Artisan Bread (fail-proof step by step instructions) (2024)

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The most detailed step by step instructions on how to make Artisan Bread. Add whatever nuts and dried fruit you like to give it a personal spin. I made mine a Walnut Fig Artisan Bread. Spread some goat cheese on a piece and fly to HEAVEN!

Artisan Bread (fail-proof step by step instructions) (1)

This is not a quick bread, this is a real artisan bread. 12-hour starter, knead, rise, (fold in extra flavorful extras), rise again, bake, give it a bite and book a flight to Montreal to come hug and kiss me ;)

Ok, so, is it easy to make artisan bread? Ummmm, let’s say it’s not difficult. There are several steps that need extra attention but in this post I will walk you through ALLLLL the steps one step at a time so you end up with the best bread you’ve tried in your life, pinky finger promise. Are you ready?

How toactivate yeast and ensure artisan bread dough rises

Proof your yeast

I cannot stress this more. I just wasted 1.5 kg of flour over the weekend trying to succeed in the bread-making business. If you proof your yeast first you don’t risk waisting flour. If your dough doesn’t rise it’s because your yeast was not properly activated or worse, you killed it. Awww, poor yeast :(

How to proof yeast

Add yeast to a bowl and then add warm water. Now here is the first tricky part. The water has to be “warm”. What does “warm” mean? About 100F (38 C).

Use a thermometer, if you don’t have one for food, use your body temperature thermometer. If you don’t have that either, use your elbow.

It should be warm like water you would bathe a baby in, milk you would give a baby in a bottle. If you have nothing to do with babies and don’t know what kind of warm is meant by that, well, warm like your own pee ;)

The end result after about 10 minutes is foamy, bubbly, yeast-smelling water. If it doesn’t foam and bubble, toss it. Your bread won’t rise. I will come out dense and heavy and maybe even uncooked in the end. Do not waste your flour. Start over again. Remember it’s just 10 minutes.

Now, how come yeast doesn’t foam or bubble sometimes? There are 3 reasons for things going wrong.

  1. the yeast expired -> buy another one.
  2. the water was too hot or too cold -> use a thermometer to make sure the temperature is right.
  3. your tap water is no bueno (too much chlorine or bacteria can kill your yeast) -> Use bottled water.

Prepare a starter

Breads made with starters taste so so so so so so (that’s not enough ‘so’s but you get the point) much more delicious than other breads. AND, the bread dough rises beautifully with a starter.

Prepare a starter. Just do it, will you?

Mix that foamy, bubbly, yeasty water (a.k.a. proofed yeast) with the flour required by the recipe, cover and leave at room temperature for at least 12 hours, max 18 hours.

The next day you will start your bread-making process like you would any bread without a starter. Making a starter takes 12-ish minutes. Make that starter the day before. You will get the most perfect result.

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How to achieve dense but airy Artisan Bread

Artisan bread requires several rises. The quicker a bread is to make the lighter and cakier (is that a word?) it will be. Basically, less time and less rises equal less deliciousness in my opinion.

This real artisan bread calls for a 12-hour rise of the starter and then another two 45-minute rises. Remember, you don’t have to do absolutely anything while the bread is rising. Making bread is a long process BUT requires only minutes of actual work in between rising/resting time. In total it will take maybe 10 minutes of you actively doing something.

Knead the starter and remaining flour the recipe calls for in the stand mixer with dough hook attached for a good 20 minutes on low. You can do this part by hand but it will be VERY messy and tiring. I don’t recommend doing this by hand but rather borrow a stand mixer if you don’t have one.

The dough should be very sticky and elastic (see right photo above). Cover it with a clean kitchen towel and let rise at room temperature for45 minutes or until the dough has doubled in size (see left photo below).

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When and how to add extras to artisan bread dough

After the first rise it’s time to fold in whatever extras you want to fold into your artisan bread. If you don’t want anything extra in your bread just omit this step.

Add extras and fold and fold until well combined. By then the dough reduced in size again. (see middle and right photo above).

