Boston Brown Bread

- Total Time
- About 2 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- Nonstick cooking spray
- ½cup plus 3 tablespoons/70 grams white rye flour
- 1cup plus 2 tablespoons/140 grams stone-ground whole wheat flour
- ½cup plus 3 tablespoons/70 grams dark rye flour
- 1cup/142 grams fine-ground cornmeal
- 1cup/198 grams lightly packed dark brown sugar
- ½teaspoon/3 grams baking powder
- 2teaspoons/11 grams baking soda
- ½teaspoon/3 grams kosher salt
- 1tablespoon/16 grams doenjang (Korean soybean paste)
- 2cups/480 milliliters buttermilk
- ½cup/120 milliliters egg whites (from 4 to 5 large eggs)
- ¾cup (scant)/169 milliliters blackstrap molasses
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees and generously coat the insides of 2 10-ounce coffee cans or a 9-by-5-inch loaf pan with cooking spray. Place the white rye flour in a large skillet over medium heat and toast, whisking constantly, for 7 minutes. The flour will darken slightly and smell nutty.
- Step 2
Whisk the flours, cornmeal, brown sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a large bowl. In a separate bowl, whisk together the doenjang and buttermilk until combined; set aside. With an electric mixer, whip the egg whites with 1 tablespoon of the molasses until stiff, silky peaks form, about 5 minutes. Whisk the remaining molasses into the buttermilk mixture. Gradually stir the buttermilk mixture into the dry ingredients until combined. Fold in the whipped egg whites in 2 additions.
- Step 3
Pour batter into the prepared cans or loaf pan. Coat pieces of foil with cooking spray, then cover the tops of the cans or pan securely. Set the cans or pan in a baking dish and add enough hot water to come about ¼ inch up the side. Transfer to oven and bake until the top springs back when lightly touched, about 1 hour 40 minutes for the cans, or 2 hours for the loaf pan. Let cool 20 minutes on a wire rack, then invert and remove the bread to a cutting board. Let cool completely before slicing.
Private Notes
Comments
I don't plan to make this recipe. It has way too many ingredients for Boston Brown Bread. You don't need 2 different rye flours--just a combination of whole wheat, rye, and cornmeal--egg whites or doenjang. There are plenty of easier recipes out on the web.
I agree that there are "easier" (or shorter I suppose) recipes on the web, but is that really the main qualifier without even trying the recipe out? If this recipe makes an outstanding Boston brown bread, a few more ingredients are worth it compared to going the short route.
Boston brown bread is a humble working-class staple that requires no leavening, kneading, or rising. It was once made by hobos over an open fire. I know I shouldn't knock it till I try it, but toasting the flour? Whipping the egg whites? Then folding them in two different stages? This seems contrary to the spirit of Boston brown bread. Granted, it's probably delicious, but it seems awfully time consuming and uses quite a few bowls and utensils.
BBB doesn't taste quite right if it's not freshly baked from the can
I use wide mouth pint ball jars. And the King Arthur recipe with chopped walnuts and dried cherries soaked in rye whiskey. Makes 3 pints. Probably should try this recipe but being from Maine…
Back in the day, my Maine Nana cooked in logging camps for hungry men. Her recipe takes All Bran cereal, buttermilk and white Gold Medal flour - and no egg. It still makes an unbeatable brown bread. And always made in coffee cans!
Advertisement