One thing that I noticed in your post HB, bread DOESN'T rise in the oven, well not much anyway.Helsbells wrote:A few days ago I made a white loaft, when I left it to rise the first time it did actually rise a fair amount, but it hardly rose at all in the oven.
The loaf should be fully risen before you put it in a very hot oven.
Other than that, breadmaking is dead easy once you get the hang of it.
I make 3 loaves every week in one batch, I used to knead by hand but can't any more (medical problem) so I now use a Kenwood that I picked up cheap on Ebay.
This is what I do ....
3lb of Lidl plain flour.
650ml of hand hot water
2 eggs
2 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon Doves Farm yeast.
Put all into bowl and mix.
Either knead by hand for about 10 mins or in a mixer for 5 mins.
Put bowl of dough covered with a damp tea towel in a warm place ... I put mine in the airing cupboard.
When doubled in size (about an hour in my airing cupboard) knead again for a few minutes to break up the bigger air bubbles into smaller ones.
Divide into 3 and either put in 1lb loaf tins or shape into cob loaves.
Put back in the warm place until doubled again and bake in a pre-heated oven (gas 8) for 25 - 30 minutes.
If you don't mind larger holes or more open bread (what they call Rustic in shops) then you can get away with just the initial rising.
After the first knead, put straight into tins ... put in warm place, cover etc, and when doubled stick in the pre-heated oven.
Strong bread flour makes the better loaf and I would recommend it for beginners, but softer flour like Lidls or English Tescos (not Irish) ordinary plain flour makes an acceptable loaf and one hellovva lot cheaper.
Whatever .... don't give up, you can't beat home made bread, and you know exactly what's in it.