Ancient Roman Bread Recipe
- 2 pkt Fast-rising dry yeast
- 2 1/2 cups. Tepid water
- 1 cup. Whole-wheat flour
- 1/2 c. Rye flour (Unbleached white flour to make up 2 lbs. 3 ounce. of total weight)
- 1 tsp Salt mixed with:
- 1 Tbsp. Water
- Cornmeal for baking sheets
- Put the tepid water in your electric mixer bowl and dissolve the yeast.
- Use a paper lunch sack for weighing out the flour.
- Put the whole-wheat and rye flour in the bag first, and then make up the weight with the white flour.
- Put 4 cups from the bag into the mixer and whip it for 10 min.
- Add in the salted water.
- If you have a KitchenAid, allow the dough hook to do the rest of the work.
- Otherwise, add in remaining flour by hand.
- Knead till the dough is smooth and elastic.
- Put the dough on a plastic counter and cover with an inverted steel bowl.
- Allow it to rise once, punch it down, and allow it to rise a second time.
- Punch down and form into 2 or possibly 3 loaaves.
- I never use bread pans for this, as they will ruin the crust.
- Place the loaves on baking sheets which have been dusted with cornmeal and allow the loaves to rise till double in bulk.
- Bake in a 450 degree oven about 25 min, or possibly till the crust is golden brown and the loaf light to the touch.
- It should make a hollow sound when you thump your finger on the bottom of the loaf.
- Serving Ideas : Makes 2 or possibly 3 loaves.
- NOTES : See Italian Breadsticks and Crustulum (Bruschetta) for other ways to use this bread recipe.
yeast, water, flour, rye flour, salt, water, cornmeal
Taken from cookeatshare.com/recipes/ancient-roman-bread-65088 (may not work)