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Apricot Oat Bread

August 13, 2013 By Korena in the Kitchen 19 Comments

IMG_4972Once upon a time, my good friend and fellow tea partier Lynette was also my roommate. Being a tidy sort, one of her cardinal housekeeping rules was Everything Shall Have Its Own Place in The Fridge. This comes to mind frequently when surveying the inside of my own over-stuffed, disorganized and messy fridge, so last week I finally did something about it. During the subsequent clearing-out and re-organizing, I discovered two things: 1) I have neglected my poor sourdough starter at the back of the fridge for too long (luckily, nothing a good feeding couldn’t fix), and 2) I have a very large collection of half-empty jars of jam. These two things added up to one obvious solution: time to bake bread!

I borrowed Richard Bertinet’s book “Dough” from Nate’s mum several months ago and took this as a chance to actually make something out of it. The recipes use conventional yeast, and I planned on adapting one to use my sourdough starter, but I got too impatient waiting for it to revive fully for baking and ended up using regular yeast (but I did mix up some starter so I can try a recipe with sourdough). The recipes and techniques in the book are all very approachable for the home baker – seasoned bread nerd or not – and most of them are variations on several master recipes, with extra ingredients added in or special shaping techniques used. Rather than the long, slow fermentation and minimal kneading that is used in many current artisanal bread recipes, Richard employs a wonderful slap-and-fold kneading technique (which I’ve used before) to develop the gluten and create a flavourful, airy bread in a relatively short amount of time. A DVD showing Richard mixing, kneading, and shaping the dough is included with the book – I never get tired of watching the skill with which a master baker handles dough!

I chose this apricot and oat bread with a whole wheat base because it sounded good and breakfasty, like it would be a nice platform for jam. It is, but it’s also pretty wonderful with cheese or on its own with a smear of butter. It’s a bit dense so thin slices are best, and it makes great toast. I haven’t been baking bread regularly for a few months now – it was becoming too easy to eat nothing but bread all the time – and this loaf reminded me that I love doing it. I’ve said it before, but bread is kind of magical – and not just because it keeps the jam population of my fridge in check. 😉

PS – I decided to break new ground and make a video of the kneading technique used in this recipe – the sound is kind of terrible (I don’t actually have a lisp) and please excuse the messy counter in the background, but you can see my film debut below. 🙂

Sourdough Apricot Oat Bread

Adapted from Dough by Richard Bertinet. Makes 2 loaves.

In a large bowl, mix together:

10 1/2 oz whole wheat flour

7 oz white bread flour

1/4 oz (1 1/2 tsp) instant yeast (or 1/3 oz fresh yeast)

Once the yeast is mixed into the flour, add:

1 tbsp fine-grain salt (adding the salt and yeast separately minimizes the chance for the salt to kill the yeast)

Then stir in:

12 1/2 oz room temperature water

Mix until the dough starts to form, about 2 – 3 minutes. It will be very soft and sticky but don’t add any more flour.

Scrape the dough out onto an unfloured surface and begin Richard’s slap-and-fold kneading technique: reach underneath the dough with your fingers (palms facing up), lift it up, then flip it over and slap it back down onto the counter by quickly turning your hands over so they are facing palm down. Drag/stretch the dough up towards you, then fold it back over onto itself, trapping air underneath it, and tuck the edges in, which brings you back to your starting point. Repeat, trying to stretch the dough and trap as much air in it as possible. Continue this until the dough starts to become smooth, elastic, and easy to handle – it is quite remarkable when a sloppy mass of flour and water turns into such a responsive dough literally beneath your hands! I found this dough a bit firmer than others I’ve used this technique with, and it only took about 5 – 8 minutes of kneading.

Flatten out the dough and add 7 oz chopped dried apricots into the center. Fold over the dough to seal in the apricots, then continue with the slap-and-fold kneading (you’ll have to be rather careful at first) until they are evenly distributed through the dough and it no longer sticks to the counter.

Tuck the sides of the dough underneath to form a round ball and place the dough in a bowl. Richard tells you to sprinkle a little flour over the top of the dough but I found it actually caused the dough to try out a bit on the outside, so I would suggest skipping the flour or brushing it with a little bit of water to keep it moist instead. Cover the bowl with plastic, and let it sit somewhere warm until doubled in size – an hour or more, depending on temperature. (This rise took a really long time for me because I used active dry yeast instead of instant – silly girl!)

Gently turn the risen dough out of the bowl onto a floured surface. With a bench scraper, divide the dough in two pieces and form each into a ball by tucking the edges underneath. Cover with a towel and let rest for 10 minutes.

To form the loaves, flatten each ball into a circle. Fold one edge in to the middle and press with your fingertip or the heel of your hand to seal. Tuck the opposite edge in to the middle and press to seal. Now fold the dough in half along the seam you just made, and use the heel of your hand to secure it. Turn it so the seam is on the bottom. You should have a torpedo-shaped loaf about 6-inches long.

Place 3 oz rolled oats on a plate. Brush each loaf with a little bit of water then roll them in the oats, pressing the oats to adhere. Place the loaves on a baking sheet and with a sharp knife or razor blade, cut a few deep slashes on top of each loaf. I use a homemade lame, which is a razor blade stuck on the end of a disposable wooden chopstick (which I whittled down to fit into the razor blade). Cover the loaves lightly with plastic wrap and set aside to proof until almost doubled in size (about 1 hour). While the loaves proof, preheat the oven to 475˚F with a rack in the middle and a metal roasting pan on a lower rack.

