The first thing required for making wholesome bread is the utmost
cleanliness; the next is the soundness and sweetness of all the
ingredients used for it; and, in addition to these, there must be
attention and care through the whole process.
Salt is always used in bread-making, not only on account of its
flavor, which destroys the insipid raw state of the flour, but because
it makes the dough rise better.
In mixing with milk, the milk should be boiled--not simply scalded,
but heated to boiling over hot water--then set aside to cool before
mixing. Simple heating will not prevent bread from turning sour in the
rising, while boiling will act as a preventative. So the milk should
be thoroughly scalded, and should be used when it is just blood warm.
Too small a proportion of yeast, or insufficient time allowed for the
dough to rise, will cause the bread to be heavy.
The yeast must be good and fresh if the bread is to be digestible and
nice. Stale yeast produces, instead of vinous fermentation, an
acetous fermentation, which flavors the bread and makes it
disagreeable. A poor, thin yeast produces an imperfect fermentation,
the result being a heavy, unwholesome loaf.
If either the sponge or the dough be permitted to overwork
itself--that is to say, if the mixing and kneading be neglected when
it has reached the proper point for either--sour bread will probably
be the consequence in warm weather, and bad bread in any. The goodness
will also be endangered by placing it so near a fire as to make any
part of it hot, instead of maintaining the gentle and equal degree of
heat required for its due fermentation.
Heavy bread will also most likely be the result of making the dough
very hard and letting it become quite cold, particularly in winter.
An almost certain way of spoiling dough is to leave it half made, and
to allow it to become cold before it is finished. The other most
common causes of failure are using yeast which is no longer sweet, or
which has been frozen, or has had hot liquid poured over it.
As a general rule, the oven for baking bread should be rather quick
and the heat so regulated as to penetrate the dough without hardening
the outside. The oven door should not be opened after the bread is put
in until the dough is set or has become firm, as the cool air admitted
will have an unfavorable effect upon it.
The dough should rise and the bread begin to brown after about fifteen
minutes, but only slightly. Bake from fifty to sixty minutes and have
it brown, not black or whitey brown, but brown all over when well
baked.
When the bread is baked, remove the loaves immediately from the pans
and place them where the air will circulate freely around them, and
thus carry off the gas which has been formed, but is no longer needed.
Never leave the bread in the pan or on a pin table to absorb the odor
of the wood. If you like crusts that are crisp do not cover the
loaves; but to give the soft, tender, wafer-like consistency which
many prefer, wrap them while still hot in several thicknesses of
bread-cloth. When cold put them in a stone jar, removing the cloth, as
that absorbs the moisture and gives the bread an unpleasant taste and
odor. Keep the jar well covered and carefully cleansed from crumbs and
stale pieces. Scald and dry it thoroughly every two or three days. A
yard and a half square of coarse table linen makes the best
bread-cloth. Keep in good supply; use them for no other purpose.
Some people use scalding water in making wheat bread; in that case the
flour must be scalded and allowed to cool before the yeast is
added--then proceed as above. Bread made in this manner keeps moist in
summer much longer than when made in the usual mode.
Home-made yeast is generally preferred to any other. Compressed yeast,
as now sold in most grocery stores, makes fine light, sweet bread, and
is a much quicker process, and can always be had fresh, being made
fresh every day.