Whole-Wheat Seeded Loaves
Updated July 22, 2020

- Total Time
- About 5 hours 15 minutes, plus the overnight soak for the seeds
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 25grams sunflower seeds (approximately 2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon)
- 25grams sesame seeds (approximately 2½ tablespoons)
- 25grams flax seeds (approximately 2½ tablespoons)
- 25grams rolled oats (approximately ¼ cup)
- 25grams pumpkin seeds (approximately 2 tablespoons)
- 180grams water (approximately ¾ cup) plus about 60 grams additional water
- 170grams bread flour or unbleached all-purpose flour (approximately 1⅓ cups)
- 170grams lukewarm water (approximately ¾ cup less 2 teaspoons)
- 4grams dry yeast (approximately 1 teaspoon)
- 250grams whole-wheat flour (approximately 2 cups) or 125 grams bread flour and 125 grams whole-wheat flour
- 12grams sea salt (approximately 1½ teaspoons)
Preparation
- Step 1
Mix seeds and oats together with 180 grams of water in a medium mixing bowl; cover with plastic wrap and and let soak overnight in the refrigerator.
- Step 2
Combine 170 grams bread flour or all-purpose flour, 170 grams lukewarm water, and yeast in bowl of a standing mixer and mix together until well combined. Cover with plastic and leave to ferment at room temperature for two hours or until it doubles in volume. Meanwhile, remove bowl with nuts and seeds from the refrigerator, drain and bring to room temperature.
- Step 3
Add drained seeds, 250 grams whole-wheat flour and sea salt to the starter. Start mixing on medium speed. The dough should come together in the first minute. If it does not and you see dry ingredients in the bottom of the bowl, add about ¼ cup of water. Mix dough for 5 minutes on medium speed, then turn the speed up to medium-high and mix 5 to 7 minutes more, or until dough is elastic.
- Step 4
Cover bowl with plastic wrap and set in a warm spot to rise for 1 hour.
- Step 5
Dust work surface lightly with flour and scrape out dough. Weigh dough and divide into 2 equal pieces. Shape each piece into a ball or into oblong pointed loaves. (For oblong loaves, first shape into balls, cover with a towel or lightly with plastic and let rest for 15 minutes. Then press the dough out to a rectangle about ¾ inch thick. Take the side closest to you and fold lengthwise halfway to the center of the loaf. Lightly press down to seal. Take the top flap and bring it toward you over the first fold to the middle of the loaf and lightly press down to seal. Flip over so seam is on the bottom and roll back and forth with both hands to form an oblong loaf with pointy ends. Place on a sheet pan lined with parchment paper and repeat with the remaining dough. Cover with a towel and place in a warm spot for one hour.)
- Step 6
Preheat oven to 450 degrees with a pizza stone on the middle rack and a small sheet pan on bottom of the oven for 30 to 45 minutes. Have 1 cup water ready in a small cup or a glass. (If you have a large pizza stone, you can bake both loaves at once. If you have a standard home pizza stone, bake one loaf at a time and place the other loaf in the refrigerator to slow down the fermentation.) Dust a pizza peel or flat baking sheet lightly with flour, semolina or cornmeal and place one loaf on top. Using a razor blade or a moistened bread knife, make a ½-inch deep horizontal cut down the middle of loaf from one end to the other, or if the loaves are round make 2 slashes across top. Slide loaf onto pizza stone and close oven door. Wait 30 seconds, then open oven door quickly and pour water onto the sheet pan on the bottom of the oven to create steam. After 5 minutes take the sheet pan out of the oven. Bake for a total of 30 to 35 minutes, until loaf is dark brown and sounds hollow when you tap the bottom. Transfer loaf to a wire rack to cool completely for 45 minutes. Repeat with other loaf.
- Advance preparation: Bread will keep wrapped in a kitchen towel for a couple of days. Double wrap the other loaf and freeze for up to a month.
Private Notes
Comments
Loved this bread! I used regular AP flour to make the starter and then whole wheat bread flour for the rest. No stand mixer so I hand-kneaded for about 12 minutes. For baking, instead of injecting steam into the oven, I used a dutch oven which I preheated for 30 min at 450. I left some water drops on the lid of the dutch oven and wet the outside of my loaves a tiny bit before going in to add a bit of steam, since the dough is pretty dry. Cooked covered 20 min and then 15 min uncovered for crust.
The same recipe works well for one big loaf. I bake it in a Dutch oven 450F 20 min with lid on and 25 min without the lid. This method creates a nice crust without dealing with water. Dutch oven needs to be preheated in the oven before you put the bread in. Proofing bread on parchment paper makes an easy transfer in to the Dutch oven. Also works well with a cup of dried cranberries or currents.
Prepared the dough as instructed, except swapped millet for the pumpkin seeds, which I didn't have. The seed mixture drank all the liquid except for just a few drops. Next time I won't bother draining. Might add a tablespoon of honey or molasses.
Makes two smallish loaves of seedy bread with a springy, dense crumb. Delicious.
For more flavor development, I did an overnight sponge (sponge: 85g bread, 125g whole wheat, 2g yeast, 170g 60g water - which I added from later in the recipe, it was way too dry otherwise. Flour blanket: 85g bread, 125 ww, 2g yeast). Let it rest at room temp for an hour then fridge overnight. Mixed in the morning and added seeds but accidentally forgot to drain (whoops), so I added a few more spoonfuls of bread flour and a little extra yeast until it looked right. I proofed a single boule in a banneton and put the cover of a Cloche in while the over heated to 450. Baked for 10 mins at 450, then 35 mins at 400 until internal temp was ~205. The texture is nice and seeds are interesting, but it’s not the most flavorful. The suggestion of dried fruit may help. Happy baking!
This bread was more forgiving than I expected! I had some things come up between rises and had to leave the complete dough in the fridge for almost a full 24 hours. Took it out, shaped it, and let it come to room temp for about an hour before baking. It's delicious. I added some honey, walnuts, and raisins.
Did not soak the seeds beyond two hours. Skipped the later steps and just formed one big round and baked for 20-25 minutes and voila! Great hearty bread.
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