I’ve packed all my stuff, cleaned everything, thrown so much out . . . I’m moving to Basel on Sunday and I’m getting read for it! Yeyy. That’s why I stayed the whole day at home. I had to get all these rather annoying things done. Now my room looks very clean and rather empty. Well done, Salome!
Still, I had to make my day somewhat more fun, and a full day at home is perfect for bread baking. Unfortunately, I realized this just after breakfast, so I didn’t have time to get my sourdough ready.
That lead to the first requirement: I wanted to use a yeast formula with no pre-ferment.
Secondly, I had some buttermilk which had to get used.
Thirdly, I wanted some whole grains – baking white bread is fun, because of all the nice holes you can achieve, but it always causes me bad stomach-sensations, because I end up eating to much. So, third requirement, a whole-grain recipe!
Tadaa tadaa: I found a nice Buttermilk Whole-Wheat Bread formula!
I just had this bread for dinner, and it is a big hit. You’ve got to try it, it’s so incredible light, even though its 100 percent whole-wheat. And the dough is simply a dream to handle, I never had a whole-wheat dough that behaved like this.
But it requires an effort: I kneaded for 30 minutes by hand, using the bertinet technique. during the last ten minutes I added gradually more water, the dough was able to absorb at least 50 ml, I’d guess. After the kneading the dough felt very smooth.
The dough has to rise twice before it gets shaped. It’s a pleasantly warm day today, around 75° F – maybe that’s the reason why this dough rised so beautifully. It was a real joy to watch it. It rose as high as many white flour doughs do! First rise: ~1 h 45 min, second rise ~1 h. After shaping, I wettened the dough slightly and rolled it in coarse wheat.
The next time, I’ll add less honey. (The bread is subtle sweet, which is tasty and you’d think that it’s the natural sweetness of the wheat if you wouldn’t know better. But I found something about this subtle sweetness disturbing, too.) And more important, I’ll bake it at a higher temperature. When I checked the loaves after 30 minutes, it was still incredibly soft on the outside. So I gave it 10 more minutes at 230°C, in order to achieve somewhat of a crust. This worked, but I’d still prefer a somewhat crisper crust. Next time I’ll start baking at 200°C, take the loaves out of the pan after 20 minutes and maybe lower the temperature if required.
The recipe is originally from Laurel’s Kitchen Bread Book and got posted here on thefreshloaf.com. I did the version without a biga. (but I’m planning on trying it with a biga soon as well.)
I’m sending this to Susan for Yeastspotting

13 comments
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August 12, 2009 at 9:10 pm
Ryan
A lot of american whole wheat breads have added sweeteners to cover up bitterness. I usually cut the amount of sweetener in half and find that it doesn’t come out quite so strange.
August 13, 2009 at 8:22 pm
salome89
thanks for answering, Ryan. I’ve never minded the “bitterness” which is supposed to be there in whole-wheat. I’m sure that some honey contributes in a positive way to the flavour, but 1/4 cup is to much for my taste. One tablespoon is probably (more than) enough for me. I’ll experiment with this recipe some more!
Salome
August 14, 2009 at 6:26 am
Susan/Wild Yeast
What a beautiful light loaf, it’s hard to believe it’s 100% whole wheat! This will be one to try. I may use white wheat flour which is less bitter than red, and cut the honey also.
August 14, 2009 at 8:16 am
salome89
Hi Susan,
right now I’ve a second batch fermenting and I made some changes. For instance I added a preferment (sourdough), autolysed the rest of the flour, increased the amount of water, cut down on honey. . . I’ll post about the results later and I hope that I’ll get even better results.
August 14, 2009 at 7:03 am
YeastSpotting August 14, 2009 | Wild Yeast
[...] Buttermilk Whole-Wheat Bread [...]
August 14, 2009 at 10:24 am
Stefanie
The loaves look very delicious.
I baked this bread some weeks ago and it is really great. One time with yoghurt instead of buttermilk and one time with buttermilk. It was both times very fluffy.
And I give the recipe to my sister, how is a beginner in baking bread, and she was so enthusiastic about her bread
I am very curious about the preferment-experiment.
August 16, 2009 at 7:53 pm
salome89
hallo Stefanie,
This bread looks similar to mine. I’m wondering how the punching down which is required in my recipe affects the bread, whether the flavour/consistency really improves, even when baked with a preferment. I made a second batch just a couple days ago (with a preferment (sourdough) and some other changes), and just have to upload the pictures, then the post is ready. so check here soon again, it should be online tomorrow night.
Did you notice a difference when baking with yoghurt instead of buttermilk? I’m very curious if the buttermilk really provides “better” bread.
August 14, 2009 at 3:13 pm
Mimi
I made the Laurels Kitchen sour corn rye a few weeks ago and it was amazing. I was thinking about going back and trying another kind of bread. Your bread looks so light for whole wheat. I may have to give this one a try next!
August 14, 2009 at 4:17 pm
bergamot
This bread looks great. I like whole wheat bread so I am gonna try this.
September 16, 2009 at 6:40 pm
Nichole, Owner, Fullearths, Etc. Soap
Hi! I made some of this bread today, and had a question about it.
How do you all get the slit on top.. When I slit my loaves, they deflated, so I stuck them in the oven anyway, but they never really rose back up??? When is the proper time to slit? should I let them rise again, AFTER slitting the top?
Also, my loaves came out with a hard crust on top, anything I can do (before or after baking) to keep it soft?
thanks!!
n
September 16, 2009 at 8:47 pm
salome89
Hi Nichole,
it can be hard to get the right timing for scoring the bread. What I always do, is the “poke test” – you poke the dough with your finger (maybe 1 cm deep, without damaging the “dough skin”), when it springs back quickly, it hasn’t risen enough yet. when it springs back slowly, it’s time to score and put the loaf into the oven (Don’t let it rise again after scoring), when it doesn’t spring back the loaf is overproofed and is likely to deflate after scoring. better don’t score then and let the loaf proof less the next time.
I never had the hard-crust-problem, but one thing you should try is to lower the baking temperature slightly (by 20 degrees) and/or cover the bread with an aluminium foil after 20 minutes of the bake. and you could brush the crust with some water after the bake. find out what works best for you! Each oven is different.
Salome
September 16, 2009 at 9:52 pm
Nichole, Owner, Fullearths, Etc. Soap
Thank you! That is very helpful! what if I just don’t score.. , is that ok? My loaves were pretty high, before I scored, if I had put them in the oven, would they had stayed that high?
n
September 17, 2009 at 11:01 am
salome89
it should be ok if you don’t score, even though there’s a purpose for scoring. but if the breads have already risen to much, better don’t score – because then there’s still a chance that they won’t collapse. but even if you don’t score and the loaves have overproofed very much, it’s possible that they collapse in the oven. So, better try to get the timing right for putting them in the oven, then you’ll be able to score them and you’ll have beautiful, high loaves.
Salome