Anadama Cornbread: inspiration from Henry David Thoreau’s “Walden” baking adventure

Philosopher Henry David Thoreau was an environmentalist and early naturalist. In 1845 he built a tiny one-room cabin on the shores of Walden Pond in Concord, Massachusetts, to experiment with living simply and deliberately. There he grew and gathered his own food and wrote in his journals—living off the grid before there was a grid.

Thoreau even made his own bread. He was inspired by a traditional bread of the Indigenous people of his beloved Massachusetts: unleavened cornmeal flatbread. In his famous book Walden; or, Life in the Woods (1854), he wrote:

“… Bread I at first made of pure cornmeal and salt, genuine hoe-cakes [sometimes made on the blade of a hoe], which I baked before my fire out of doors on a shingle on the end of a stick of timber sawed off in building my house; but it was wont to get smoked and to have a piny flavor. I have tried flour also; but have at last found a mixture of rye and cornmeal most convenient and agreeable…”

Unleavened, smoked, and piny? Not too appealing. But reading about Thoreau’s recipe got me thinking about Anadama Bread, another New England specialty, which also includes cornmeal. And what could be lovelier in fall than the aroma of  Anadama warming your own soon-to-be chilly kitchen?

The version here is not quite so flat as Thoreau’s, but not as lofty as more typical Anadama bread, which generally calls for all-purpose flour, cornmeal, molasses, and milk or butter. It is closely associated with New England, and Massachusetts in particular—possibly Rockport and Gloucester, two of my favorite towns in the world. The cornmeal lends great flavor; if you love it, like I do, you may also appreciate a Portuguese cornbread that appeared in The New Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day. A version of that recipe and a Portuguese fish stew to go with it is here on the website, and as it happens the Portuguese fish stew is also associated with Gloucester and coastal New England.

This Thoreau-inspired loaf is delicious, with a touch of warmth and sweetness from the molasses, a subtle crunch from the cornmeal, and the savory depth of rye. It makes what is perhaps my all-time favorite toast for breakfast, and freezes (after slicing) exceptionally well. Expect 2-inch (5 cm) high slices (keep scrolling here if you’re seeing a blank space).

If you’re new to my method, start with my basic loaf then check back here, where you’ll note I’m presenting this recipe as a 2-pound single loaf, rather than a big dough-batch for daily baking. That said, you can double the recipe and store the dough for up to five days. And though I’m jumping the gun, Anadama would be a great addition to the Thanksgiving table next month. Be aware that cornmeal and rye can conspire to make for a dry crumb, so I mixed this as a very wet dough that can’t be handled or shaped at all, and won’t make a tall sandwich loaf:

IngredientsVolume (U.S.)Weight (U.S.)Weight (metric)
All-purpose flour2 cups10 ounces280 grams
Rye flour1¼ cups5½ ounces160 grams
Cornmeal⅜ cup4¼ ounces120 grams
Coarse salt½ tablespoon0.3 ounce8 grams
Water, lukewarm1¾ cups14 oz400 grams
Molasses⅛ cup2.5 ounces70 grams
Granulated yeast½ tablespoon0.17 ounce5 grams

1.  Whisk together the flours, cornmeal, and salt in a 5-quart bowl, or, if you’re storing the dough, a lidded (not airtight) food container. Flavors will intensify with storage.

2.   Combine the water, molasses, and yeast, then mix the liquid with the dry ingredients, using a spoon, a food processor (with dough attachment), or a heavy-duty stand mixer (with dough hook). With dough this wet, the stand mixer is the easiest way to go (scrape down dry bits with a spatula as you mix).

3. Use the spatula to pull the dough over itself to give the dough-mass some structure. This is hard to describe but you’ll see what I mean in these pictures:

4.   Cover (not airtight), and allow the dough to rest at room temperature until it rises and collapses (or flattens on top), approximately 2 hours (it should double; go longer if it hasn’t). If you refrigerate the dough overnight, the flavor will intensify, and it can be refrigerated for up to 5 days (beyond that and you’ll find the results too dense).

5. Scrape the dough, doing your best to preserve a round shape, onto a heavy-gauge baking sheet prepared with parchment paper, allowing it to settle by itself into a flat-ish round. Do not try to flour and handle this very wet dough.

