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April 1, 2010 by: Cathy

Spelt Bread and Pizza: HBinFive

The second bread in the HBinFive April 1st Bread Braid, is Olive Spelt Bread. I don’t particularly like olives so I omitted them.

I made a free-form artisan loaf.  However, once I tasted it, I realized this dough would make great sandwich bread.  The addition of yogurt makes it very moist and delicious! I also like that it’s made with mostly spelt flour. 

spelt-bread 050

 

Spelt Bread with Yogurt

Adapted from: Healthy Bread In Five Minutes Olive Spelt Bread by Jeff Hertzberg and Zoe Francois

This recipe is easily doubled or halved.

 

I used a mixture of KAF all-purpose flour and spelt flour that I got from the farmer’s market.  I couldn’t find plain yogurt the day I went shopping so I ended up using low-fat vanilla yogurt.  It added a little sweetness.  I liked it!

Ingredients:

  • 4 cups spelt flour
  • 2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons granulated yeast, or 2 packets
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt
  • 1/4 cup vital wheat gluten
  • 2 cups lukewarm water
  • 2 cups plain whole milk yogurt (or nonfat)

 

Directions:

  1. To make the dough, whisk together the flours, yeast, salt, and vital wheat gluten in a large bowl. 
  2. Combine the water and yogurt and mix them with the dry ingredients without kneading, using a spoon or Danish Dough Whisk. 
  3. Cover and allow the dough to rest at room temperature until it rises and collapses, approximately 2 hours. 
  4. Refrigerate in a lidded container and use over the next 7 days.
  5. On baking day, dust the surface of the refrigerated dough with flour and cut off a 1-pound piece.  Dust the piece with more flour and quickly shape it into a ball by stretching the surface of the dough around to the bottom on all four sides, rotating the ball a quarter-turn as you go.
  6. Allow the dough to rest, loosely covered with plastic wrap, on a pizza peel prepared with cornmeal or lined with parchment paper for 90 minutes.
  7. Thirty minutes before baking time, preheat the oven to 450 degrees F, with a baking stone on the middle rack and an empty steam pan underneath.
  8. Just before baking, dust the top with flour and slash the loaf diagonally with 1/4-inch-deep parallel cuts, using a serrated knife or lame.
  9. Slide the loaf directly onto the baking stone.  Pour 1 cup of hot water into the steam pan, and quickly close the oven door.  Bake the loaf for about 35 minutes, until richly browned and firm.  Remove the parchment paper about two-thirds of the way through the bake to ensure the bottom is browned evenly.
  10. Allow the bread to cool on a rack before slicing or serving.

 

I really liked the flavor of this loaf.  I tested it with my trusty peanut butter test and it passed with flying colors.  I didn’t take a photo of the slice with peanut butter on it.  I just ate it!

spelt-bread 049

 

This bread also tastes good toasted and spread with Carrot Marmalade.   

 


Spelt Pizza with Pesto and Pine Nuts 

I also made pizza using the Spelt Bread dough.  I wasn’t sure how this dough would work for pizza, but necessity is the mother of invention as they say.  The evening I decided to make this, my son had a track meet and when we got back, I wasn’t up to making anything time consuming for dinner.  I already had this dough fermenting in the refrigerator so I decided to use it for pizza.

spelt-bread 023

 

To make the pizza, I spread the dough out as thin as I could with my hands and shaped it into a round pizza.  Then, I parbaked it on the baking stone for about 7 – 10 minutes.

spelt-bread 017 

 

Then, I added some pesto and pine nuts.  I didn’t have much in the way of toppings in my refrigerator except pizza sauce and pepperoni and I wasn’t sure if that combination would taste right with this dough.  So I opted for the pesto and pine nuts instead.

spelt-bread 018

 

Then, I sprinkled shaved parmesan cheese over the top.

spelt-bread 020 

 

And baked it until the cheese was melted.

spelt-bread 026

 

Then I ate it!  It had an interesting flavor but I enjoyed it.

spelt-bread 029

 

I think some grilled chicken would be good with this, but the pizza was good as is. My taste tester liked it as well.  I sent some home with him for lunch, but he ate it for breakfast instead. 😉

I definitely think the spelt dough is a keeper.  I have some spelt grains that I plan to mill into flour. I think this is the perfect bread to experiment on. This one and the Pesto Pine Nut Bread.

 

This Spelt Bread has been YeastSpotted. Please visit Wild Yeast to view all of the lovely breads in the roundup.

 

Thanks for joining me in the bread-baking blog.  Check out the blog BigBlackDog to see the April 1st Bread Braid roundup.

Happy Baking!
Cathy

 

About the HBinFive Baking Group

The HBinFive Baking Group, started by Michelle of Big Black Dogs, is baking through all of the breads in the  Healthy Bread in Five Minutes book. For more information on the new HBinFive baking group, check out Michelle’s blog.

