SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY RECIPES

facebook share image    twitter share image    pinterest share image    E-Mail share image

JIM LAHEY’S NO-KNEAD BREAD | LODGE CAST IRON



Jim Lahey’s No-knead Bread | Lodge Cast Iron image

Jim Lahey, founder of Sullivan Street Bakery in New York City, has a no-knead bread recipe that just uses a cast iron dutch oven, flour, yeast, water, and salt so anyone can make bakery-quality bread right at home.

Provided by Jim Lahey

Prep Time 18 hours

Cook Time 1 hours

Yield 6 - 8

Number Of Ingredients 5

3 cups of bread flour
1 ¼ teaspoon of salt
¼ teaspoon of instant or active dry yeast
1 ⅓ cups of cool water
of cornmeal, wheat bran, or additional flour for dusting

Steps:

  • In a medium bowl, stir together the flour, salt, and yeast. Add the water. Use a wooden spoon or your hand to mix until you have a wet, sticky dough—about 30 seconds. Make sure it’s really sticky to the touch; if it’s not, mix in another 1-2 tablespoons of water. Cover the bowl and let set at room temperature, out of direct sunlight, until the surface is dotted with bubbles and the dough is more than doubled in size (about 12-18 hours).
  • When the first fermentation is complete, generously dust a work surface with flour. Use a rubber spatula to scrape the dough onto the surface in one piece. When you begin to pull the dough away from the bowl, it will cling in long, thin strands (this is the developed gluten), and it will be quite loose and sticky—do not add more flour. Use lightly floured hands or a bowl scraper or spatula to lift the edges of the dough in toward the center. Nudge and tuck in the edges of the dough to make it round.
  • Place a cotton or linen tea towel (not terry cloth, which tends to stick and may leave lint in the dough) or a large cloth napkin on your work surface and generously dust the cloth with wheat bran, cornmeal, or flour. Use your hands, a bowl scraper, or wooden spatula to gently lift the dough onto the towel so it is seam-side down. If the dough is tacky, dust the top lightly with wheat bran, cornmeal, or flour. Fold the ends of the towel loosely over the dough to cover it and place it in a warm, draft-free spot to rise for 1-2 hours. The dough is ready with it is almost doubled. If you gently poke it with your finger, making an indentation about ¼-inch deep, it should hold the impression. If it doesn’t, let it rise another 15 minutes.
  • Preheat the oven to 475 degrees F 30 minutes before the end of the second rise, with a rack in the lower third position, and place a cast iron dutch oven in the center of the rack.
  • Using pot holders, carefully remove the preheated pot from the oven and uncover it. Unfold the tea towel, lightly dust the dough with flour or bran, lift up the dough, either on the towel or in your hand, and quickly and gently invert it into the pot, seam side up. (Use caution—the pot will be very hot). Cover the pot and bake for 30 minutes.
  • Remove the lid and continue baking until the bread is a deep chestnut color, 15-30 minutes more. Use a heatproof spatula or pot holders to carefully lift the bread out of the pot and place it on a rack to cool thoroughly. Wait until it cools to slice or tear into it, about an hour.

NO-KNEAD BREAD | MARTHA STEWART



No-Knead Bread | Martha Stewart image

This recipe for No-Knead Bread is courtesy of Jim Lahey of New York City's Sullivan Street Bakery and the New York Times.

Provided by Martha Stewart

Categories     Bread Recipes

Yield Makes one 1 1/2-pound loaf

Number Of Ingredients 5

3 cups all-purpose or bread flour, plus more for work surface
1/4 teaspoon instant yeast
1 1/4 teaspoons salt
Olive oil, as needed
Cornmeal or wheat bran, as needed (optional)

Steps:

  • In a large bowl, combine flour, yeast, and salt. Add 1 1/2 cups water and stir until blended; dough will be shaggy and sticky. Coat a second large bowl with olive oil. Transfer dough to oiled bowl and cover bowl with plastic wrap. Let dough rest at least 12 hours, but preferably up to 18, in a room about 70 degrees in temperature. When surface is dotted with bubbles, dough is ready.
  • Lightly flour work surface. Place dough on work surface and sprinkle with more flour. Fold the dough over on itself once or twice. Loosely cover with plastic wrap and let rest about 15 minutes.
  • Sprinkle just enough flour over work surface and your fingers to keep dough from sticking; quickly and gently shape dough into a ball. Generously coat a cotton towel (not terry cloth) with flour, cornmeal, or wheat bran; place dough seam side down on towel and dust with more flour, cornmeal, or wheat bran. Cover with a second cotton towel and let rise until it has more than doubled in size and does not readily spring back when poked with a finger, about 2 hours.
  • After about 1 1/2 hours, preheat oven to 500 degrees. Place a 6- to 8-quart heavy covered pot, such as cast-iron or Pyrex, in oven as it heats. When dough has fully risen, carefully remove pot from oven. Remove top towel from dough and slide your hand under the bottom towel; turn dough over into pot, seam side up. Shake pan once or twice if dough looks unevenly distributed; it will straighten out as it bakes. Cover, and bake 30 minutes. Uncover, and continue baking until browned, 15 to 30 minutes. Cool on a wire rack.

SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY NO KNEAD BREAD RECIPE - FOOD.COM
Jan 29, 2018 · Recipe supplied by Sullivan Street Bakery and printed in the NY Times, this bread recipe so insanely brilliant - no sticky fingers, no doughy mess, no intricate measuring, no complicated kneading. Totally hands-off. The crust is thin, crisp and snaps as you cut into the loaf. The interior of the bread holey, chewy, airy and light. This low fat, low cal bread will become a staple in your home ...
From food.com
See details


RECIPES FROM THE SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY COOKBOOK | LEITE'S ...
Jan 11, 2020 · In The Sulivan Street Bakery Cookbook, Jim Lahey builds on the revolutionary no-knead recipe he developed for his first book, My Bread, to outline his no-fuss system for making sourdough at home.Applying his Italian-inspired method to his repertoire of pizzas, pastries, egg dishes, and café classics, The Sullivan Street Bakery Cookbook delivers the flavors of a bakery Ruth Reichl once called ...
From leitesculinaria.com
See details


SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY | ITALIAN BAKERY IN NY & FL
Sullivan Street Bakery started with the belief that good bread should be available and affordable for everyone. Today it serves the best craft bread and NYC and Miami.
From sullivanstreetbakery.com
See details


NO-KNEAD BREAD RECIPE - NYT COOKING
Nov 08, 2006 · Here is one of the most popular recipes The Times has ever published, courtesy of Jim Lahey, owner of Sullivan Street Bakery. It requires no kneading. It uses no special ingredients, equipment or techniques. And it takes very little effort — only time.
From cooking.nytimes.com
See details


JIM LAHEY’S NO-KNEAD BREAD | LODGE CAST IRON
Apr 02, 2020 · Jim Lahey, founder of Sullivan Street Bakery in New York City, has a no-knead bread recipe that just uses a cast iron dutch oven, flour, yeast, water, and salt so anyone can make bakery-quality bread right at home.
From lodgecastiron.com
See details


BAKING BREAD AT HOME: A KNEAD FOR COMFORT - CBS NEWS
May 24, 2020 · Sullivan Street Bakery, New York, N.Y. "My Bread: The Revolutionary No-Work, No-Knead Method" by Jim Lahey with Rick Flaste (WW Norton), in Hardcover and eBook formats, available via Amazon. King ...
From cbsnews.com
See details


SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY: NEW YORK, NY - THRILLIST
Sullivan Street Bakery: A New York, NY . ... While not a restaurant, the small retail area at Jim Lahey's Sullivan Street Bakery in Hell's Kitchen sells sweets, flatbreads, and savory snacks that ...
From thrillist.com
See details


SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY - GLUTEN FREE FOLLOW ME
236 9th Ave, New York City New York 10011. 533 W 47th St, New York City New York 10036.
From glutenfreefollowme.com
See details


RECIPES FROM THE SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY COOKBOOK | LEITE'S ...
Jan 11, 2020 · In The Sulivan Street Bakery Cookbook, Jim Lahey builds on the revolutionary no-knead recipe he developed for his first book, My Bread, to outline his no-fuss system for making sourdough at home.Applying his Italian-inspired method to his repertoire of pizzas, pastries, egg dishes, and café classics, The Sullivan Street Bakery Cookbook delivers the flavors of a bakery Ruth Reichl once called ...
From leitesculinaria.com
See details