Once all the extras are mixed into the dough it’s time for the second rise. Cover a clean dish towel with abundant flour and corn meal. Dump the dough onto the dishtowel and fold the towel over it.

Emphasis on “abundant” so no dough at all stays stuck to the dish towel. You should be able to shake it out in the kitchen sink, throw it in the wash that’s it once you removed the dough after the second rise.

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Dutch oven vs. no dutch oven when making artisan bread

There are two reasons artisan bread will form a dome. One, the bread dough is given enough opportunities to rise. Two, the bread dough is baked in strong heat coming from all directions.

Most of us have regular ovens. Heat from the top and heat from the bottom. That’s it. Regular home ovens do not emit heat from all around.

Bakeries have special ovens. Many of their ovens arestone ovens where the stone retains all the heat and radiates it back to the whole surface of the bread.

The only way to “imitate” this is by using a dutch oven. I’ve tried with a oven-proof stainless steel pot with oven-proof glass lid and … it doesn’t work. Stainless steel doesn’t “store” heat. It becomes hot, yes, but as soon as you take it out of the oven to dump in the bread dough, it immediately starts cooling down.

A cast-iron pot keeps the heat for muuuuch longer. Enough time for you to dump in the dough, put the lid back on and transfer back in the oven without it cooling down even 1 degree.

If you don’t have a dutch oven here are my 3 suggestions.

  1. BUY ONE! It’s worth it! There is one for all budgets. This $50 dutch oven does the trick perfectly well. And this $300 dutch oven is not only a life-time investment but also a pot to hand down a couple generations if you take care of it properly.
  2. Borrow one! If you can’t afford one right now or you first want to test it before buying, ask around who can borrow you one. I did that before, too. I was sold after the first use but still borrowed it again until I had the money to buy one for myself.
  3. Don’t make this bread. Sorry, but I tried making artisan bread without a dutch oven and I REALLY wanted it to work but it just doesn’t. :(

One important tip: be really, really, really, really, really, really careful when taking the dutch oven out of the oven. It will be BURNING HOT! Use very thick silicone oven gloves or double up your regular cloth gloves. The burns you get from a hot dutch oven are unbelievably painful. All concentration is required here. Don’t multitask at this point. Do only ONE thing. Keep your eyes only on the oven and your body parts.

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Artisan Bread cooling instructions

This point is also very important. Once the bread is baked you have to remove it from the dutch oven (carefully, remember it’s hot!). Since the dutch oven retains a lot of heat for an extended amount of time it’s crucial to remove the bread so it doesn’t continue baking. Otherwise it will become very hard.

Turn the dutch oven over so the artisan bread falls out. It will immediately and easily fall out. There is no way bread dough will stick to a burning hot cast iron pot or pan. If it sticks, you didn’t heat it up enough time (as I suggested further up) naughty you ;)

Place the freshly baked artisan bread on a cooling rack and wait for it to COMPLETELY cool down before cutting into it. If you cut into hot bread all the steam escapes and the center stays “doughy”. The bread needs to cool down slowly for the steam to do it’s work on the inside of the artisan bread.

How do I know my bread is really baked through without cutting into it? Knock on the bottom of the bread. If it sounds hollow it’s done. If it doesn’t return to the oven.

And this is what it looks like from the inside once it’s finished cooling down:

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How to storeArtisan Bread

I can’t believe you’ve made it this farreading. Congratulations. Now it’s time to finally, finally break apart a piece of this masterpiece of a healthy artisan bread.

Don’t use a knife. Use your hands. Eat an uneven piece. It tastes so much better that way. Eat your first piece just like that. You can eat the second with goat cheese or butter or dunked into butternut squash soup. Eat the first piece just plain.

Once you ate all you could eat it’s time to store it. If you think you will finish the bread the next day I recommend storing it in a paper bag on the kitchen counter. That way it stays crispy.

However, bread dries out by the end of day two. If you know you won’t be able to finish it by day two I recommend storing it in a paper bag and then plastic bag on top and tie a tight knot and leave it on the counter if you’ve added only nuts and dried fruit but in the fridge if you’ve added fresh fruit.