6.   Allow to rest, loosely covered with an overturned bowl for 90 minutes.

7.   Thirty minutes before baking time, preheat the oven to 450°F. Place an empty metal broiler tray on any other rack that won’t interfere with the rising bread.

8.   Just before baking, use a pastry brush to paint the top crust with water. Slash the loaf with 1⁄2-inch-deep crossed cuts, using a serrated bread knife.

9.   Slide the loaf directly onto the hot stone (or place the silicone mat or cookie sheet on the stone if you used one). Pour 1 cup of hot tap water into the broiler tray, and quickly close the oven door (if your oven window isn’t made of tempered glass, cover the window with a towel and remove before closing the oven door). Bake for about 30 to 35 minutes, until richly browned and firm, checking at the midway point for over-browning and decrease to 425F if needed. Carefully remove the parchment and bake the loaf directly on an oven rack half-way through baking. Because of the molasses, the crust will be very dark when the loaf is baked through.

10. Allow the bread to cool on a rack before slicing. You should end up with slices that are about 2 inches tall (5 cm).

Thoreau might approve. Here he is in my backyard, not exactly the natural connection he was looking for, but still...

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Hawaiian Buns for Thanksgiving

Hawaiian Buns are a delicious treat: they are soft, and sweet, and perfect for both snacking on or serving with a warm meal. The most famous are, of course, the orange package of King’s Hawaiian buns found in your local supermarket. While the supermarket brand doesn’t contain pineapple or honey, those two ingredients were often used by Portuguese immigrants in Hawaii in the early 1900’s when refined sugar was scarce or too expensive to purchase. Our no-knead brioche and challah doughs already contained honey, so with just a little tweaking (and some pineapple juice and vanilla), we found ourselves with a great version of these famous buns, just in time for Thanksgiving dinner.

We have more Thanksgiving bun recipes on our site (Herb Crock Pot Dinner Rolls! Soft Pull Apart Buns!) and you can find links to them here. We also have a Thanksgiving round up post, complete with many of our sweet breads, plus a homemade-bread stuffing recipe, that you can check out here.

Hawaiian Buns

Fresh pineapple juice will not work here; the enzymes in fresh destroy the yeast. Some people heat the fresh juice with good results (this will kill the enzymes), but I’ve found canned to be the easiest (and cheapest) method. The pineapple juice can inhibit the yeast, so we use extra here to insure a good rise, and soft, tender buns. Having your eggs at room temperature will also help the dough rise quicker. The juice can also cause the melted butter to curdle when mixed, so I keep them separate until everything is mixed together. You can shape the buns the night before serving and let them do a slow rise overnight in the refrigerator.

1 cup [240 g] lukewarm water (100F or below)

1/2 cup [120 g] canned pineapple juice (fresh will not work here, see note above), room temperature

2 tablespoons yeast

1/4 cup [50 g] granulated sugar

1 cup [2 sticks | 226 g] unsalted butter, melted

1/2 cup [170 g] honey

1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract

5 eggs, room temperature, lightly beaten

1 tablespoon kosher salt

7 cups [990 g] all-purpose flour

In a liquid measuring cup, mix together the water, canned pineapple juice, yeast, and sugar.

Mix the butter, honey, eggs, vanilla, and salt together in a 6-quart bowl or lidded (not airtight) food container.

Pour in the flour and begin to mix, slowly adding the water/pineapple mixture. Use a Danish dough whisk to combine all the ingredients together (this can also be done in a heavy-duty stand mixer fitted with a paddle). The dough will be loose but will firm up when chilled; don’t try to work with it before chilling.

Cover (not airtight), allow to rest at room temperature for 2 hours, and then refrigerate.

The dough can be used as soon as it’s thoroughly chilled, at least 3 hours. Refrigerate the container and use over the next 3 days.

Hawaiian Buns

On baking day, cut off 1-pound (grapefruit-size) piece of dough and divide the dough into 8 pieces. Quickly shape the pieces into balls. Place the balls in a greased 8 x 8-inch baking dish, or an 8-inch cake pan. If you want more than 8 buns, as shown in the photos, double the quantity of dough used, or pull cut 2.5 ounce pieces to make the amount needed. If you want pull-apart buns, nestle the buns close together. Cover and allow to rest for 1 hour. Brush the tops with egg white (this will give them some shine).

