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SheWoff
05-22-2007, 02:55 PM
Okay TSHTF...be it country wide or maybe a hurricane. You want some bread...no store. But you have a grill...here's how to bake bread!

How to Bake: Bread on the Grill.

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How to Bake: Bread on the Grill
By Dennis R Weaver

One of the slickest tricks we know is baking bread on the grill. Once you get to know your grill, it's easy—like baking your favorite recipe in the oven.

We can think of all kinds of reasons to use the grill. You can enjoy fresh baked bread while camping, or at the cabin, or at the next family reunion. Sometimes, it's just nice to get out of the kitchen, enjoy the spring air, and bake outside. (Watch the neighbors turn their noses upwind when the smell of fresh baked bread wafts over the fence.) And in the summertime, you don't have to heat up the kitchen to bake. Finally, if there is ever an extended emergency when the power is off, you may have the only fresh bread in town.

You can bake nearly anything with a covered grill. (If your grill doesn't have a cover, improvise with a large inverted pot.) The heat rises and circulates in the covered area just as it does in your oven. The heat source can be charcoal, gas, or even wood. We prefer gas because it is easier to control and does not impart a smoked taste to the bread. Since it is hottest near the flames, elevate the bread even if you have to improvise. In our grill, there is a secondary shelf for baking potatoes and such.

For this demonstration, we used Old-Fashioned White Bread mixes though any mix or recipe will do. We mixed according to package directions. After it had risen, we formed one batch into oval country loaves, one into hamburger buns, and another into dinner rolls.

The trick to grilling bread perfectly is controlling temperature and time. If your grill comes equipped with a thermometer, you've got it made (though outside temperatures and winds may impact how well your grill retains heat). If you have a thermometer, just heat to the temperature designated on the package or in the recipe. If not, guess. After a few loaves you'll have it perfect and we bet that the first batch off the grill will be just fine.

Rolls and buns will probably bake in 15 to 20 minutes and loaves will take 20 to 30 minutes depending on size and temperature. An occasional peek to see how your bread is doing as it nears completion is okay.

We made twelve giant-sized hamburger buns, just the ticket for that quarter-pounder. Form the buns as you would dinner rolls then press them flat several times until they look like those in the picture to the left. (The dusting that you can see on the pan is cornmeal.) Cover and let rise.

Just before baking, we washed the buns with an egg white wash (one egg white plus one tablespoon of water). We then sprinkled them with sesame seeds. On our grill, we baked them with the heat turned about two-thirds open for about 18 minutes.

For the dinner rolls, we used a 8 1/2 x 15-inch pan and made 20 rolls scaled at 2.5 ounces each.

We made two country style loaves from one mix. If you look closely you'll see that we forgot to slash the tops to release the steam and consequently ended up with a split on the side of the loaf. Don't do as we did—score two or three quarter-inch deep slashes on the top of the loaf just as you begin baking.

Here are a few more hints to help you along the way:

• Bake the bread before the burgers. The bread can cool while you cook the rest of the food. Burning grease in the bottom of the grill makes the temperature harder to control and the soot can stain the bread.

• If you are letting your bread rise outside where the temperature may be less than indoors or where breezes may swirl around the bread, consider using a large food-grade plastic bag as a greenhouse. Simply slip the bread dough--pan and all--inside the bag, inflate it slightly, and close it. If the day is cool, set the bag and the bread in a sunny warm place to capture a little solar energy.

• Grills tend to not circulate the hot air as well as ovens. To keep the bottom of the bread from burning, place one pan beneath the other and a wire rack between the pans to create space for insulation.

• If your bread is baking faster on one side than the other, turn the pan 180 degrees part way through the baking time.

• The tendency is to burn the bottom of the bread. Place the bread as far away from the flames as you can even if it means elevating the bread.

We hope that you have fun baking bread outside this summer. We do know that you will be the envy of the neighborhood, campground, or RV park.

For more articles like this visit The The Bakers' Library.


http://www.nancyskitchen.com/how-to-bake-bread-on-the-grill.htm

Fair use for education/discussion purposes only.....


She

SheWoff
05-22-2007, 02:56 PM
http://www.hillbillyhousewife.com/familybread.htm

easy, easy bread recipe to go with above post.

She

CAYSEN
05-22-2007, 03:07 PM
Thanks, That looks fun & easy. This weekend might just be a good time to try this out. I love fresh baked bread.

Mimmy
05-23-2007, 06:10 AM
Wonderful! I ran across the HillBilly Housewife site months ago and then forgot about it. Thanks for the link!

rafter
12-05-2007, 08:05 AM
We bake all of our 'take and bake' pizza on the grill...its far better than what the oven does.

So then I tried other stuff. I bake all my biscuits on the grill now as they raise better. And I made a 'better than sex' cake on the grill and it turned out better than the oven too!

kelee877
12-05-2007, 10:31 AM
best you share that " better then sex" reciepe :lol:

jazzy
12-06-2007, 06:36 PM
this was really great--i never thought of the grill----and i will certainly try it out. my sister uses her solar oven to make bread too.

i really believe that bread , in its many forms, is very important for not only food purposes but for the comfort it gives psychologically.

i make bread in alot of different forms, maybe we can all share some of our better recipes--i know its all out there on the net, but it might help some folks who havent been to alot of the sites. i think there are alot of folks who dont know how easy 'bread' can be to make yourself. and the more we practice now, the better off we will be in the long run later.

