Making bread in a slow cooker

My flat doesn't have an oven. A fabulous sea view, but no oven.

My parents recently gave me a slow cooker.

 I enjoy baking bread. It seemed to me that an oven and a slow cooker essentially work in the same way, and so I decided to try making bread in a slow cooker.

The first hurdle was yeast. I normally (like, always until now) use dried yeast in those convenient sachets. My supermarket doesn't sell convenient sachets, it sells cubes of what is apparently fresh yeast. (Google Images and friends on Twitter, thank you for helping me work this out!)

I have to admit, at this stage, I had some doubts about this bread. Using yeast I'd never seen before and a slow cooker instead of an oven, I could think of many, many things that could go wrong. But I had nothing better to do with my morning, so I thought I would press on regardless!

Ingredients: 1 cube of yeast, 600ish grams of flour, a pinch of salt, about 400ml of lukewarm water, a teaspoon of sugar.

Yeast in a cube
Cube of yeast
Flour
Flour and salt

Mash and stir the yeast into the water/sugar, until it's all dissolved:

Yeast in water and sugar
Yeast dissolved into water and sugar mix


Mix the yeast/water/sugar mixture into the salt/flour mixture until it makes a dough. It should look something like:

Mixing the dough together
Dough, unrisen

Leave to rise, covered loosely with clingfilm, until doubled in size. (This took me about an hour, but may take longer depending on how warm your house is. Don't overheat in an effort to speed the process up, because that will kill the yeast.)

After the first rising
Dough, risen



Get your slow cooker ready, punch down the dough, and then put your punched down, deflated dough into the bowl of the slow cooker. I didn't use baking paper, because I didn't have any in the house, but I would recommend it for getting it out of the pot more easily at the end!


Dough in the slow cooker
In the slow cooker

In the slow cooker with the lid on
In the slow cooker with lid on!

Heat on high for as long as it takes to cook - it took my slow cooker about two hours, but check regularly as it's going to see how long it takes with yours. Note that you will not see a crust forming on the top of your loaf of bread, because of the way slow cookers cook - the crust forms on the bottom and the sides - so you'll need to test the top for springiness.

Try not to touch it until you're fairly sure it's set though, else it will probably collapse. (See below...)


Cooking
Bread, cooking

When it's done, the top will be soft to the touch, but not squashy - you'll know it when you see it, no doubt! Mine looked like below - you'll see that where I touched it after an hour and a half, it's collapsed. I'd avoid doing that, if I were you...


Cooked!
Cooked loaf, still in the slow cooker


Bottom of the loaf
Crusty bottom and sides of the loaf

Wait for it to cool before cutting it, else it will go all gummy. This will be torture, as you'll have to endure the smell of warm fresh-baked bread, and not be able to eat it. Resist.

First cut is the deepest...
Sliced loaf

End of the loaf
Soft, fresh, warm bread

Enjoy!

Heidemarie Chernushin  – (23 September 2013 at 16:01)  

I had the link of your blog "favorited" on my PC at work -- and on a whim, I clicked on it. (Was looking for a "favorite" for something related to work! :) really. I wasn't just slacking!) I'm delighted to see you're blogging again. I look forward to catching up with what's been happening in your life, but, I'll have to do that another time, because I really should get back to work.

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