Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- In a large saucepan, heat the milk. Add sugar, salt and butter. Heat until it melts the butter and all the ingredients are dissolved, but DO NOT let the milk boil!
- Pour the liquid ingredients into the mixing bowl where you plan to mix your bread dough. Let it stand at room temperature until the liquid is lukewarm (you can stick your finger in it without yelling "ouch"). This takes about 30 minutes, depending on room temperature. Don't rush this step.
- Once the liquids are at room temperature, dissolve 1 tbsp of yeast into 1/4 cup of warm (not hot) water. Let stand five minutes.
- Mix the yeast and water mixture into the liquids. Mix the teaspoon of almond extract and the beaten egg into the liquids.
- Add six cups of flour, about one cup at a time, stirring vigorously. You can also use an electric mixer with a dough hook attachment. As you add the flour, use a spatula to turn it into the mixture while the dough hooks knead.
- Once all the flour is added and mixed, let rest for 10 minutes.
- Turn dough onto a floured board and knead for 6-8 minutes. Alternatively, you can knead with an electric mixer using dough hooks for about 5-6 minutes.
- Butter a large bowl. Gently turn place the kneaded dough into the bowl. Take a piece of plastic wrap and spray one side with cooking spray. Place the wrap cooking spray side down over the top of the bowl. Place the bowl in a warm area and gently drape a clean dishtowel over it. Let rise for about 1 to 1 1/2 hours or until doubled.
- Grease or butter the bread loaf pans. After the dough has finished rising, gently remove it from the bowl and put it back on your floured kneading surface or bread board. Separate it into two equal size pieces and shape into loaves. Place in greased loaf pans.
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
- Allow dough to rise again in the loaf pans about 20-30 minutes.
- Once dough has finished second rising, and the oven is preheated, bake the loaves at 375 for 40-50 minutes. Check for doneness after 40 minutes by gently tapping on the browned crust. If it sounds hollow, and the bread is pulling away from the sides of the pan, it's done.
- Cool on wire racks. Remove from baking pans after 1 hour, letting the bread cool further. Cooling slowly allows more flavor to develop.
- Slice and enjoy! You can freeze the bread by wrapping fully cooled loaves in plastic wrap. It keeps for up to three months.
Notes
You may need one more cup of flour to dust the breadboard and your hands. Add more flour if the dough seems too liquid. It should be sticky, but not runny,