Really. It’s that good. And I made it up myself. Well, I started with a recipe and kept changing it and changing it until I hit on this combination and haven’t changed it since. This is what my family eats. I promise it’s delicious.
Angela’s Crazy Delicious 6 Grain Bread Recipe
Makes 6 loaves. If I had two ovens and a few more bread pans I’d double it, but you can half it or 1/3 it or whatever for your needs.
4 Cups 6 grain cereal (or other rolled grains) You want “regular” rolled grains here, not “quick”–quick oats would just turn to mush
1 1/2 C. Water
2 TB yeast
1 1/2 tsp sugar
5 C. warm water
About 15 Cups flour, half white half wheat
1 Cup Sugar
1 Cup Gluten flour (optional)
1-2 Cups Bean flour (optional)
1 Cup powdered milk
2 TB Salt
6 TB Butter or shortening
350 degrees 40 minutes or thereabouts depending on your oven.
Ready? Okay, let’s get started.
1. Put the 4 cups rolled grains in a pot or bowl that holds more than 4 cups. I use a pot because I don’t actually measure the stuff, I just know about where on the pot to fill it to because I’ve used this same pot for the grain part of this bread forever.
2. Pour hot water over the grains until they are covered by about an inch of water. Hot water from the tap is fine, you don’t need to go heating water for this. Then set it aside to soak. I set mine on the stove because I have limited counter space–I do NOT turn the stove on and cook it, it just sits there.
3. Put the 1 1/2 Cups of warm water, 2 TB yeast, and 1 1/2 tsp sugar in a bowl and let the yeast do it’s thing. It’s okay to stir it around a bit just so all the yeast gets in the water.
4. While the yeast and grains are soaking, get out your giant bowl for the dry ingredients. Sweet husband got this for me one year for Christmas. It rocks.
5. Put about 10 cups of the flour (I like half white and half wheat, but you could go all wheat or all white if you want to), the sugar, gluten flour, powdered milk, bean flour, salt and shortening in the bowl. Grandma’s very cool 2 cup measurer speeds up the process measuring the flour. Thanks, grandma. :)
The bean flour is ground from white beans. It just makes it so my kids are eating beans without knowing it. With a standard electric impact type grain grinder you can just grind beans up. My Country Living Mill has a corn/bean auger to grind beans into flour.
The gluten flour makes the bread hold together better. Gluten=Glue. If I use all white flour or don’t use the rolled grains, I use less gluten flour than 1 cup.
You don’t have to measure exact tablespoons of the shortening–what a hassle getting that stuff out of the measuring spoons! Just put 6 scoops that are approximately tablespoon sized. I promise you won’t mess it up if you’re a little off. I’ve actually forgotten the shortening and the bread turned out okay anyway.
Do not forget the salt. Really, the bread is not that good without it. Edible, but not nearly as tasty. I like Redmond Realsalt. It’s really good. Shameless plug for a fantastic product. :)
6. Now all your dry ingredients are in the bowl, mix them together. It’s okay if the scoops of shortening don’t get mixed up yet. The yeast mixture should be nice and bubbly by now–add it to the bowl.
7. Now we’re going to add the 5 cups of warm water, but don’t go turning on your faucet just yet. Go get your pot of soaking rolled grains.
Pour the water off the soaking grains into your measuring cup until you’ve poured it all off as best you can. Yes some of the grains go along for the ride, it’s okay. This is not rocket science.
I usually get 2-3 cups of water off the grains. Then the rest of the 5 cups I get from the faucet.
8. Once you have the water measured off your grains, add them to the bowl as well. About this time I turn my oven on warm because I use it to raise my dough. If you’ve got a fairly warm place without using your oven, you don’t need to turn your oven on yet.
Now we have everything in the bowl except the remaining flour. See why you need a giant bowl?
