Bernard Clayton's New Complete Book of Breads: Revised and Expanded

by Bernard Clayton

Paperback, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

641.815 C5796

Publication

Simon & Schuster (1995), Edition: Revised, 752 pages

Description

First published in 1973, Bernard Clayton'sThe Complete Book of Breadsimmediately became a modern classic; under his guidance, a generation of home bakers was introduced to the seductive pleasures of baking and produced their first loaves. But new products and equipment revolutionized the kitchen, and these changes inspiredBernard Clayton's New Complete Book of Breads,which first appeared in 1987. With an electric mixer, a food processor, or a bread machine, and with faster-acting yeasts, anyone could produce home-baked loaves in a fraction of the time bread-baking once took. The availability of a wide variety of flours and specialty products, once found only in health-food and gourmet stores, opened up a world of possibilities. Clayton revised 200 of the original recipes and added 100 more with these new ingredients and equipment in mind.Now America's best-loved bread-baking authority returns with the 30th anniversary edition of theNew Complete Book of Breads,the definitive version of this baking classic. Clayton has written a new introduction, added a glossary, updated the sections on ingredients and equipment, and gone through every recipe, correcting and refining each one. The inviting new design keeps Clayton's explicit, easy-to-follow instructional format and makes the book easy to use.In these pages, home bakers will find an extraordinary range of variety, nearly enough to supply a new bread a day for a year. There are wheat breads -- Honey-Lemon, Walnut, Buttermilk; sourdough breads; corn breads; breads flavored with herbs or spices or enriched with cheese or fruits and nuts; and little breads -- Kaiser Rolls, Grandmother's Southern Biscuits, English Muffins, and Popovers, to name a few. For the baker who observes the holidays with a fresh loaf there are Challah and Italian Panettone.Offering classic recipes while making use of modern kitchen technology, this comprehensive volume is an indispensable reference for the novice or experienced home baker looking to make the best bread with ease.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member mcglothlen
Yup. Clayton is absolutely reliable. And loveable. I think he's been a little obscured by Reinhart and Leader but that's unfair. Clayton's bread books will stand against any. This is a classic.
LibraryThing member labelleaurore
Been a breadmaker myself, I cannot go anywhere without this book, and this is true. Very well done, simple to understand and full of passion for the rising of the dough.
LibraryThing member ladycato
This 700-page tome on the wonders of bread has sat in my to-read pile for years now--what better time to take a look than during quarantine? I skimmed through and jotted down pages and recipes of interest. This book has an incredible variety of bread on offer, from sandwich loaves to rustic boules
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to rolls to quick breads of all kinds to vegetable-stuffed to how to build your own backyard bread oven.

One of the great surprises was that most of the recipes include three versions: by hand, by Kitchen-Aid mixer, or by food processor. And hey, here I have a new big food processor... and lo and behold, I currently have a batch of brioche dough rising in my fridge. That will be the first of many recipes I try from this book.
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LibraryThing member catseyegreen
I've been baking bread for decades and this is one of my go-to references. It covers most any kind of bread possibly made in a home kitchen. The sour dough chapter is particularly good and the recipe for buttermilk bread rises higher and lighter than any other bread I have ever made.
I buy most of
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my books secondhand but this one would be worth the expense of buying new.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1987

Physical description

752 p.; 7.38 inches

ISBN

068481174X / 9780684811741
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