Place the proofed loaves in the preheated 475˚F oven and pour a mugful of hot tap water into the metal roasting pan to create steam. Turn the oven temperature down to 425˚F and bake the loaves for 25 – 35 minutes, until well-browned and hollow-sounding when tapped on the bottom. Cool completely on a rack before slicing.

This post submitted to YeastSpotting and Panissimo, created by Barbara and Sandra and hosted this month by Barbara.

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Filed Under: Bread, Breakfast & Brunch, Fruit, Recipes Tagged With: apricots, bread, oats, recipe, Richard Bertinet, yeast

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Comments

  1. Jülide Başkur says

    August 13, 2013 at 6:20 am

    Recipes are great, I wish you continued success 🙂

    Reply
    • Korena in the Kitchen says

      August 13, 2013 at 7:48 am

      Thank you!

      Reply
  2. Sawsan@ Chef in disguise says

    August 13, 2013 at 7:35 am

    I have not made bread in a while too and I miss it. I can’t wait to give this recipe a try. I read the title and though..oh I want to make that!
    You did a wonderful job with your first video.It was nice to hear your voice 🙂 Thank you for the demo I find videos like this one very helpful as I am still working on my kneading technique

    Reply
    • Korena in the Kitchen says

      August 13, 2013 at 8:09 am

      Thanks Sawsan! I hope you like the recipe if you try it – I’m really enjoying eating it for breakfast 🙂

      Reply
  3. Sibella at bakingwithsibella.com says

    August 13, 2013 at 10:20 am

    Wow, what a bread! I really love everything about it; it looks so delicious and so professional, like you just took it of a fancy bakery shelf! You did a great job on the video, really nice to hear your voice and the kneading technique I will use next time I make bread (which might be tonight, since I feel so inspired by your bread)! <3

    Reply
    • Korena in the Kitchen says

      August 13, 2013 at 3:42 pm

      Thank you Sibella! This was a nice bread to get back on the horse with, so to speak 😉 This kneading technique really only works with very wet, high hydration dough, FYI…

      Reply
      • Sibella at bakingwithsibella.com says

        August 13, 2013 at 5:21 pm

        I was planning to go for the ciabatta once again, but instead I am making german yeasted plum cake…

        Reply
        • Korena in the Kitchen says

          August 13, 2013 at 6:34 pm

          That sounds delicious – I hope you post the recipe 🙂

          Reply
  4. wendyjv says

    August 13, 2013 at 10:56 am

    I love the video. (And the lisp IS quite uncharacteristic of you!!) Makes me think that this technique would be good for spelt dough, perhaps?? Whaddyathink?

    Reply
    • Korena in the Kitchen says

      August 13, 2013 at 3:43 pm

      Yessss, that’ssss what I thought, too! Lol. That’s what I get for using a crappy camera I guess 😉

      Reply
  5. Bread & Companatico says

    August 13, 2013 at 2:25 pm

    love the way you work that dough. some really beautiful movements. this loaf looks delicious and I love apricots in bread… yum with some cream cheese! thank you for submitting this to Panissimo.

    Reply
    • Korena in the Kitchen says

      August 13, 2013 at 3:43 pm

      Ohhh yes, cream cheese would be lovely!

      Reply
  6. Kathryn and Ross says

    August 13, 2013 at 3:19 pm

    So glad you made something from the book, I was wondering if you had found anything to make out of it. I find it pretty unusual for there to be no flour on the board for the kneading, (slapping?) process. The finished product looks delicious, especially with apricots, almost, can we say healthy?

    Reply
    • Korena in the Kitchen says

      August 13, 2013 at 3:50 pm

      Yeah, no added flour! Actually, that’s probably one reason why people end up with tough, hard bricks of bread their first few times baking it – the tendency to add more and more flour as you knead the dough. It really isn’t necessary for this kind of bread and the high hydration level (lots of water relative to flour) gives you a with more rustic, open-crumb bread, rather than fine-crumbed American style bread (or whatever you’d call it). Different technique for a different type of bread, really!

      Reply
  7. Joanne T Ferguson (@mickeydownunder) says

    August 13, 2013 at 6:55 pm

    G’day Korena, Your bread looks absolutely lovely, true!
    Never heard of the “slap and fold” method, but this is what I do…wish I could come through the screen and try a slice of this right now too!
    Cheers! Joanne
    http://www.facebook.com/whatsonthelist.net

    Reply
  8. Jenni (@GingeredWhisk) says

    August 17, 2013 at 6:31 pm

    This bread looks amazing!!! I have been neglecting my starter for too long, too! And why are there always so many jars of jam in the fridge?! LOL!

    Reply
    • Korena in the Kitchen says

      August 17, 2013 at 8:37 pm

      I know! They must multiply when you’re not looking. I took it as a sign to make bread though 😉

      Reply
  9. Ivana says

    October 27, 2013 at 2:42 pm

    I am fascinated by this recipe. Actually, I am fascinated by whole website. Thanks on many ideas for healthy and delicious bread and pastry. I will bake this bread and with your video it is going to be much more easier. 🙂

    Reply
    • Korena in the Kitchen says

      October 27, 2013 at 7:47 pm

      Thanks Ivana, I’m glad you’re enjoying the site!

      Reply

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I'm Korena: cook, baker, dirty-dishes-maker. My favourite things include flour, butter, sugar, and chocolate. Read More…

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