Phew. Are you ready to make bread now? Check the shorter version of all instructions further down in the recipe card.

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Artisan Bread

Prep Time: 10 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 30 minutes minutes

Total Time: 14 hours hours 40 minutes minutes

Servings: 1 loaf

The most detailed step by step instructions on how to make Artisan Bread. Add whatever nuts and dried fruit you like to give it a personal spin. I made mine a Walnut Fig Artisan Bread. Spread some goat cheese on a piece and fly to HEAVEN!

Print Recipe

Ingredients

  • 110 ml warm water - (100°F / 38°C!!)
  • 3.5 g active dry yeast
  • 110 g all purpose flour
  • 400 g all purpose flour
  • 3.5 g active dry yeast
  • 240 ml water
  • 10 ml cow's milk
  • 12 g sea salt
  • 1 pinch sugar
  • 2-3 Tbsp all purpose flour
  • 2-3 Tbsp corn meal - (not corn flour! corn MEAL!)
  • 1/2 cup chopped nuts - (I used walnuts)
  • 1/2 cups dried fruit - (I used figs)

Instructions

  • *Proof the yeast and prepare starter*In a medium bowl mix 110ml 100°F-warm water (use a thermometer!) and 3.5g active dry yeast and let sit for 8-10 minutes until all bubbly (<- this is called "proofing the yeast"). Then add in 110g flour and mix with a spatula. Cover with a clean kitchen towel and let rise at room temperature for 12 hours (overnight).

  • *Prepare the bread dough*Add 400g flour, another 3.5g yeast, salt, sugar and 240ml water and 10ml milk to the starter and knead on low for at least 20 minutes until the dough is sticky and elastic.

  • *First rise*Cover the bowl in which the dough was kneaded with a clean kitchen towel and let rise for 45 minutes at room temperature.

  • *Add extras*Chop walnuts and dried figs or any other nut and dried fruit and fold into the dough. Omit this step if you want your artisan bread plain.

  • *Second rice*Spread out a dish towel on the counter, sprinkle with abundant flour and corn meal and dump dough onto towel, then fold dish towel over bread and let rise a second time for 45 minutes.

  • *Preheat oven and dutch oven*15 minutes into the second rise preheat the oven to 450F with the dutch oven with lid inside the oven. The oven and dutch oven have to heat up at least 30 minutes.

  • *Bake the bread*Take the dutch oven out of the oven carefully, turn the dish towel and dump the dough into the burning hot dutch oven (be carful with the hot dutch oven!!!!). Place the lid on top and return into the oven. Bake 25 minutes with lid on and a further 5-10 minutes with lid off. Until golden.

  • *Cool Bread*Take dutch oven out of oven, remove bread from dutch oven, place bread on a cooling rack and let cool down completely before cutting into it.

Notes

How do I know my bread is really baked through without cutting into it? Knock on the bottom of the bread. If it sounds hollow it's done. If it doesn't return to the oven.

Nutrition

Calories: 1985kcal | Carbohydrates: 414g | Protein: 58g | Fat: 6g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 4671mg | Potassium: 717mg | Fiber: 16g | Sugar: 1g | Calcium: 110mg | Iron: 26.3mg

Course Breakfast, Side

Cuisine French, German, International

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Artisan Bread (fail-proof step by step instructions) (2024)

FAQs

Do you cover bread when proofing in the oven? ›

How do you proof dough in the oven? Cover the bowl of dough loosely with plastic wrap. I avoid covering the bowl tightly in order to give the dough the freedom to expand as it rises. Place the dough in a turned-off oven.

How do you use failed bread? ›

If the flavor is unappealing, then yes, toss or compost it. But if it tastes good, then you can make bread crumbs and/or croutons with it. Bread crumbs are useful for coating foods that will be fried e.g. chicken or fish.

What is the proofing process in bread making? ›

Proofing (aka final fermentation, final rise, second rise, or blooming) is the dough's final rise that happens after shaping and just before baking. The entire dough fermentation process is sometimes referred to as the proofing process. 6.

