Today was my first attempt at making bread, and it came out pretty damn perfect. This made an outstanding grilled cheese sandwich.

Here's the recipe I followed:
www.emmafontanella.com/the-easiest-no-knead-bread

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A few things which may or may not have played a factor in this working as well as it did:

1. I went out and bought high gluten bread flour even though I already had a lot of all purpose in the house. And of course I sifted.

2. I bought Italian dry yeast rather than just using the standard stuff at the grocery store.

3. I ignored the American measurements and weighed everything.

@voltronic Good job! Glad you're enjoying bread making. I never use all purpose flour for anything (I'd use it for cookies or cakes but I can't make that stuff cuz I'd eat it. LOL)

I doubt the yeast mattered, TBH. I use Red Star ADY that I keep in the freezer and it works great.

Weighing is key. Good choice.

Be aware that the percent water needed varies with the indoor weather in your house. :) It's perfect bread weather here with moderate humidity and just warm enough temps.

Bon Apetite!

@TrueBloodNet
Thanks for the tip on the water. That makes sense. I have central air so in the warm months the humidity stays pretty consistent.

I looked into more expensive specialty flour, but ended up going with King Arthur organic bread flour.

As for yeast, you're probably right but I used this since the reviews were so great and because I want to eventually make pizza and focaccia.
a.co/d/c4WTpMd

@voltronic The only time the 'yeast' seems to matter is if you're making sour dough (which gives me a tummy ache 🤷🏻‍♀️ ) or if it goes bad but ADY kept in the freezer would likely outlast humanity. LOL!

Anyway, I usually make about 50% moderately high hydration whole wheat bread and that can be like fencing with the environment! :)

I hope you enjoy the adventure!

@TrueBloodNet
I tend to automatically think that specific yeast strains matter, because I'm a home brewer and in that case it's one of the most critical ingredients.

@voltronic Yeah, most breads it's not as critical except stuff that has a very long growing time, often in a fridge and that's due to added sourness. Although everyone's taste buds are different, I kinda think folks who say they could taste the difference in yeast in a sandwhich loaf or italian/french boule are hallucinating.

@TrueBloodNet
This calls for a double-blind tasting to see if they are making it up or not.

For beer, yeast makes a massive difference in flavor, but the growing time is measured in months so that's a long time to influence things.

@voltronic Breadmaking is the ultimate expression of the art and science of cookery.

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