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A handy bread machine recipe for a delicious, conveniently made loaf using soaked flour for much improved nutrition and digestibility.
Homemade bread is making a comeback! The convenience of using a bread machine recipe is part of the reason why as more and more people opt to make their own with quality ingredients they source themselves.
Quality over convenience is an idea whose time has come in the bread department. The general public is awakening to the dangers of white flour, one of the “displacing foods of modern commerce” as described by Dr. Weston A. Price in his nutritional classic Nutrition and Physical Degeneration.
This is a radical change from even just a few decades ago.
My Grandmother, like many of her generation, always chose white bread over “brown bread” as she called it. She considered whole wheat bread a sign of poverty because she observed growing up that those who ate white bread were more affluent and educated.
Fortunately, this notion is no longer a popular mindset.
Whole Grain Homemade Bread is Best
Not only is bread made with white flour basically devoid of nutrition, but it also adds to the body’s toxic load with a plethora of additives, chemicals, and unhealthy vegetable oils.
Worse, unlike the white bread even just 10 years ago, store bread frequently contains soy flour. This modern food threatens hormonal health and can trigger digestive problems for those who are sensitive.
Even commercially made sprouted bread masquerading as healthy frequently contains seitan or vital wheat gluten. This additive is nearly impossible to digest when isolated for use by food manufacturers.
Consumers choosing to bake their own bread usually forgo white flour in favor of whole wheat or other whole grains. Popular examples include teff or millet.
While whole grain flour may be fresher when you grind it at home and the bread more nutritious, other problems can emerge.
Modern breadmaking using a bread machine recipe typically employs the use of yeast and high heat. This quickly raises the dough and bakes the bread in a short amount of time.
This contrasts with the slow, natural rise that occurs with fermented dough baked at a lower temperature.
Why Use Soaked Flour?
Science has demonstrated the wisdom of the careful preparation methods of our ancestors. All grains and legumes contain phytic acid, an organic acid that blocks mineral absorption in the intestinal tract.
Powerful anti-nutrients in grain flour are neutralized in as little as 7 hours of soaking in water with small amounts of an acidic medium.
Examples include yogurt, kefir, lemon juice or cider vinegar. Soaking also neutralizes enzyme inhibitors present in the hulls of all grains and adds beneficial enzymes that increase the amount of nutrients present – especially the B vitamins.
For those with gluten intolerance, soaking or fermenting gluten-based grains breaks down this difficult-to-digest plant protein; studies carried out in Italy have found that people with celiac disease can consume genuine sourdough bread without digestive distress or auto-immune symptoms.
I frequently get asked how to make fresh bread at home using the traditional method of soaking flour first combined with the modern convenience of a bread machine.
If you have a breadmaker and would like to transition to a traditional method for making bread while continuing to use this appliance, here’s a bread machine recipe to try.
It is adapted from Healthy4Life by the Weston A. Price Foundation.
Enjoy your fresh-baked loaf courtesy of a blend of modern convenience and Traditional Wisdom!
Bread Machine Recipe using Soaked Flour
A handy bread machine recipe for a delicious conveniently made loaf using the traditional preparation method of soaking flour for much-improved nutrition and digestibility.
Ingredients
- 10 Tbl whole yogurt
- 3/4 cup filtered water
- 4 cups whole grain flour less 3 Tbl, preferably freshly ground
- 2 Tbl butter softened
- 1 Tbl molasses
- 3 Tbl arrowroot powder
- 1 3/4 tsp dried yeast
- 1 tsp sea salt
Instructions
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Mix yogurt with water and mix with the flour to form a dough. Cover and leave in a warm spot on the kitchen counter for 18-24 hours.
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When it is partway through the kneading section, check that all the ingredients have mixed together and observe the consistency of the dough.
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If it is slimy, add some more arrowroot powder. If it’s too dry, add a few more drops of water, drop by drop.
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Proceed as directed for your particular bread machine model to finish baking your traditional loaf!
Once you’ve made your soaked loaf, be sure to save the crusts because they are perfect for making breadcrumbs!
More Traditional Bread Recipes
Interested in traditional breadmaking? Try these other recipes inspired by ancestral wisdom.
lisa
How wet is the flour/water/yogurt mixture supposed to be? I am using spelt flour and it is a very dry mixture. I even added an extra 1/4 cup water but some of the flour is totally dry. I live in Colorado so I didn’t know if that makes a difference?
Lisa in TX
I am having the same issue. How did yours turn out?
Amanda Kate
I do the same soaking method with yoghurt and spelt flour to make a great pizza base and everyone who has ever tried it raves about it….if only they knew it was far superior health wise!!
krkernes
wait, so by mixing the flour with water/yogurt and leaving on the counter overnight–the flour is now soaked? Just want to make sure I’m not missing a step!
Elsha
Would this work with einkorn flour?? I also read Wheat Belly which makes it very clear that today’s wheat is not healthy and should be avoided. I only bake now with einkorn flour which I grind from the einkorn berries.
Bianca
while this is a good article, Sarah, I am most amused by your
grandmother’s perception that “White bread was used by affluent people”
that same perception invaded my poor immigrant upbringing
and clouded their otherwise native intelligence !!
Peasant food is the best !
Carmen
Would buckwheat flour or another gluten free flour work?
Lindsey
Could one use spelt flour instead of wheat?
amy freund
Hi Sarah, thanks for this bread recipe! But I have one issue, I do not have a bread machine and instead have been making all of my bread in my KitchenAid. Do you have a recipe for this style of baking?
thanks!
amy
Terri
Amy, I make it in my Bosch. Please scroll up and see two posts telling how I do it. It works great.
Maggie Goodman Russell via Facebook
whats the arrow root for?…is it just to toughen the dough?…I have to ask because its one of the starch proteins that causes a histamine response so I cannot have it
Megan
Thanks very timely for me. I am just satrting my 1 yr old on once and awhile grains but very choosey over what grains. like spelt not whole wheat yet. mayb some bean flour added. just to see how she does. and want it all to be sprouted or soaked like in the Bible. thanks again.