Iz's Vegan Easy French Bread
Iz's Vegan Easy French Bread

Hey everyone, it’s Brad, welcome to our recipe site. Today, I will show you a way to prepare a distinctive dish, iz's vegan easy french bread. One of my favorites. For mine, I will make it a little bit unique. This will be really delicious.

Iz's Vegan Easy French Bread Please feel free to fill this up with questions. I would love for everyone to learn to enjoy simple, fresh bread that can be made at home. This french bread recipe is easy and happens to be vegan too!

Iz's Vegan Easy French Bread is one of the most well liked of recent trending meals on earth. It’s simple, it’s quick, it tastes yummy. It’s appreciated by millions daily. They are nice and they look fantastic. Iz's Vegan Easy French Bread is something that I’ve loved my whole life.

To begin with this particular recipe, we must first prepare a few ingredients. You can cook iz's vegan easy french bread using 4 ingredients and 39 steps. Here is how you cook it.

The ingredients needed to make Iz's Vegan Easy French Bread:
  1. Make ready 15 3/4 oz bread flour
  2. Make ready 1/2 oz salt
  3. Take 1/4 oz yeast
  4. Prepare 11 3/4 oz water

It makes two standard baguettes, about a foot long and I am telling you, I cannot resist warm bread right out of the oven. Bread is, and has always been, my downfall. I did the other day, so I whipped up this ridiculously easy Vegan French Bread in my bread machine, and before I knew it I was reading to start dipping! Just looking at those soft, chewy chunks of bread is making my hungry all over again!

Steps to make Iz's Vegan Easy French Bread:
  1. All measurements are by weight. If you don't have a scale, here are alternative measurements:
  2. Bread flour - 3 cups
  3. Salt - 2 1/2 teaspoons
  4. Yeast - 1/4 oz package of Rapid Rise Yeast (If you use this type, you will NOT have to mix with warm water first.)
  5. Water - 1 1/2 cups
  6. Ok, now for the bread. Put the flour in a bowl.
  7. Add the salt and mix thoroughly.
  8. Add yeast and mix thoroughly.
  9. Add water and mix until incorporated. (Your hands will work fine for this.)
  10. Cover the bowl and let rise for for 20 minutes.
  11. Fold the dough:
  12. Scrape dough into floured surface.
  13. Pick up top edge and stretch/pull/fold the dough down about 2/3 and pat down.
  14. Pull the bottom edge up to the top of the fold and pat.
  15. Pull one side over 2/3 and pat.
  16. Pull other side to the edge of the fold and pat.
  17. Place back in bowl and cover. Allow to rise another 20 minutes.
  18. Fold dough again. Notice that the gluten is starting to develop nicely and the dough is smoothing out.
  19. Step 19 showing gluten development
  20. Allow to rise another 20 minutes.
  21. Fold one last time. Notice the gluten has developed further. This is how we get away without a mixer or kneading the dough a lot. (Actually, kneading/mixing french too much makes for poorer bread.)
  22. Allow to rise for 2 hours. This is a good time for that nap you've been wanting.
  23. Divide the bread. This will make 28 ounces of dough. Which is about 10 rolls, 2 baguettes, 3 boules, or 1 sandwich loaf. Today I will be making some rolls, a boule, and and will figure some other shape for the rest, maybe a peasant/batard sort of thing. So that's three pieces of dough: 1/2, 2/3 of the other half, and the scrap.
  24. Cutting the dough
  25. Ball or boule the pieces of dough, place on a floured surface, cover and allow to rise for 40 minute.
  26. After the dough has risen
  27. Cut the rolls into 5 pieces.
  28. Shape into balls, place on a cornmeal dusted cookie sheet. (DO NOT use cornmeal mix, it has baking powder, flour, and salt added and will burn. You can use rice flour if cornmeal is not available in your area.)
  29. Ball up the boule now and place on a heavily cornmealed surface. Shape the scrap too.
  30. Cover and allow to rise until doubled. This will depend on the temp in your kitchen, but will be around 1 hour for the boule, 40 minutes or so for the scrap, and 25 minutes for the rolls. The temperature today here is 87F, so I won't be waiting that long.
  31. Preheat oven to 450°F. Preheat a baker's stone or cookie sheet as well. Just put it in and turn it on. If you use a cookie sheet, you will need to watch for burning with the boule and scrap. For those of you that didn't check out my profile, I live off grid. For now, my oven consists of a Coleman camp stove with a Coleman camp oven.
  32. I'm putting up pics so you can see that even with meager equipment, you can make good bread.
  33. Slice the top of the rolls with a knife or razor blade and bake until brown, or an internal temp of 180°F - 200°F
  34. Slice, or score, the tops of the boule and scrap.
  35. Use a turner to transfer the scrap to the stone.
  36. Then the boule. If your stone is not large, bake them separately.
  37. Bake until hollow sounding when thumped on the bottom, or 200°F internal temp.
  38. Cool on a wire rack. If you can wait….
  39. Per serving (one roll) - - Calories 166 - Fat 0.1 g - Saturated 0.0g - Polyunsaturated 0.0g - Monounsaturated 0.0g - Trans 0.0g - Cholesterol 0.0mg - Sodium 440.7mg - Potassium 0.0mg - Carbohydrates 31.5g - Dietary Fiber 1.7g - Sugars 0.0g - Protein 6.2g - Vitamin A 0.0% - Vitamin C 0.3% - Calcium 01% - Iron 3.0%

Surely the easiest (and the best) Easy French Baguettes recipe you can find. Self-rising flour: if you cannot find all-purpose flour, you can make yeast-free bread with self-rising flour. Since self-rising flour contains baking powder and salt, omit those from the recipe. Traditional French Bread is adapted for the home. And like all traditional French Bread, it happens to be vegan!

So that’s going to wrap this up for this exceptional food iz's vegan easy french bread recipe. Thanks so much for your time. I’m confident that you can make this at home. There’s gonna be interesting food at home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to save this page in your browser, and share it to your loved ones, colleague and friends. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!