 17, 2009. 9:31 AMallenrob108 says:
Wow I just made a batch and was reading through this in it's entirety as I was waiting for the first rise to finish before I put it in the frig.. I didn't read all of the comments before I made the batch. I wish you would have mentioned in the instructions that if you used table salt you should half the amount of salt. I hope using the amount you suggested in table salt didn't ruin this batch. I'd hate to have over salty bread that is inedible. That would be such a waste of food. I suggest you edit this instructable to make that clear in the instructions.
Apr 16, 2009. 3:57 AMdvdlvr says:
I used this dough for pizza yesterday and it was wonderful. (Preheat oven at 240C then cook the pizza in 8-10 minutes) I made plain bread from it this morning and it was great. I always have had problems baking white bread (Would never rise properly) and this instructable solved it for me. Many thanks! The baking time seems a bit long. I have a heat circulation oven (Not sure what the correct term is) and the bread was ready in 15 minutes. Maybe my 'grapefruit size' was a bit smaller than in the instructable, but it had a wonderful crust and was very light and airy on the inside.
Jul 2, 2009. 11:49 PMblackjimmy says:
I made a 2 loaf batch by scaling down; used 1 loaf's worth for bread (which turned out well) and the remainder for pizza. The dough tasted good but it was really hard to shape it into a flat pizza shape.. also I cooked it at 250C (maximum for my oven) on a terracotta dish until the top was a bit over done, but when I cut it open the inside was still really wet... any suggestions? I was worried about how wet the dough was so I used less sauce than usual and left it in longer than I usually do.. but it was still wet. It sounds like others have had good results so maybe I'm doing something wrong?
Jun 30, 2009. 12:50 PMfraugefahr says:
The authors were very wise to let you reprint their recipe! I first got interested in the book from this instructable and gave the book to my friend for her birthday. I got all the materials and plan to bake my first loaf in the next week!
Apr 26, 2009. 7:36 AMmuzzz says:
Made it w/ 2 cups of flour, 1 cup water, 1.5 tsp yeast and 1.5 tsp salt. The dough ended a bit loose so it wasn't easy to handle. But it turned out really well. I was quite amazed because I'm very novice when it comes to dough and breads. A bit too salty though. Great instructable.
Apr 30, 2009. 1:20 PMmuzzz says:
I will use less salt and maybe a little bit more flour next time. I suppose steam at the beginning is a crucial ingredient. How should one use the steam when making pizza with the dough?
Apr 11, 2009. 1:43 PMgosda says:
Sorry! We Americans haven't been "trained" yet - and we like it that way.
Apr 10, 2009. 6:26 AMRiffraff3055 says:
The authors were wise to allow you to reprint this recipe ... I just went out and bought a copy of their book! Happy baking everyone!

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Craftsman of fortune. Less is more, and simpler is better.