Does artisan bread need to rise twice? ›

Bread recipes typically call for two rises: The first is the “bulk” rise when the dough rises in the bowl, while the second rise comes after the dough has been shaped, like when a sandwich dough proofs directly in the loaf pan.

What oven temp is good for proofing bread? ›

Carefully fill an oven-safe dish with several cups of boiling water, then place the water-filled dish on the bottom rack of your oven. Bread dough rises well in a moist and warm environment, between 70–80°F, so be sure to keep the oven off unless you plan to use a specialized proofing setting.

How do you keep dough from drying out when proofing? ›

For shorter proofing times, (up to 24 hours) many recipes suggest covering your dough container or dough balls with a clean, damp, tea towel. This is perfectly fine as long as the towel is damp, as this will create moisture in the air to keep the dough from drying out.

What happens if you bake underproofed bread? ›

underproof dough will spring back completely correctly, proof will spring back slowly and only halfway, and overproof dough won't spring back at all. after baking, the underproof dough will be dense and deformed. while the dough that was ready will be fluffy and light. and the overproof dough will be flat and deflated.

How do you know if bread is Overproofed after baking? ›

What to look for in an over proofed loaf. Similar to the signs of over proofed dough, an over proofed loaf will be very flat, without much rise or retention of shaping. Over proofing destroys the structural integrity of the bread, so loaves that have gone over are unable to hold their shape in the oven.

Can you still bake dough that doesn't rise? ›

Fortunately, this is a problem that's relatively easy to diagnose and solve. If your bread dough doesn't rise, you can still use it and fix it by changing up the temperature or mixing in more yeast.

Is it better to proof in the fridge or room temperature? ›

The dough should generally be proofed for around 1 to 4 hours at a warm temperature or overnight (or more) at a cold refrigerator temperature. As the proofing temperature increases, the total fermentation time will decrease.

How do you know when proofing is complete? ›

Look: Your dough should be about double the size it was when it started. If it's in a bowl covered with plastic wrap, then use a marker to trace an outline of the dough on the plastic — the dough is done rising/proofing when it stretches beyond that mark by about double.

What should bread look like after proofing? ›

As bread proofs, it typically doubles (or nearly doubles) in size, becoming puffy and pillowy. Professional bakers often use terms that are different from the ones used by home bakers. In this case, there are several different terms that are used interchangeably to describe this step.

How long should artisan bread rest? ›

Let the Dough Rest

It needs to sit for anywhere from 8-18 hours. I always just mix up the dough the day before, but technically you could do it early in the morning and have it for dinner as well. Just know the longer it sits, the better the texture will be so I recommend at least 12 hours.

Why didn't my artisan bread rise? ›

Yeast is too cold If the other ingredients are too cold, it could cause some of the yeast to die. Was the dough kneaded properly? Dough may not have been kneaded enough. Kneading 'exercises' the gluten in the bread and gives it the elasticity to hold in the air bubbles produced by the yeast.

How do you know when artisan bread is done? ›

“For crusty artisan bread, one way to determine doneness is by thumping the bottom of the loaf,” says Barb. “Give it a few quick knocks on the bottom of the loaf with your knuckles; if it sounds hollow, that tells you it's fully baked.”

Should you cover bread when letting it rise? ›

Covering your dough correctly is a crucial step here. For best results, we want a non-porous, tight-fitting cover that will keep the dough from becoming too cool or developing a skin. And a towel doesn't cut it: The porous material allows heat to escape, causing the dough to lose temperature.

Should I cover bread out of the oven? ›

It depends. If you plan to eat the bread within the next few days, keeping it in a bread box or paper or linen bread bag works well.

Do you cover bread in proofing basket? ›

Place the dough in the basket with the seam side facing up. Cover the basket and allow the dough to proof according to the recipe's instructions. A lot of bakers like to use a shower cap to cover their dough, as the elastic clings easily to the sides of the basket. A proper bowl cover is another great choice.

What does covering bread in the oven do? ›

Some bread is baked in a covered pan to trap heat and steam to maximize oven spring and produce a crusty loaf. Bread is usually uncovered during the last part of baking to allow it to brown.

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