Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Pumpkin Nut Bread Machine Bread

This is not a dessert bread. It's very moist and faintly sweet and spicy. You may like it even if you don't like pumpkin.

Choose the loaf that best fits your bread machine size. (Look at the recipes in your machine's instruction manual and see which of the two recipes below has about the same amount of flour.)

Medium Loaf
5 ounces (1/2 cup + 2 Tablespoons) evaporated milk
1/3 cup pureed pumpkin (canned or fresh)
2 cups bread flour
2-1/2 Tablespoons whole wheat flour
1/3 cup finely chopped walnuts (check your manual to see when to add)
1-1/2 Tablespoons brown sugar, packed
1-2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice
1 teaspoon salt
1-1/2 Tablespoons room-temperature butter, cut in 4 pieces
1-1/2 teaspoons yeast


Large Loaf

8 ounces (1 cup) evaporated milk
1/2 cup pureed pumpkin (canned or fresh)
3 cups bread flour
1/4 cup whole wheat flour
1/2 cup finely chopped walnuts (check your manual to see when to add)
2 Tablespoons brown sugar, packed
2-3 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice
1-1/2 teaspoons salt
2 Tablespoons room-temperature butter, cut in 4 pieces
2 teaspoons yeast

  1. Bring all ingredients to room temperature. 
  2. Add all ingredients except nuts, in the order listed in your bread machine's manual. If you can't find the manual, add them in the order listed here.The pumpkin should go in at the same time you normally add oil or butter.
  3. Add the chopped nuts at the point recommended for your machine, probably after the second kneading cycle. 
  4. Bake on the basic bread cycle, on light or medium color setting. 
  5. Remove bread from machine and allow to cool for 15 minutes or so before slicing. 
Tips: 
  • Never use cold or hot ingredients, or the bread won't rise well. 
  • Measure ingredients very precisely. Scoop the flour into a separate measuring cup and sprinkle it into the one you're measuring with. Mound it up high and then level it off with a knife. 
  • Do not substitute whole wheat pastry flour for whole wheat flour (in this or any yeast bread recipe). It does not rise well at all. 
  • To keep the bread fresh longer, do not preslice it. Just cut off the pieces as you eat them.
  • Cool the bread COMPLETELY before storing it. Drape a clean towel over it as it cools, and wrap it in the towel before you put it inside a large Ziploc bag. 
  • If the bread is around long enough to go stale, slice the rest of it and freeze it in sandwich bags. It makes great toast.

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