Walnut Bread no knead recipe | Recipes | Moorlands Eater (2024)

Walnut Bread is a wonderful, tasty loaf. Equally good with cheese or toasted and slathered with butter and honey. With a mix of white, rye and wholemeal flours, the bread has substance without being heavy. Walnut pieces give the loaf a satisfying crunch, while a few ground ones distribute the flavour throughout.

I found this recipe for Walnut Bread in Dan Lepard‘s The Handmade Loaf. It was that book which got me started on my sourdough journey. I’d been baking bread off and on for many years before then, but never sourdough. Following Dan’s step-by-step instructions, I made my own sourdough starter and began making basic loaves. That sourdough starter is still going strong, almost ten years later.

I’ve since developed my own preferred method for overnight, no-knead bread, both sourdough and yeasted. Now more confident in my own baking abilities, I’ve recently gone back to The Handmade Loaf for inspiration, but adapted its recipes to my own method.

This Walnut Bread was the first of those adaptations, and I’m pretty pleased with it.

The recipe uses both sourdough starter and a little dried yeast.

WALNUT BREAD

The thing I like about this Walnut Bread is that it’s very walnutty! That’s because, besides the chunks of walnut studding the loaf, you also make a paste of ground walnuts which is incorporated into the dough.

This distributes the walnut flavour throughout the bread and gives the dough a pleasing, almost pinkish-purple tinge.

Besides adapting it to suit my overnight, no-knead method, virtually the only change I’ve made to the original recipe is to add a few more walnut pieces.

THE NIGHT BEFORE

If you’ve read any of my other posts about bread making, you’ll know that you mix the dough the night before you want to bake. For this recipe, you’ll need some sourdough starter that’s been recently fed and is nice and lively, so get cracking on that a few days before if your starter is a little lackluster.

After making a paste with ground walnuts, water, honey, melted butter and salt, it’s mixed with the rest of the ingredients into a dough – no kneading required.

Once the dough is covered, you can forget about it for the next 12-14 hours.

See an overview of my overnight, no-knead method here

BAKING THE BREAD

For the first 30 minutes of cooking, I bake the bread in a very hot, cast iron pot with a lid. This creates a steamy, moist environment which encourages the bread to rise.

To finish the loaf (about another 15-20 minutes), I bake the bread out of the pot, directly on the oven shelf, at a slightly lower temperature.

And that’s it. A wonderfully risen, crusty bread full of walnut flavour.

EATING WALNUT BREAD

I find that toasting the Walnut Bread brings out even more of the nutty flavour in the crumb. It was delicious spread lavishly with butter. I’m a big fan of honey on toast too and the combination of earthy, crunchy Walnut Bread and sweet, dripping honey was a sublime one.

But Walnut Bread is equally good with savoury pairings.

Try it in a sandwich with good, strong cheese, crisp apple and celery plus a sprinkle of sweet raisins.

The bread should be fine to eat for at least three days. It also freezes well; I slice and freeze virtually all my homemade bread if not eaten on the second day to make sure there’s no waste. Just take out as many slices as you need – you don’t even need to defrost before popping in the toaster.

Walnut Bread

Walnut Bread is equally good with cheese or toasted and slathered with butter and honey. Walnut pieces give the loaf a satisfying crunch, while a few ground ones distribute the flavour throughout. You'll need some recently fed, lively sourdough starter for this recipe.

CourseBread

CuisineBritish, European

Keywordbread, walnut bread

Servings 1 large loaf

Ingredients

For the walnut paste

  • 50gwalnutsground
  • 50gwater
  • 2tbphoney
  • 20gbuttermelted
  • saltpinch

For the dough

  • 350gwhite bread flour
  • 100grye flour
  • 50gwholemeal flour
  • 1.5tspsalt
  • twothirds tspdried yeast
  • 120gwalnutsbroken or halved
  • 100gsourdough starter
  • 220gwater

Instructions

THE DAY BEFORE YOU WANT TO BAKE THE BREAD

    For the walnut paste

    1. In a bowl, mix all the ingredients together to form a paste. Set aside.

    For the dough

    1. Put the flours, salt, dried yeast and walnuts in a large bowl then set aside.

    2. Whisk the sourdough starter into the water then stir in all the walnut paste.

    3. Pour all the water/starter/walnut paste liquid into the large bowl containing the flour mixture.

    4. Use a rubber spoon or spatula to bring the mixture together into a rough, wet dough.

    5. Cover the bowl and leave overnight or 12-14 hours.

    ON THE DAY OF BAKING

    1. Scrape the dough out of its bowl onto a well-floured worktop. Flatten out then fold the dough into thirds a few times before moulding it into your desired shape of loaf. Leave to rest for a few minutes, covered, while you prepare a proving basket/banneton or bowl (see next step)

    2. Prepare a basket or banneton by dusting well with flour. If using a bowl, line with a clean tea-towel and dust that well with flour.

    3. Place the dough in the prepared banneton or bowl and cover. Leave to prove for 30 minutes. Pre-heat your oven to 250C or its highest setting, with a heavy, lidded pot inside to heat up also.

    4. After 30 minutes, reduce oven temperature to 220C, remove the pot from the oven, take off the lid and carefully flip the dough from the proving vessel into the pot.