Hawaiian Buns

Bake the buns at 350F for 16 minutes. Brush the tops of the buns with melted butter, then bake for 5 to 8 more minutes, until the tops are golden brown. Remove the pan from the oven, and brush the tops with more melted butter.

Hawaiian Buns

Serve slightly warm and enjoy! These buns can also be made in a Crock pot, follow our direction for Crock Pot Buns here.

Hawaiian Buns

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Pumpkin Star Bread

Pumpkin Star Bread for Thanksgiving

Our Holiday Star Bread was quite popular last year, so we decided to come up with yet another version: this one with pumpkin filling and sprinkled with sanding sugar. Our original version is filled with sugar and holiday spices, but we’ve also tried it with jam and Nutella, so if you are interested in playing around with recipe, there is also room for your own interpretation! This beautiful bread made it into our newest book, Holiday and Celebration Bread in Five Minutes a Day, and it is one of the prettiest, easiest and most sensational breads to make for a family gathering or work party.

Pumpkin Star Bread

(For step-by-step instructions, check out our Instagram highlights!)

2 pounds Brioche dough, Challah, Amish Milk Dough or our White Bread Master dough (from Holiday and Celebration Bread in Five Minutes a Day) (note that the enriched doughs will produce a richer, thicker bread)

Pumpkin Filling

1/2 cup unsweetened pumpkin puree
1/4 cup light brown sugar
1 tablespoons unsalted butter
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Pinch salt

Egg wash (1 egg mixed with 1 tablespoon water and a pinch of salt)

For the pumpkin filling: Combine the pumpkin puree, sugar, butter, ginger, cinnamon, and salt in a small saucepan and heat over low heat, stirring continuously until the butter has melted and the sugar has dissolved. Turn up the heat to medium and continue to heat the mixture, stirring constantly, until the mixture comes to a boil (the mixture is quite thick, so you need to look for slow bubbles). Once the puree is bubbling, turn the heat down to medium-low and cook the mixture for about 5 minutes, still stirring. Remove the puree from the heat. Cool to room temperature, then chill in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes before using.

For the star bread: Divide the dough into four equal pieces. Roll the pieces into balls, and let rest for 20 minutes, covering with plastic wrap.

With a rolling pin, roll out all the dough balls into 10-inch circles. Place one of the circles on a piece of parchment paper. Put a couple tablespoons of the pumpkin mixture on the round and spread evenly.

Place another circle on top of the first circle, and spread a couple more tablespoons of pumpkin. Repeat with one more circle, then place the final circle on top. (I like to chill the star for 20 minutes at this point; it helps make cutting and twisting a little easier.)

Place a 2 1/2-inch biscuit cutter (or other round object) in the center of the circle, and then use a bench scraper to cut the circle into 16 equal strips (starting at the circle and out to the end), cutting through all the layers.

Take two pieces of dough, and twist them away from each other twice. Repeat around the whole circle.

Pinch the ends of the pairs of strips firmly together to create the star (you should end up with 8 points).

Remove the biscuit cutter. Transfer the star on the parchment to baking sheet. Cover the star gently with plastic wrap and let rise for 45 minutes to 1 hour, until a bit puffy. During this time, preheat the oven to 400F. Before putting into the oven, brush the star with egg wash and sprinkle the center with sanding sugar, if desired. Bake for 20 to 30 minutes, until golden brown.

Remove from the oven and let cool on a wire rack for 15 to 20 minutes. Best eaten the day it’s made.

Lesaffre Yeast Corporation (Red Star) provided yeast samples for recipe testing, and sponsors BreadIn5’s website and other promotional activities.

Pumpkin Spice Monkey Bread

pumpkin spice monkey bread | bread in 5

We’ve had a lovely Autumn here in Minnesota, with warm weather lasting far into October. However, November has brought about a winter chill, and, with it, the desire to head to the kitchen and bake with cinnamon and pumpkin. Often I turn to cinnamon rolls or caramel rolls, but I decided this time around to make Monkey Bread.

