Ale Bread

by cookingbytheseatofmypants in Cooking > Bread

11817 Views, 76 Favorites, 0 Comments

Ale Bread

Ale-Bread-the-Resurrection.jpg
it took me several tries to perfect this recipe, but I've finally got it right where I wanted it. The best Ale Bread I've ever had the pleasure of noshing.

Overview

Ale-Bread-the-Resurrection.jpg
It took me 133 days to get up the nerve to face the dough, which had failed so completely to be dough-like on my last attempt that I described it at the time by saying:

"...And still the dough stuck to hands, mixer parts and floured counter tops like a living thing fighting for its life..."

But in the end, I beat the bloody thing!

In the days since June, I've occasionally searched for other recipes. For the most part, I found the same recipe repeated, but then I came across this post at Farmgirl Fare , and when I compared it to a comment left on my original post, I realized where everything had gone wrong!

For one thing, the recipe I had didn't call for enough flour. The ones I was finding now called for an additional cup. Secondly the first recipe we'd tried didn't call for any sugar, which meant the yeast in the beer didn't have anything to munch on. No yeast growth, no rise, I had to try this again!

And it was good.

Ale Bread Adapted from a recipe at Farmgirl Fare and a recipe I've made before, with a twist of inspiration and a pint of stout

Ingredients

Ale-Bread-the-Resurrection.jpg
Bread mix:

  • 3 cups unbleached flour
  • 1 tbsp.sugar
  • 1 good pinch kosher salt
  • 1 tbsp. baking powder
  • 1 bunch finely chopped scallions
  • 1 cup grated sharp cheddar cheese
  • 12 oz. beer (I used Shiner bock, a dark German beer)

Glaze (optional):

  • 1 egg
  • 2 tbsp. water

Method

Ale-Bread-the-Resurrection.jpg
Glaze:

Whisk egg and water until frothy in a small mixing bowl.

Bread:

Heat oven to 375°F. Combine flour, sugar, salt, baking powder, scallions and cheese in a large mixing bowl or the bowl of your stand mixer. Slowly mix in beer and mix until just combined. Batter will be thick. Spread in a greased 8" loaf pan, brush with glaze if desired. Sprinkle with a bit of shredded cheese.

Bake until golden and toothpick inserted in center of loaf comes out clean, about 45 minutes.

Cool in pan on rack for 10 minutes. turn out onto rack, place top side up and allow to cool completely. Reheat if desired before serving.

(I don't recommend serving this straight from the oven, or even for the first hour, as the crust is unbelievably tough, but softens as it cools.)

What I Would Have Done Differently Had I Thought of It at the Time

Ale-Bread-the-Resurrection.jpg
This post is dedicated to Lis, at la Mia Cucina , who prodded me into baking in the first place. The bread was fabulous, and will be my first choice whenever I make soups or stews from now on. It's dense, flavorful and oh-so-yummy that it nearly made me want to cry.

See this recipe and many more at Cooking... by the seat of my Pants!