Water Bread / Pan de Agua

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We are nearing the end of the month and end of the awesome Baking Mega Marathon in which we baked dishes for each alphabet from A to Z from various countries across the world. I was not fully prepared for this marathon and was very nervous of baking and clicking and posting on the same day and having so much bread to eat. But I have enjoyed each and every aspect of this month and had an absolute ball with all that baking. Even though my fellow blogging marathoners are spread across the world, with the regular commenting on each others’ blogs, I feel like we are so close and chatting across the hall as we each bake a delicacy in our respective kitchens.

This bread marks another ‘first’ for me. It is the first time that I baked in a oven that was not preheated. I have been so used to preheating the oven before baking anything that I was surprised to see a baked dish, that too bread, could be baked in a cold oven. If you have not tried it before you would be skeptic too but the results are awesome. So do not miss out.

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I was not able to get too much information about the origin or history of this bread except for the fact that it is popular in Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico and named ‘Pan de Agua’ or ‘Water Bread’ because of the differing baking method. It is a regular bread in terms of ingredients and proofing but when it comes to baking it is completely different. This bread is first kept in a cold oven with a cup of hot water below it for ten minutes. Thereafter the oven is switched on and the bread is baked. This method allows the bread to rise and gives it a beautiful crunchy crust that is to die for. The bread can be eaten as is or with butter or even used to make sandwiches.

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Country – Dominican Republic / Puerto Rico

Makes two 12″ loaves

Recipe adapted from here

WHAT WE WANT

All purpose flour              2 1/2 cups

Instant yeast                      1 tsp heaped

Sugar                                   1 1/2 tsp

Salt                                       1 1/2 tsp

Lukewarm water              1 cup ( See Notes)

Boiling hot water              1 cup

Milk for glaze                    2 tbsp

Cornmeal / flour to dust the baking tray
WHAT TO DO

  • In a large bowl, mix together the flour, Yeats, sugar, salt and lukewarm water
  • Knead well for 8-10 minutes by hand to form a soft and elastic dough
  • Cover and set it aside in a greased bowl till it doubles in volume, around 2 hours
  • Take out the dough and divide into 2 equal parts
  • Shape each part into a 12-14″ oblong loaf
  • Transfer both to a baking tray dusted with cornmeal or flour
  • Slash 3-4 times on the top with a serrated knife and brush the top with milk
  • Pour the boiling water in a shallow baking dish and place it in the bottom rack of a cold oven
  • Immediately put the baking tray on the middle rack and shut the oven door
  • After 10 minutes, switch on the oven at 200C and bake for 30-35 minutes or till the top is nicely brown
  • Slice it after it has completely cooled
  • Enjoy with butter or as is!

NOTES

  1. Since it is peak summer in Bangalore, where I live, I have been having issues with the dough taking too long to rise because of the heat. So in this recipe I used room temperature water to knead the dough instead of lukewarm water which helped in faster rising of the dough. If you are baking when the outside temperature is 35C or more, it would be better to use room temperature water to knead.
  2. In order to capture maximum steam within in the oven, it is necessary to shut th woven door as soon as both the loaves and boiling water have been placed inside. So, it is advisable to have the loaves ready, slashed, brushed with milk before pouring the boiling water in the baking dish

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This is my post for the Mega Marathon under the letter ‘W’.

Check out the Blogging Marathon page for the other Blogging Marathoners doing BM# 75

11 Comments Add yours

  1. How interesting to bake a bread with a totally new technique . And the bread’s texture is mind blowing . I would definitely love to taste some from it.
    Kudos to you Sowmya for baking , clicking, posting as well as commenting everyday .
    I am not amazed , those three days in Delhi , they were good enough to know your sincerity for Blogging.

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  2. Priya Suresh says:

    Seriously this is definitely an interesting bread, completely a different one from the usual bread. Well done Sowmya, am in love with this bread.

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  3. That’s one gorgeous bread Sowmya. Baking in cold oven sounds interesting. Got to try this for sure. Awesome share.

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  4. Such a different technique with such amazing results!!

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  5. sweetnams says:

    Wow that is a very interesting technique and am going to try it! The crumb and crust look great. And I completely agree, though we are spread across the world it feels we are so well connected through this one medium 🙂

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  6. Srivalli Jetti says:

    The texture looks so good Sowmya, nice reading about the method of baking and what you said is so true too, this marathon has been so wonderful!..and I totally love your series!

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  7. Pavani says:

    That is a very interesting way of baking a bread. I think keeping the bread in cold oven even gives it a crispier crust.

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  8. Such basic ingredients that make a great loaf of bread. The texture of the bread is quite different since we start it in the cold oven.

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  9. cookingwithsapana says:

    How interesting the texture of the bread is. Looks totally delicious.

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  10. Awesome recipe.. Totally different form the regular ones!!

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