SheWoff
12-07-2007, 05:16 AM
this was really great--i never thought of the grill----and i will certainly try it out. my sister uses her solar oven to make bread too.

i really believe that bread , in its many forms, is very important for not only food purposes but for the comfort it gives psychologically.

i make bread in alot of different forms, maybe we can all share some of our better recipes--i know its all out there on the net, but it might help some folks who havent been to alot of the sites. i think there are alot of folks who dont know how easy 'bread' can be to make yourself. and the more we practice now, the better off we will be in the long run later.


Okay....I can make pie crust flaky as all get out, cakes to die for, cookies that melt in your mouth, cornbread that is just great....but for the life of me, I can not make a loaf of bread. I make bricks! :shock: I have tried the hillbilly housewife site, summertymes recipe, Frugals recipe, etc... and none of them have turned out. I proof the yeast even so I know that isn't the problem. If you have a good recipe that you use....please start us another thread here in the kitchen and post it...anyone? And yep, I tried sourdough also and had the same results!

She

Freeholder
12-07-2007, 08:39 PM
SheWoff, where do you live? Maybe someone on the forum lives close enough to you to have a teaching session with you -- I strongly believe that if someone is having trouble making bread, the best thing to do is actually get walked through the process by someone who does well at it. ETA: I see that you are in Tennessee -- too far for me to help you. I have to be honest -- when I make bread, I just throw everything together, mix it up (knead if making bread with wheat flour, which I cant do anymore because of celiac disease), let it rise, and bake. It comes out fine. I have helped several people who were having trouble with bread, and never did quite figure out what they were doing wrong -- but they did have better luck after our session.

You can also bake bread in a dutch oven over an open fire; by improvising a bake oven with a couple of pans (one for a lid, one for the bottom, and put the bread in another with spacers so air circulates around the bottom); in a reflector oven (which can even be planked like a fish); and wrapped around a stick and toasted over the coals like a marshmallow -- make your dough snake thin, though, or it will not cook all the way through.

Kathleen

SheWoff
12-08-2007, 03:09 AM
NW TN is where I am at. I wish I could find someone around here that still bakes their bread, cuz I'm the type that will just but in and watch from the front row, so to speak. I'm wondering if the house just isn't warm enough for the dough to rise? (about 65-68)

I through it together the way it should be, mix it up, let it rise....but it never seems to rise up enough even if the yeast is okay. That is my sticking point right there. :( I can make the bread in a dutch oven though on the wood stove which is out in the garage/shop. But it stays warmer out there and more humid. Would a low humidity in the house stop the dough from rising?

She

DreadPirate
12-08-2007, 04:10 AM
So SheWolf you are in NW Tn and cant back bread????????
You could say I'm in West Ky and can. I'll talk to Buttercup and see what we can do. As for making bread it is so easy. Once you learn you will kick yourself :lol: .

DreadPirate
12-10-2007, 05:11 AM
SheWolf,
The colder the kitchen the longer it will take. try adding a Tbls of sugar and put some place warm. Pizza dough is often placed in ref. to rise as it makes a chewear(sp?) dough. most inportant have pateance and wait for it to at least double. Add your salt with the flour as it can kill the yeast if added to it directly. Good luck

SheWoff
12-10-2007, 06:01 AM
SheWolf,
The colder the kitchen the longer it will take. try adding a Tbls of sugar and put some place warm. Pizza dough is often placed in ref. to rise as it makes a chewear(sp?) dough. most inportant have pateance and wait for it to at least double. Add your salt with the flour as it can kill the yeast if added to it directly. Good luck

Good ideas and thank you! I think I have been adding the salt before the flour...this may have solved my problem. I was going to try again to bake some bread tomorrow. Will let yall know how it turns out.

She

Sammy55
12-11-2007, 01:37 PM
If the house is too cool when I bake bread, I set the oven on the lowest temperature (usually warm) and put the bowl of dough in the oven with a mitt or towel or something to hold the oven door slightly open. It works for me!

Sammy55
12-11-2007, 01:40 PM
If the house is too cool when I bake bread, I set the oven on the lowest temperature (usually warm) and put the bowl of dough in the oven with a mitt or towel or something to hold the oven door slightly open. It works for me!

:wink: I forgot to say that I shut the oven off after I put the dough in. I check it every so often and, if needed, I take the bowl of dough out and turn the oven on again.

I usually don't need to put the oven more than the initial first time.

rafter
12-11-2007, 07:39 PM
best you share that " better then sex" reciepe :lol:

OK :lol:

Take a german chocolate cake mix and mix as directed. Pour half of it in a 11X13.

Take a container of carmel (like what you dip apples in)..pour that over the half of cake batter.

Take a pkg of chocolate chips and pour evenly over the batter.

Put the other half of batter over that.

ummmmm. Very moist and good!

DreadPirate
12-12-2007, 02:40 AM
best you share that " better then sex" reciepe :lol:

OK :lol:

Take a german chocolate cake mix and mix as directed. Pour half of it in a 11X13.

Take a container of carmel (like what you dip apples in)..pour that over the half of cake batter.

Take a pkg of chocolate chips and pour evenly over the batter.

Put the other half of batter over that.


ummmmm. Very moist and good!

Ok then maybe make a home made ganosh(sp?) coat the whole thing. a layer of German Choc. iceing on the top with shaved choc. and a cherry in the center. 8) [/quote]