The Pioneer Woman Tasty Kitchen
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Boule

4.88 Mitt(s) 8 Rating(s)8 votes, average: 4.88 out of 58 votes, average: 4.88 out of 58 votes, average: 4.88 out of 58 votes, average: 4.88 out of 58 votes, average: 4.88 out of 5

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Level: Easy

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Description

Homemade artisanal bread: crusty, chewy, and full of flavor. So simple and almost fool-proof, you may never go back to store-bought bread again.

Ingredients

  • 3 cups Lukewarm Water
  • 1-½ Tablespoon Active Dry Yeast (See Note)
  • 1-½ Tablespoon Kosher Salt
  • 6-½ cups All-purpose Flour
  • Corn Meal, To Dust The Resting Surface

Preparation

Note: this recipe makes enough dough to make fresh bread all week long. You just take a handful at a time and bake as needed. The dough itself will keep for at least two weeks. You can use less yeast if you want to, but just make sure you give it enough time to rise. The prep time does not include the initial 3 hours of rest.

To make the dough, put the water in a large container (large enough to hold all of the risen dough—a 3 to 4-qt container should be good). Sprinkle the yeast and salt in it. Then put in all of the flour, and mix using a wooden spoon. Just mix until everything combines and there are no streaks of flour left.

Cover the container (not airtight) and let the dough rise and then deflate a bit, about 3 hours. You can now bake immediately, or store in the refrigerator.

To bake, dust your hands and the surface of the dough with some flour and grab a handful of the dough (about the size of a grapefruit). Gently pull the sides of the dough toward the bottom, rotating the dough, until you get a roundish boule shape with a smooth surface. Be gentle and try not to deflate any gas bubbles. Don’t worry about the bottom being smooth, it’ll be fine.

Dust a pizza peel with some cornmeal to prevent sticking, and lay the formed dough on it. Let it rest (no need to cover it) for at least 40 minutes, or longer if the dough was chilled. It’s best to bake it when it’s no longer chilled.

Twenty minutes before you are ready to bake, put a pizza stone in the middle rack of your oven, and put a broiler pan in the bottom rack. Preheat your oven to 450 degrees. Dust some flour on the top of your loaf, and make 1/4-inch deep slashes on the surface of the dough.

After twenty minutes of preheating, slide the loaf onto the pizza stone. Pour a cup of warm tap water into the bottom broiler pan and shut the oven door to keep the steam inside.

Bake for 30 to 40 minutes until you get a nice brown crust. Let cool completely on a wire rack.

You can also bake this in a Dutch oven, which will eliminate the need for the broiler pan with the steam. But I prefer the pizza stone method.

(Recipe is adapted from Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes A Day. I think they are geniuses wrapped in a blanket of smart and smothered in awesomeness.)

30 Comments

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maryloves2cook on 8.24.2010

I made this today, and it was excellent! I had been worried, like many who commented, because mine was flat. Still, the crust was like Artisan bakery bread, and the inside was yummy, too! I did a little digging online and found the actual author of the book making this bread on a local show. He rolls his in flour. I will try that with my next batch this week!

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Heidi Malott on 5.18.2010

Wow! You have turned someone that could never make bread into a bread makin’ success! Thank you so much for posting this. I am a fan of artisan bread and never figured I could make it myself. What a treat!

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lydiajo on 2.1.2010

YUM! Made this bread for dinner one evening and was dying for my husband to comment on it. He finally said, “This is the best bread I’ ve had in a long time” SMILE

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wallajohnson on 1.31.2010

Wow, I’m very impressed. I seriously almost cried when I took the first bite. Who knew flour, salt, yeast and water (with no kneading) could make this!

I’m already on my second batch. I used the first batch for a fondue party. Yum!

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time4pie on 1.27.2010

This was a hit! Can’t wait until the next batch tomorrow!

8 Reviews

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chocolateforever on 9.26.2017

Excellent! I was so impressed with what I made! Thanks!

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Heidi Malott on 12.9.2011

I have never been that successful making bread, so I was not sure if I wanted to try again. Glad I did! This is easy and delicious. I have made this many times now. Thank you so much for posting.

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drbettycrocker on 10.2.2011

This bread is so easy to make. Great accompaniment to soups and spinach-artichoke dip. Be sure your dough comes to room temperature prior to baking if you have stored it in the refrigerator.

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maryloves2cook on 8.24.2010

This is excellent! My husband thought I got it at the bakery:) I don’t have a pizza peel, so like vinevalleygirl, I used parchment paper and put it directly on the preheated stone. I didn’t have cornmeal, so I skipped that, and the parchment peeled right off after it baked and cooled a bit. I will definitely make this a lot! The crust is just like the Artisan bread you buy! Yum!

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Good Yarns on 7.10.2010

This is the best crusty bread recipe I’ve ever used. I love this bread, and am so glad Ivoryhut shared this recipe. It looks gorgeous, and tastes fantastic. The best part is the texture, though. It is perfect for soup, but I make it in the spring and fall, too – with anything.

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