Carrot Bread in a Clay Baker: HBinFive
Making Jam: Carrot Marmalade

Comments

  1. Petra says

    April 1, 2010 at 9:35 am

    Great shape. I wonder what I did different that my bread spread so much. Did you let it rise at all or place it right away in the oven? Mine was haped nicely and than spread sideways during it’s 45 min. rise.

  2. Cathy (breadexperience) says

    April 1, 2010 at 9:42 am

    Hi Petra! I used the fold over method to shape the bread so it made it a little bit tighter. I did let it rise. I shaped the bread first, then made and baked the pizza so the bread was rising while I worked on (and ate) the pizza.

    Plus, I didn’t add any olives in the bread. It might not have been as wet as your dough.

  3. Michelle says

    April 1, 2010 at 11:06 am

    So funny because I considered adding Vanilla Yogurt too and wondered how it would taste! We so enjoyed the Olive Spelt Bread and I will be using more Spelt Flour in the future.

  4. SavoringTime in the Kitchen says

    April 1, 2010 at 11:15 am

    I think the Spelt bread is a keeper! That pizza looks delicious and I like the idea of adding some chicken to it.

  5. Bonnie says

    April 1, 2010 at 11:38 am

    I love that you used the vanilla yogurt. Would you do this again. This was a very wet dough, but I loved the texture and crumb.

  6. Mama Peck says

    April 1, 2010 at 12:09 pm

    Your bread looks so good! I have yet to make a free-form loaf that doesn’t spread and flatten so I love to see examples that prove it can be done. 🙂 Your pizza looks terrific as well. Great idea to parbake it first.

  7. Cathy (breadexperience) says

    April 1, 2010 at 12:19 pm

    Yes, I will most likely use vanilla yogurt when I make this bread again. It’s really good! I loved the texture as well.

    I’m beginning to really like Spelt Flour as well. Hope to be doing more with it.

  8. Cathy (breadexperience) says

    April 1, 2010 at 12:25 pm

    Mama Peck, I’ve had trouble with free-form loaves spreading as well. I learned some techniques in the BBA Challenge to help prevent that. I’ll try to document that process with photos in one of my future HBinFive posts.

  9. Teresa Bjork says

    April 1, 2010 at 5:21 pm

    I’m liking the spelt flour breads, too. The olive loaf looks pretty. And pesto pizza sounds so good right now!

  10. Cristie says

    April 1, 2010 at 8:35 pm

    Your loaf looks great. Cathy, what else have you used spelt in? I wish I could love this bread, but it hasn’t hit me with the same overwhelming enjoyment that most of the group has expressed. I’m wondering if my flour isn’t up to snuff . . . any thoughts for me?

  11. Cathy (breadexperience) says

    April 1, 2010 at 10:45 pm

    Cristie,

    Is it the flavor or the texture that you don’t like about the spelt bread? It could be your flour or it could be that you just don’t like spelt. Or, maybe you haven’t found the right bread formula yet.

    I just recently started experimenting with spelt. My first attempt was the 100% sourdough rye bread from the BBA Challenge. I made it with a mixture of spelt and rye flours, and it was a flop. Yuck!

    My next bread was the HBinFive Pesto & Pine Nut Bread Bread which, as you know, is made with a mixture of white whole wheat flour, spelt flour and all-purpose flour. That bread tasted great and so did this one.

    I used Arrowhead Mills Organic Spelt for the first couple of breads. This time, I used some spelt I got from the farmer’s market. I want to grind my own flour, but haven’t done that yet.

    My plan is to keep experimenting with spelt to see what works and what doesn’t.

    You might want to keep experimenting with it as well, but there are a lot of other breads/flours out there to love. No one says you have to like them all. 🙂

  12. Elwood says

    April 2, 2010 at 9:34 am

    Your pizza looked great. I loved all the shaved parm on it.

  13. Femalechef says

    April 2, 2010 at 10:19 am

    WOW looks great all of it!!!

  14. Joanne says

    April 2, 2010 at 5:10 pm

    That pizza is TOTALLY making my mouth water! Love the parmesan topping. so perfect!

    I thought the yogurt bread made it much more sandwich-y as well!

  15. Cristie says

    April 3, 2010 at 12:40 am

    Cathy, Thanks for the lesson on spelt. I used Arrowhead Mills Organic Spelt as well. I’m just not sure what it was that went wrong with this bread. I used Greek yogurt, it is a great product, the same yeast I always use and quality olives. Go figure? I will not give up on spelt. Thanks for your wonderful words.

  16. Jenny says

    April 3, 2010 at 11:17 pm

    The pizza looks yummy. Love pesto! I made a more traditional pizza with the olive spelt dough and it turned out pretty tasty.
    ~Jenny~

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