9. Mix it all up and add enough of the remaining flour to make it stick together fairly well. Now we’re going to knead it. Some folks are all kinds of fancy and have a mixer that will knead bread for them. Mine will only do about two loaves worth at a time, so I just knead this myself. I divide it into two parts that will be three loaves each for the kneading. It makes it easier to work with and it works out better for the bowls I use to raise the bread in if it’s only half the recipe in each bowl. I also move from my counter to my table to knead. You’ve got to be able to get leverage on the dough, and the counter is too high for me. See if you can lock your elbows with your hands together (CPR style) and reach your kneading surface without needing a stool. If so, it will work better for you. When the table’s been busy with homework or whatnot, I’ve used the counter, I just get a little stool so I’m up a little higher to make it easier. Whew. Got all that? Just trying to make kneading a little easier for you! :) Here’s what the dough looks like when I’m done mixing it in the bowl and it’s ready to knead.
Put some flour on your surface before dumping the dough out and keep it handy to add flour to the dough as you knead.
I’m not giving kneading instructions here as I was my own photographer and it’s kind of difficult to knead and take pictures without getting flour and dough all over the camera, so after I knead the dough, here’s what it looks like.
I have no idea how long I knead each half. I just keep kneading until it’s nice and bouncy and kind of pushes back when I push on it. Not sticky. Okay? And just for Chef Tess, here’s a closeup of the kneaded dough where you can see the yummy rolled grains all mixed in there.
Where were we? Oh yes, step 10.
10. Spray oil a bowl and put your nice ball of dough in it. Then spray the top of the dough with the spray oil, cover it, and put it someplace warm to rise. I cover it with a dishcloth. That’s just how my mom did it. I don’t know if it’s the best way or not, but it works for me. I also use my oven to raise the bread in. I already had it turned on low or warm setting about the time I started mixing up all the ingredients, now I turn it OFF and put the dough in to raise.
11. Wait. Here’s where you can clean up the mess you’ve made so far and go do some jumping jacks or whatever floats your boat for 20-30 minutes or so. The bread is raising. You want it about double in size, but if it gets bigger than that it’s okay. I’ve had it hanging over the edge of the bowl before. The bread still turned out fine. So once it’s at least double its size, it’s done raising. Beautiful.
12. If the top is kind of dry, spray it with some water from a spray bottle to soften it up again. Then punch down the dough and dump it out of the bowl to form the loaves. Divide each bowl into 3 equal-ish balls.
12. Shape the dough into loaves. There’s probably a million ways to shape a bread loaf. Here’s what I do. Press out the air while shaping one of the dough balls into a rectangular shape about as wide as a bread pan, maybe a little wider. I kind of roll my hands from the bottom to the top to get air bubbles out–you could use a rolling pin if you want and get the same effect. I just don’t like washing more dishes than I need to, so I press it out with my hands.
Then roll the dough into a log being careful not to trap air bubbles in the layers.
My log is usually a bit longer than the bread pan. Tuck the ends of the log under itself and wiggle it a bit to even it all out.
12. Then put it in your greased bread pan. I use el-cheapo bread pans and spray oil. They work fine. I don’t wash them out after I bake bread in them, I just wipe out any residual grease and they’re ready to go for the next round. Maybe that’s unsanitary, but they’ve become nicely seasoned this way–like cast iron.
13. Put the loaves somewhere to rise. I turn my oven on to pre-heat and put them along the back of the oven because that’s where the oven vents so it’s nice and warm. Cover them again. I use the same dish cloths I used earlier.
Wow, I think this is one of my longest posts ever. If you are still reading, you are awesome! Hang in there, we’re almost done!
Let the bread raise in the loaf pans for 20 minutes or so. It depends on how warm you have your raising place as to how fast the loaves will raise. Don’t let them raise until they look like a loaf of bread–they do some more raising in the oven, so that will make for “airy” loaves where the bread doesn’t stick together very well. About like this is fine.
14. Put your bread in the oven and cook it at 350 for 40 minutes or so. 40 minutes is perfect in my oven. Then take the loaves out, get them out of the pan, and let them cool. I usually just set them out on the same dish cloths I used to cover them. Multi-purpose. I rub butter on the top while they’re hot to soften it up a bit.
Super delicious. Making me hungry . . . I think I’ll go have some bread and jam now.
Keep preparing! Angela
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Cindy (Letters From Midlife) says
Yum! We're getting lots of snow here in Indiana so I'm thinking tomorrow will be a good bread baking day. Thanks for the inspiration.
