Skip to main content

Artisan Multigrain Bread with Bread Booster

Artisan Multigrain Bread with Bread Booster

              

LEVEL

SERVINGS

2 loaves

TIME

1 hour

RECIPE RATING

0 0 votes

Ingredients

Poolish

  • 1 cup whole wheat flour
  • 1/2 cup bread flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon Fleischmann's® Quick Rise Yeast
  • 1-1/4 cups lukewarm water (90°F to 100°F)

Dough

  • 2-1/4 cups bread flour
  • 1/2 cup rye flour
  • 5-1/2 teaspoons Fleischmann's® Bread Booster™
  • 1/2 teaspoon Fleischmann's® Quick Rise Yeast
  • 1 cup lukewarm water (90°F to 100°F)
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons salt
  • 1/3 cup cornmeal
  • 1/3 cup rolled oats
  • 2 tablespoons toasted wheat germ
  • Extra flour for dusting

Toppings

  • Rolled oats
  • Extra flour for dusting the top

PRODUCTS

Instructions

To make the Poolish

  1. Stir together whole wheat flour, bread flour and yeast in a medium bowl. Stir in water until thoroughly blended. This dough will be like thick cake batter. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let sit overnight or up to 24 hours at room temperature. The dough will become frothy and have lots of little bubbles.

To make the Dough

  1. In a medium size bowl, mix bread flour, rye flour and Bread Booster.
  2. In a large bowl, dissolve yeast in lukewarm water. Stir in Poolish, honey and salt until thoroughly blended, stirring to break up Poolish. (This will make it easier to incorporate the remaining ingredients.) Add 2 ½ cups of the flour mix, cornmeal, oats and wheat germ. Stir until combined. Dough will be soft and slightly sticky like biscuit dough. Stir in enough remaining bread flour, if dough is too sticky. Cover with plastic wrap and let rest 20 minutes.
  3. Turning Dough: With a slightly wet hand give the dough several turns by sliding the hand down the edge of the bowl, lifting and stretching the dough up and over the center. Give the bowl a quarter turn and repeat 7 times until you have gone around the bowl twice. Cover and let rest for 30 minutes. Repeat turning and resting 3 more times for a total of 2 hours rising time.
  4. Shaping: Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. With floured hands gently press to deflate dough. Divide in half. Working with each half separately, choose from one of the shapes below and follow instructions. If the dough is too sticky, dust the surface lightly with bread flour and use a dough scraper to pick up and fold over dough several times then retry shaping. After the shape is chosen and the final shaping is complete, place the seam side down on parchment paper generously dusted with bread flour or rice flour. Cover and let rise 1 to 1 ¼ hours or until double.
  5. Place a baking stone, pizza stone or unglazed ceramic tile on the bottom shelf of the oven. Preheat the oven to 475°F for 20 minutes to allow stone to get to temperature. Depending on the size of your baking stone, bake 1 or 2 loaves at a time. If desired, brush flour off top, lightly brush with water and sprinkle with oats. Score each loaf with 2 to 4 slashes using a sharp knife or blade. Slide the dough with parchment onto a bread peel or rimless baking sheet. Carefully slide onto heated baking stone, immediately spritzing the oven with water around the dough 7 to 10 times. Bake for 20 to 30 minutes spritzing every 5 minutes 3 more times. Bake to an internal temperature of 200°F. Remove from the oven and parchment; cool on a wire rack. Bake remaining loaf.
  6. Batard (oval loaf): For Primary Shaping on a lightly floured surface with floured hands pull an edge of the dough from the outside to the center gently stretching the side of the dough to the center. Give the dough a sixth of a clockwise turn and repeat going around the dough 2 or 3 times shaping it into a rough ball. Cover and let rest for 20 minutes. For Final Shaping working with the seam side up, slightly flatten the dough. Repeat the edge pulling shaping as above going around the ball 1 time. Now fold the far edge toward the center about 1 inch, pressing into the dough under the edge. Repeat folding and pressing several times until almost to the near edge. Fold up near the edge and pinch to seal. Turn the loaf over and gently roll to an oval about 8 inches long.
  7. Boule (round loaf): For Primary Shaping on a lightly floured surface with floured hands pull an edge of the dough from the outside to the center gently stretching the side of the dough to the center. Give the dough a sixth of a clockwise turn and repeat going around the dough 2 or 3 times shaping it into a rough ball. Cover and let rest for 20 minutes. For Final Shaping working with the seam side up, slightly flatten the dough. Repeat the edge pulling shaping as above going around the ball twice. Turn the ball over and cupping the side of the ball with one hand, work the other hand from top to bottom slightly pulling the dough around to the bottom as you spin the dough an eighth turn. Work until the ball is smooth.
  8. Baguette (long loaf): For Primary Shaping on a lightly floured surface with floured hands shape into a rough rectangle (6 x 9-inches) with a short edge toward you. Fold the far edge of the dough toward the center about 2 inches, gently stretching the bottom of the dough over the edge and pressing the edge to dough under it. Repeat folding and pressing until a roll is formed. Cover and let rest for 20 minutes. For Final Shaping working with the seam side up, flatten the dough to a rough rectangle (6 x 9-inches) with a long edge toward you. Now fold the far edge toward the center about 1 inch, pressing into the dough under the edge. Repeat folding and pressing several times working toward you, until almost to near-edge. Fold up near-edge and pinch to seal. Turn the loaf over and gently roll back and forth under two hands to about 14 inches long.

[um_bookmarks_button]

0 0 votes
Recipe Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Reviews
Inline Feedbacks
View all reviews