3 SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY RECIPES | RECIPEOFHEALTH.COM
raisins, chopped dried fruit or candied citron, dark jamaican rum, warm water ( 105 to 115 degrees ), active dry yeast, sugar, unsalted butter, softened, eggs, at room temp, all purpose flour, grated lemon zest, honey, salt, vanilla
From recipeofhealth.com
See details


THE SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY COOKBOOK: LAHEY, JIM, JOSEPH ...
Founded in 1994, Sullivan Street Bakery is renowned for its outstanding bread, which graces the tables of New York’s most celebrated restaurants. The bread at Sullivan Street Bakery, crackling brown on the outside and light and aromatic on the inside, is inspired by the dark, crusty loaves that James Beard Award–winning baker Jim Lahey ...
From amazon.com
See details


A "SIMPLE" LIQUID STARTER: THE SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY ...
Jan 16, 2018 · I've been a big fan of Jim Lahey for years now: both of his earlier cookbooks have allowed me to produce great bread and pizza. So when he came out with a new cookbook, The Sullivan Street Bakery Cookbook, which relies on wild yeast I decided I would give sourdough starters a try (again). His "simple liquid starter" is the basis for his doughy starter (which he calls a
From thefreshloaf.com
See details


PANETTONE / ITALIAN CHRISTMAS BREAD (SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY)
Dec 03, 2015 · This recipe from Brown Eyed Baker is from Sullivan Street Bakery’s website, written by the owner, Jim Lahey, who created the recipe. Seeing that the Sullivan Street Bakery’s panettone is listed as one of the best in New York at here and here, I tell myself that this is a must-try recipe and so I baked this...
From bakeforhappykids.com
See details


RECIPE: JIM LAHEY'S BASIC NO-KNEAD BREAD - CBS NEWS
May 21, 2020 · Jim Lahey, owner of New York City's Sullivan Street Bakery and author of several cookbooks, including "My Bread," offers his recipe for a delicious, long-fermented rustic bread. Advice: plan ahead!
From cbsnews.com
See details


RECIPE: SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY NO-KNEAD PIZZA DOUGH ...
Recipe: No-Knead Pizza Crust (King Arthur Flour) Betsy at Recipelink.com - 8-3-2009: 1: Recipe: Sullivan Street Bakery No-Knead Pizza Dough : Betsy at Recipelink.com - 8-3-2009
From recipelink.com
See details


NO-KNEAD BREAD — MARK BITTMAN
Nov 05, 2018 · It came from Jim Lahey, owner of Sullivan Street Bakery in New York City, who created a way to make a spectacular loaf at home, with a crackling crust, open-holed crumb, light texture, and fantastic flavor — all with next to no hands-on time.
From markbittman.com
See details


SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY'S RECIPE FOR SUCCESS - YOUTUBE
In New York City, most restaurants and bakeries don't even make it past their first year. So, for Jim Lahey of Sullivan Street Bakery, marking 20 years in bu...
From m.youtube.com
See details


SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY PANETTONE RECIPE - GROUP RECIPES
Mix on high speed 5 minutes or until dough is smooth and elastic. Beat in fruit mixture. Lightly butter two 8 1/2 by 4 1/2 metal loaf pans. On a floured surface, cut dough in half. Shape each half into a oval and place in loaf pans. Let rise in warm place 1 1/2 to 2 hours. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
From grouprecipes.com
See details


NO KNEAD BREAD | BREAD RECIPE | THE NEW YORK TIMES - YOUTUBE
Mark Bittman, a.k.a. The Minimalist, and Jim Lahey, the owner of Sullivan Street Bakery, share a recipe on how to make no-knead bread where the secret is let...
From m.youtube.com
See details


RECIPE: SULLIVAN STREET BAKERY POTATO PIZZA (NO-KNEAD ...
Drain slices in a colander, toss with 1/2 teaspoon salt, and set aside for 10 minutes. Drain any accumulated water. In a medium bowl, combine potatoes, onions, and 1 tablespoon olive oil, and set aside. Preheat oven to 440 degrees F. Prepare two rimmed baking sheets with vegetable oil. Divide dough in half.
From recipelink.com
See details