Monkey Bread is easy to make. It’s basically a pull-apart cinnamon roll baked in a Bundt or loaf pan. Zoë has posted a standard recipe before, but today I’m doing one made with pumpkin spices: cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and cloves, and topped with a cream cheese icing. It’s the perfect way to celebrate the coming cold.

Read More

Thanksgiving Recipe Round Up

Pumpkin Brioche | Bread in 5
‘Over the river and through the wood,
To grandfather’s house we go;
The horse knows the way
To carry the sleigh
Through the white and drifted snow.

Over the river and through the wood –
Now grandmother’s cap I spy!
Hurrah for the fun!
Is the pudding done?
Hurrah for the pumpkin-pie!’ (Thanksgiving Day, by Lydia Maria Child)
(Of course, at our house, we would be cheering for pumpkin brioche instead of pie.)

Over the years, we’ve done quite a few posts that are Thanksgiving related. Here’s a round up of all our recipes, and also some from around the web. If you bake anything this Thanksgiving from our site or from our books, take a photo and then tag it with #breadin5 so we can see what you’re making! Here’s one more, a recipe for home-made stuffing from your own bread (click to view)! Read More

Caramel Apple Brioche Cake–for Thanksgiving Breakfast

Caramel Apple Brioche Cake for Thanksgiving Breakfast | Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes a Day

There are so many good things about Thanksgiving dinner. There’s the table piled with comfort food, the house full of family and friends, the first evening of holiday music playing, and a day to consider all the good things the year has brought.

But there’s something to be said about Thanksgiving breakfast. It’s always overlooked, and often skipped while one focuses on cleaning house, peeling potatoes, and setting the table. But what better way to start a day of feasting, really. This cake is one big roll, stuffed with apples and topped with caramel sauce and toasted pecans. It’s perfect to have on hand for overnight guests and bribing kids to pitch in Thursday morning. It also just may remind one to pause with gratitude; this treat is still bread underneath. Breaking it with a loved one first thing in the morning is a sweet sort of communion, a unique way to stop and give thanks.

Read More

Gluten-Free Thanksgiving Cornbread–great review of Gluten-Free Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes/Day in Columbus Dispatch

Columbus Dispatch Review of GFin5

“Hertzberg and François offer foolproof recipes for (gluten-free) bread…”

I was in Columbus recently, and had the distinct pleasure of driving around town at dusk, looking for a hotel (I’d made my reservation for the wrong month). Great town, dumb business traveler!

Lisa Abraham (@DispatchKitchen), the Food Editor at the Columbus Dispatch, has covered all of our books and she’s just reviewed Gluten-Free Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day. Read the whole article, which includes our Gluten-Free Cornbread for Thanksgiving. Thanks Lisa!

And click here to buy the book. 

Pumpkin Swirl Bread

Pumpkin Swirl Bread | Breadin5

Pumpkin pie and brioche are two of my all time favorites, so why not combine the two. The result is a bread rich with butter, eggs and spiced pumpkin puree. Spreading the pumpkin onto the brioche dough and rolling it into a log creates the swirl pattern when you cut it. The bread is gorgeous and tasty, perfect for Thanksgiving or just a fall morning with a cup of coffee.

Next week is the official release of our book The New Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day. Woot! To celebrate we are doing a giveaway, before the book even hits the stands. It is a small token of our appreciation for all your help in creating this new edition. We’ve incorporated what we’ve learned from your comments, your questions and your suggestions. Please leave us a comment below about your favorite experience baking bread or what you are most eager to try. We will give away 5 copies of the new book to randomly picked winners next week.* Thank you! Our usual contest rules apply (click here for rules); you need to respond within 24 hours of notification or we have to pick someone else. CONTEST CLOSED, WINNERS CHOSEN AND NOTIFIED 10/22/13.

To make the Pumpkin Swirl Bread:

Pumpkin Swirl Bread | Breadin5 Read More

Thanksgiving Leftovers Torta

Thanksgiving leftovers

No matter how big your Thanksgiving feast is or how many people are gathered around your table, chances are there’s more leftovers than you know what to do with. Here is a way to use the extra turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, plus anything else that graced your holiday table and make it into something new. There’s an Italian Torta recipe in Artisan Pizza in Five, but why not swap out the layers for all those leftovers? It is tasty and gorgeous and goes together in a flash if you are cleaning out the fridge of all those half empty containers. Read More