    5. Slash the top of the dough, replace the lid and put the pot back in the oven. Leave to bake for 30 minutes without removing the lid.

    6. After 30 minutes, reduce the heat to 200C. Remove the pot from the oven, take the bread out of it and put the bread back in, directly onto the oven shelf. Bake for a further 15-20 minutes until the bread is cooked through. If necessary, reduce the oven temperature to stop the crust over browning before the loaf is finished baking.

    7. When the loaf sounds hollow if tapped underneath, it should be cooked. Place on a wire rack to cool.

    Recipe Notes

    Recipe adapted from Dan Lepard's highly recommended book, The Handmade Loaf.

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    FAQs

    Why is my no-knead bread not rising enough? ›

    I'm going to assume you're working with active dry yeast/instant yeast of some kind (not sourdough starter). Yeast was killed, either by something too hot/cold or by direct contact with salt at the beginning (or, maybe the yeast is old and therefore dead); the dough wouldn't rise.

    Why do you put vinegar in no-knead bread? ›

    Vinegar – I use my homemade apple cider vinegar but any vinegar will do, it helps create a better texture in no-knead bread recipes.

    Why is my no-knead bread so flat? ›

    Classic no-knead bread (made with ¼ tsp instant yeast and 2¾ cups of flour) often tastes flat and dull. That lack of flavor comes from the yeast outpacing enzymes and consuming too many of the available sugars in the dough.

    Why is my no-knead bread too chewy? ›

    Usually your bread will be chewy when there isn't enough gluten formation or you're using a low-protein flour. Make sure you let your bread dough rest for at least 12 hours to give it enough time for gluten formation.

    Why is my homemade no knead bread so dense? ›

    I assume you have not baked it and the dough is too dense. The only thing you can do is add yeast after activating it. At this stage, you will have to knead the dough to mix the yeast well. You may need some more flour to balance the yeast liquid.

    What to do if dough doesn't rise enough? ›

    But almost as good as a proofing box is taking a Mason jar filled halfway up with water, microwaving it for two minutes, then putting your bowl of dough into the microwave with the jar to rise. The other thing you can do is place your lidded container or bowl of dough into a second, larger bowl of warm water.

    Why do you spray water on bread dough? ›

    Wetting the dough causes the surface to steam. Covering it traps the moisture. This partnership stops the bread from drying out on the surface in the hot air of the oven and forming a premature crust. Your bread rises more and produces a richer colour, becoming glossy on the surface.

    What can I use instead of apple cider vinegar in bread? ›

    Vinegar Substitutes
    1. White Vinegar. White vinegar has the most neutral flavor, which is why I find it to be the best substitute for apple cider vinegar in baking. ...
    2. Red Wine Vinegar. ...
    3. White Wine Vinegar. ...
    4. Champagne Vinegar. ...
    5. Unseasoned Rice Wine Vinegar. ...
    6. Malt Vinegar. ...
    7. Balsamic Vinegar.
    Apr 28, 2022

    Does vinegar affect yeast in bread? ›

    When just vinegar and yeast are mixed, vinegar's weak acid cancels out yeast's ability to grow.

    Should you stretch and fold no-knead bread? ›

    If the dough isn't mixed or kneaded to full development (e.g., full windowpane), adding in sets of stretch and folds during bulk fermentation will help continue its progress toward a firmer, more cohesive dough that's able to trap gas and hold its shape all the way to bake time.

    Does no-knead bread need a second rise? ›

    No-knead bread gets its power from a long, slow rise at room temperature. Mix up the dough in the morning and let it sit for at least six hours before shaping and rising for one hour more. The bread bakes for 30 minutes covered and 15 minutes uncovered in the Dutch oven.

    How do you make big holes in no-knead bread? ›

    How to... get bigger holes in your bread
    1. A longish overall dough rising time. Now this needs some planning, and perhaps might require tweaks to your recipe. ...
    2. The ratio of water to flour in your dough. ...
    3. Manipulating the dough during the rising time. ...
    4. Delay the addition of salt until the end of mixing.
    Apr 14, 2023

    What ingredient makes bread chewy? ›

    The chewiness of bread is due to the protein in the flour. High protein flour will give you chewy bread. Low protein flour will give you “cakey” bread. I make a dinner roll with milk, butter and eggs that is pillowy soft and yet a bit chewy too.

    What makes no knead bread different? ›

    No-knead bread is a method of bread baking that uses a very long fermentation (rising) time instead of kneading to form the gluten strands that give the bread its texture. It is characterized by a low yeast content and a very wet dough.

    Why is my bread not rising high enough? ›

    Dough may not have been kneaded enough. Kneading 'exercises' the gluten in the bread and gives it the elasticity to hold in the air bubbles produced by the yeast. It is these air bubbles that cause the dough to expand and rise.

    Does no knead bread need a second rise? ›

    No-knead bread gets its power from a long, slow rise at room temperature. Mix up the dough in the morning and let it sit for at least six hours before shaping and rising for one hour more. The bread bakes for 30 minutes covered and 15 minutes uncovered in the Dutch oven.

    Why is my bread not rising too dense? ›

    It might be cold dough. One of the most common mistakes is having a dough temperature that's too low for the starter to feed on all the flour in the dough, resulting in a crumb that's dense, with fewer openings. "Starter is happiest and most active at around 75 degrees.

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