Angela's Mom says
I've done the first raise (or is it rise??) in the dehydrator. Put a damp dishtowel over it so the dough won't get a dry crust(the dishtowel is a familial thing…my mom and her mom did the same thing).
The Hermit says
I think my wife Miriam could do this. She likes to bake. I will show her this post when she comes home this weekend and maybe she and I can give it a try.
Rainbow Rivers says
I love making homemade bread, I will definatly have to try this one! Thanks for sharing!
Adrianna says
I'd love to try this recipe out.
Where do you buy your 6 grain mix? Or if you make it, what's in it?
Melonie says
Wow, this sounds scrumptious!!! And the length of the post was well worth it. LOL
Angela says
Cindy–we're buried in snow also and yes, hot bread is especially good on a cold day :)
Mom–That would work if I were doing a small batch like you do. What do you do? 2 or 3 loaves? With two big ol' bowls to raise and a house that's never very warm (especially in the winter), I need the oven. :)
Hermit–let me know how it turns out :) I think you'll like it if you can get it made.
Rainbow–you're very welcome. It's our favorite and I've had a few people local ask for the recipe, so I thought I'd give them the whole tutorial with it.
Adrianna–I get my 6 grain from Honeyville Grain. honeyvillegrain.com Other food storage places and granaries have it as well. 7 or 9 grain cereal would also work as would plain old rolled oats. The 6 grain cereal from Honeyville has Red Whole Wheat Flakes, White Whole Wheat Flakes, Barley Flakes, Oatmeal, Rye Flakes, and Sunflower Seed.
Melonie–it's worth the extra effort to make this over plain white bread. I really like it. It's the norm here though, so the kids get real excited when dad brings home a loaf of store white bread. Funny kids. ;)
Conservative Scalawag says
I really need to intruduce my wife to your blog, cause that looks real good.
Chef Tess says
Yup…soaking the 6 grain in water instead of cooking it is genius! That's how I've done oatmeal bread for years and it always ends up super moist instead of an oven-produced brick (like other recipes that add the grain dry and it just sucks the life out of your bread). Well done my dear! Oh…and thanks for the shout out on the dough kneading too…you know that made me smile really big! Hey…I need one of your mills with the bean auger! Wow! You know what I'm doing with my tax return right?!
frugalgravy says
OH, that looks divine! We need to eat more healthy bread and that is just a beautiful loaf!!!
GW says
What a great blog & bread recipe! Someone linked here from the Bread Basket forum at cubits.org (not live quite yet, but soon!). I must try this. Soaking the oats first is a great idea. Your photos are very helpful, too. My doughs end up too sticky so much of the time and I'm afraid to add too much flour for fear the bread will end up too dense.
Farm Girl Wannabe says
I made your bread the other day and it was SOOOOOO good. It made 8 loaves because my pans are smaller. I gave 5 away and everyone said it was my best bread yet. I added chopped dried cranberries, chopped walnuts, ground flax and sunflower seeds to 4 of the loaves. Will definitely be making this one again and again! Thanks for sharing!
Angela says
Farm Girl–So glad you tried it and liked it! I gave this recipe to my mom and when we went to visit my oldest was eating her bread and said, "I hate to tell you this mom, but grandma's bread is better than yours." Huh? She made it with my recipe! Too funny. Glad yours turned out well :)
Laury says
Love your funny posts!
I just found you today, and I'm looking for a 9-tray Excalibur dehytrator, a pressure canner, canning jars and supplies, etc. My email address is laurywindsor@gmail.com.
Please send me info on prices, etc. and hopefully I can place an order! Thanks! Laury Windsor
Abbey says
All I could find was 7 grain cereal, will that work?
Angela says
As long as it is a rolled grain cereal and not a cracked grain cereal it should be fine. Enjoy! :)
Doris Thompson says
How do you “keep” your extra loaves until you get them all eaten? There are only 2 of us so we are going to have to take our time to get through 6 loaves.
Can’t wait to try this but I am concerned about what to do with it.
I am trying to get away from putting things into the freezer to keep them, not knowing each day holds in today’s times.
Angela says
We freeze our extras. You could cut the recipe in thirds and just make two loaves at a time if you don’t want to freeze the extras.