
Time flies when you're baking bread! It's hard to believe that the Bread Baking Babes are celebrating our first anniversary this month. We started out as twelve intrepid bakers, willing to delve into challenging recipes, have long discussions of various flours and hydration levels, and have a wild time together taming the bread of the month. We made
crowns,
braids,
wreaths, and
pockets. We lived the
sweet life, went on
safari, attempted an
impossible miche-on, and took a trip to
France . What an amazing year with a wonderful group!
As we start a new year together we've had a little re-arrangement of our roll (pun intended). We lost Sher of
What Did You Eat last year and Glenna of
A Fridge Full of Food bowed out so she could have a less structured approach to her food blogging. In order to bring our number back up to our full complement we have invited Natashya of
Living In The Kitchen With Puppies and Gretchen of
Canela and Comino to join the Babes. They have been faithful Baking Buddies, completing and posting the breads to earn a Baking Buddy badge each month. We're so pleased to welcome them to Babes!
This month, Tanna, the amazing lady who dreamed up our group, gave us a new twist on bread. Go nuts! Walnuts, to be precise. Instead of going nuts right a way, I had to go shopping. This loaf contains, besides the walnuts, 5 different grains, so it was time to add to my ridiculous collection of flours. The helpful tip was that if you didn't have oat flour or brown rice flour, you could grind them. Well, that's helpful if you have a grinder, which I don't. I certainly wasn't going to attempt this with a mortar and pestle!

Once I had the ingredients I got to work toasting the nuts, measuring the flours, and mixing up some seriously tasty bread. My first thought when I took a bite of the crusty bread was, "I know this taste. What is it? What is it?" Finally, the aha moment came - Rye Krisp crackers! Even though this bread is supposed to be all about walnuts, it really tasted exactly like Rye Krisps in bread form to me. It was good spread with butter, but I loved it even more toasted. Thank you, Tanna, for this great recipe and for this great group. Be sure to check out the other Babes and see their take on the Walnut 5 Grain bread (the links are on the side).
And if you'd like to bake along with the Babes, you have until February 26th bake and post the bread and send a link to Tanna. She'll send you a beautiful Bread Baking Buddy badge to proudly display on your site.
Five~Grain Bread with Walnuts - adapted from
The Italian Baker by Carol Field
Makes 2 - 9 X 5-inch loaves
2-1/2 cups (300 grams) walnut pieces
3-3/4 teaspoons active dry yeast or 1 1/2 small cakes (27 grams) fresh yeast
1/4 cup warm water
3 cups water, room temperature
3-3/4 cups (500 grams) unbleached all-purpose flour
1-1/4 cups (125 grams) oat flour or finely ground rolled oats
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons (125 grams) rye flour
1 cup less 1 tablespoon (125 grams) whole-wheat flour
3/4 cup (125 grams) brown rice flour
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon (12 grams) salt

Toast the walnuts for 10 to 15 minutes in a 350° F oven until they begin to darken and smell toasted; then chop in a food processor fitted with the steel blade or with a sharp knife to the size of a fat rice kernel. Do not grind them finely. (I left larger chunks so I could enjoy the texture in the bread.)
BY HAND:
Stir the yeast into the warm water in a large mixing bowl; let stand until creamy, about 10 minutes. Stir in 3 cups water. Mix the walnuts, flours, and salt and stir 2 cups at a time into the dissolved yeast, stirring vigorously with a wooden spoon or rubber spatula. The dough should come together easily. Knead on a floured surface, sprinkling with additional all-purpose flour as needed, until firm, elastic, and no longer sticky, 8 to 10 minutes.
BY MIXER:
Stir the yeast into the warm water in a mixer bowl; let stand until creamy, about 10 minutes. Stir in 3 cups water. Stir in the flours, walnuts, and salt with the paddle. Mix until the dough comes together. Change to the dough hook and knead for 3 to 4 minutes at medium speed until firm and elastic but still slightly sticky. Finish kneading briefly by hand on a surface floured with all-purpose flour.
BY PROCESSOR:
Make sure your food processor can handle the volume of this dough. Even when done in 2 batches, there will be 4 cups flour to be processed. Stir the yeast into the warm water in a small bowl; let stand until creamy, about 10 minutes. Place the flours and salt in a food processor fitted with the dough blade and process with several pulses to sift. With the machine running, pour the dissolved yeast and 3 cups cold water through the feed tube as quickly as the flours can absorb it; process until the dough gathers into a ball. Process 40 seconds longer to knead. Knead in the walnuts by hand on a surface floured with all-purpose flour.
First Rise. Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and let rise until doubled, about 1 hour.
Shaping and Second Rise. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. The dough should be moist, firm, and noticeably elastic, if slightly sticky. Cut the dough in half and shape each half into an oval loaf to fit a loaf pan. Place the loaves in the oiled pans (preferably glass), cover with a heavy towel, and let rise until truly doubled and fully above the tops of the pans, 1 to 1 ¼ hours.
Baking. Heat oven to 400° F. Slash a pattern in the top of the loaves. One baker in Milan cuts the shape of a stalk of grain on the top; elsewhere bakers make 3 parallel slashes. Bake 40 to 45 minutes; bake the last 5 to 10 minutes out of the pans on a baking stone or baking sheet to brown the bottoms and sides. Cool completely on a rack.