Walnut bread is popular in France, and is excellent with blue cheese butter or Swiss cheese. It makes great chicken salad or ham and Swiss sandwiches
too. You can shape it into a round loaf
or into a 4 ½ x 8 ½” loaf pan. You do
need to toast your nuts – the difference in taste is marked. If you use active dry yeast instead of instant yeast, your rising times will about double.
I keep
roasted walnut oil in my kitchen, but if you don’t have it or can’t find it,
use safflower oil. (I bought mine at Whole Foods last time). I've made this since
the 80’s and although it’s not our regular weekly bread, its a favorite to
make occasionally for good sandwiches or to serve with cheese or soup.
Walnut Bread
1
Package Instant Yeast (2 1/8 teaspoons)
¼ Cup
Brown Sugar
13 ½ Ounces Bread Flour -- 3 cups
2 ½ Ounces Whole Wheat Flour -- 1/2 cup
1
Teaspoon Salt
3
Tablespoons Toasted Walnut Oil
6
Ounces Toasted Walnuts (1 1/2 cup)
Toast
walnuts. Use the steel blade for your processor. Combine all but water and
walnuts in processor bowl. Add water
slowly and process 40 seconds. Add nuts
and process 10 seconds. Press any loose walnut crumbs into dough. Let rest 10 minutes, in a
warm place, right in the covered processor bowl. Make into loaf, either round or for a greased 4 1/2 x 8 1/2" loaf pan, cover, let rise for 30
minutes or until the center of the loaf is 1 inch above the rim of the pan, preheat oven while letting dough rise.
Bake 30-35 minutes at 400°. (If bread is browning too fast, tent a piece of foil over it, until it's done. An instant-read thermometer should read 200°.)
Do not
process too long with walnuts - dough should look marbled.
To toast
nuts, spread them on a baking sheet and bake in a preheated 350° oven for 12-15
minutes. Let cool.
"1 Loaf"
Per Serving:
132 Calories; 3g Fat (20.6% calories from fat); 3g Protein; 23g Carbohydrate;
1g Dietary Fiber; 0mg Cholesterol; 135mg Sodium. Exchanges: 1 1/2 Grain(Starch); 1/2 Fat; 0
Other Carbohydrates.
Not so sure about this one, though I love walnuts. We don't eat enough bread now to make it practical.
ReplyDeleteWell, it's very good bread. I made a loaf today and shared some with Bettie...most folks are happy to get something home-baked.
DeleteIs there any way to make this sans the food processor? TIA
ReplyDeleteI don’t know a good way to easily swirl in the nuts lIke the processor does. I would think you could finely chop your nuts, spread then on your rolled out dough and roll up the dough and shape it into a loaf, it might not look as pretty. It is a delicious bread.
DeleteI made this a month ago and man this was delicious!
ReplyDeleteYes...glad you like it as much as my family does.
Delete