I got a chance to make Jeff Hertzberg’s simple bread recipe from his book Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day that was shared on the NY Times website. It is billed as being even quicker than Jim Lahey’s “No-Knead” recipe that appeared in the NY Times about a year ago and it lives up to that billing — you can follow this recipe and have a decent loaf of bread in about 3 hours.
But that’s just it — the bread is only passable. I can make very good sandwich bread in three hours. This, however, is supposed to be “artisan” bread. It isn’t artisan bread by any stretch of the imagination.
When I think of artisan bread, I imagine a slightly sour, very crusty, open-holed bread with wonderfully chewy insides. This bread is more related to white sandwich bread in texture — maybe slightly chewier due to the wetness of the dough. The flavor was almost too “yeasty,” as the recipe requires quite a bit of yeast (1 1/2 TB) to raise 6 cups of flour in two hours.
I prefer doughs (and the breads that come from them) that use less yeast and more time — the flavor of bread made in this way is tangy and wheaty instead of having an overly fermented taste and smell. Also, time is necessary in order to truly accomplish the “no-knead” trick.
Kneading bread develops gluten, a protein matrix which acts like sheets of rubber than can be blown up like balloons. Gluten can also be developed by the metabolic byproducts of yeast (gas), which slooooooowly stretches the proteins in the dough. Trying to accomplish this quickly leaves one with an under-developed dough. This, in turn, produces small, dense loaves — exactly what I got when I followed the recipe precisely.
It seems we are still left with two options for bread — kneaded sandwich-style bread (which can be quite good) or lightly kneaded, long-rising artisan-style bread. Quick artisanal breads still live in the realm of unicorns and ogres — fantasy.
One more note — the recipe says that you can make the dough and keep it in the fridge for up to two weeks. This option probably produces a bread that is closer to artisan-style in texture. But I imagine the flavor would still be very “yeasty.”
Overall, if you have never baked bread before and don’t own a stand mixer, give the original no-knead bread recipe a try. If you’re also in a pinch and rushed for time, try the Hertzberg variation just for kicks. You’ll quickly be swept up in the joyful meditation of baking your own bread and will summarily graduate to recipes where a little (happy) effort is required!














