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Рецепт The Only Recipe for Sandwich Bread You Need
by Confections of a Foodie Bride

It’s probably no surprise to anyone, but I handle the bulk of the grocery shopping around here. And by that, I mean that Jason knows where HEB, Costco, and Aldi are. And that they allegedly sell things other than cheese and wine and Blue Bell.

ALLEGEDLY.

So on the super rare occasion that he has to go grab a forgotten ingredient or two, I make sure my phone is right next to me. Because I know it will ring.

And it will ring more than once. (The over-under is at 3.) (Fair disclosure: Jason would probably rather cut off both his ears with a rusty spoon than send me back to Home Depot for lumber again.)

Why is there artificial smoke flavor in this?

[Confused, because he went for bread and cheese] They… put it in so they don’t actually have to smoke the meat?

I’m reading the bag of bread.

Dude. Gross.

I’m not buying this. Show me how to make it when I get home.

Or… you could go play dinosaur lunchtime tea party upstairs with Landry and just let me do it because as huge a dino-geek as I am, I cannot play that game for one single second more some days.

Enter the last recipe for sandwich bread that you’ll ever need.

It’s light, white, and fluffy. It’s soft, tender, but still holds up to a serrated knife. When I make Landry’s butterfly- or dino-shaped PB&Js for lunch, I don’t throw these scraps away – I eat them in the before-school chaos for my breakfast.

The recipe is even fairly quick and painless, as far as bread goes (assuming you’re not kneading by hand). I have been baking it twice a week, to stay ahead of the lunch curve: once on the weekend and then again on Wednesday nights. And only once has it ever done this:

Don’t skip that step to lower your oven rack. Otherwise, you’ll be sawing off the top of the loaf.

Slice it up, freeze what you don’t need in the next two days, and then tell me that it doesn’t make the very best “plain” turkey sandwich you’ve ever eaten for lunch.

American Sandwich Bread

Light, airy, soft. and tender - it's the only recipe for sandwich bread you'll ever need.

Ingredients

Instructions

Sprinkle yeast over warm water and proof for 10 minutes.

Add the milk, butter, sugar, flour, and salt to the bowl, mixing in low until combined.

Increase speed to medium and knead for 10 minutes, until dough mostly cleans the side of the bowl and is smooth. (If the dough is still very sticky half way through kneading, add a few extra Tbsp flour.)

Transfer to a lightly oiled bowl, cover, and let rise for ~45 minutes in a warm spot.

Spray a loaf pan (original recipe recommends 9-inch, I use a 10-inch) with cooking spray.

Press the dough into a rectangle 1-inch thick, approximately 9-inches long, and then begin rolling the long edge into a cylinder.

Crimp the bottom edge of the dough and lightly press it into the loaf pan, spreading it to the corners.

Cover and let rise for 30 minutes while the oven is preheating to 350 and you're rearranging your oven racks to back in the lower/middle of your oven (remember - top third will look like that sad loaf above!).

Bring 2 cups of water to boil and place it in a small pan in the oven when you place the loaf pan in the oven.

Bake for ~45 minutes, until golden brown.

Let cool in the pan for 5 minutes, then turn out onto a rack to cool completely.

I slice once cool (16 slices + ends) and freeze the bread in stacks of 4 in a large zipper bag. I let the bread thaw overnight in a zipper bag on the counter to make lunches in the morning.

Notes

Yields: 1 loaf, or 16 slices of bread

Source: Cook's Illustrated Cookbook via Smells Like Home

Estimated time: 2 hours 45 minutes