Betsy and I used to be big time sandwich people for lunch. In my opinion, you can put almost anything on a sandwich and it’ll probably be decent as long as one thing is really good: The bread.

If I get a sandwich and it’s made with some crappy flimsy bread, I just don’t care for it. I want my bread sturdy and ready for tons of condiments and toppings. I want to be able to wrap it up and eat it a few hours later without worrying about it falling apart.

We’re getting back into sandwiches these days after a brief stint in a quinoa salad.

So I took this as an opportunity to work on my sandwich breads.

These big, thin, sturdy loaves called stecca or “stick” turned out to make for some of the best sandwich bread I’ve had!

Stecca Sandwich Bread

4 from 2 votes
Author: Nick Evans
Servings: 8 Servings
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 15 minutes
Sandwich bread that resembles hoagies, made with no knead bread!

Ingredients 

  • 3 Cups 400 grams bread flour
  • 1 Teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 Teaspoon sugar
  • ¼ Teaspoon yeast, instant or active dry is fine
  • 1 ½ Cups cool water, 55-65 degrees F.
  • Additional flour, olive oil, and kosher salt for dusting

Instructions

  • Combine flour, sugar, salt, and yeast in a large bowl.  Stir in water until combined.  It should be a pretty wet dough.
  • Let sit, covered, for 12-18 hours.
  • Scrape dough onto a well-floured surface.  Work the dough a bit by folding it over itself.  After a few folds, form a loose ball with the dough.
  • Add the dough to a well-floured towel, seam side down.  Drizzle dough with olive oil and top with a pinch of kosher salt.
  • Cover dough ball and let rise for 2 hours.
  • Cut dough into 4 equal parts.  Lightly oil two 18 inch sheet pans.
  • Form 4 long, thin loaves with each quarter of dough.  The loaves should be a few inches across and fairly thin.  Don’t worry about them being all the same though.
  • Drizzle each loaf with a bit more olive oil and another small pinch of salt.  Let them rise again for 30 minutes.
  • Bake in a pre-heated 500 degree oven for 15-25 minutes until the loaves are golden brown.  Mine took about 20 minutes.
  • Let cool for at least 30 minutes before eating.
  • To store, let cool completely, then wrap in plastic wrap and store in the fridge.

Notes

Adapted from My Bread.

Nutrition

Serving: 0.5Loaf | Calories: 172kcal | Carbohydrates: 35g | Protein: 6g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 0.1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Sodium: 294mg | Potassium: 48mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 1IU | Calcium: 9mg | Iron: 0.4mg
Course: Breads, Sandwiches
Cuisine: Italian

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The Dough

This dough comes together just like the normal loaf of no knead bread would. It takes maybe 60 seconds to get it ready, but it does need to sit for 12-18 hours before you can continue with the recipe. So a bit of planning is necessary unfortunately.

Don’t worry though, you’ll be well-rewarded for your planning efforts.

Start by mixing the flour, sugar, salt, and yeast in a large bowl. Add in the water and stir to combine. The dough should be very loose. It should be too wet to knead even if you wanted to.

This is what mine looked like after about 15 seconds of stirring.

dough mixed
No knead necessary!

Cover this with plastic wrap and let it sit for at least 12 hours.

During that time, the slow fermentation will basically knead the dough for you as the gases work through the dough.

You’ll come back to a dough that’s more than double in volume and very soft. It’ll be really wet, more wet than when you left it because the flour is now completely relaxed.

These are all good things.

after rise
After a night…

Shaping the Loaves

So now that you have this big bowl of dough, let’s make some great sandwich bread.

The thing to remember when working with this dough is that you’ll need to use a good amount of flour to make sure you can work with it. Otherwise, it’ll be too sticky.

So sprinkle a good amount of flour on a work surface. Then scrape out the dough from the bowl and turn it over itself a few times. Kind of press it down, then fold over the edges. Just do this a few times until you have a rough ball of dough that holds its shape. It shouldn’t take more than a minute.

Transfer this dough ball to a kitchen towel that’s been floured also. Once the dough is on the towel with the seam side down, drizzle it with olive oil and sprinkle it with a pinch of kosher salt.

shaped
Don’t worry about this part.

Cover this with the towel and let it rise again for 2 hours.

When this rise is done, take the dough and cut it into four even pieces. If you want to get exact, you could weigh them, but I kind of just went by sight.

Lightly oil two 18 inch baking sheets. Take each quarter of dough and stretch or roll it out to fit the length of the pan. So each piece of dough will stretch to 18 inches and should be a few inches across. It’s fine if they are very thin at this point.

Also, don’t worry about the loaves being perfectly uniform. Go for the rustic look.

Once the loaves are shaped, drizzle them with a bit more olive oil and salt and let them rise again for 30 minutes.

formed
Don’t worry about this part either.

Baking and Sandwich Making

Bake these guys in a preheated in a 500 degree oven for 15-25 minutes. You might need to rotate the pans if they are looking like they are cooking unevenly.

Mine took about 20 minutes before they were golden brown on the top.

cooked
Really good.

I was worried that mine were getting burned on the bottom, but it turned out to be perfect.

This was what the bottoms looked like after 20 minutes.

bottom
The backside.

After you let these cool for at least 30 minutes, you can chop into them.

Mine had a beautiful crumb structure. Perfect for sandwiches!

crumb
Some of the best I’ve made!

Betsy likes turkey, but I was on a pastrami kick last week.

One loaf of the bread makes two really big sandwiches actually.

As you can see, this is one mean sandwich. I’d guess this would cost $10 at a deli and I made it for around $3-$4.

sandwich
Beautiful.

If you’re not a sandwich person, this bread would be great for just dipping in some olive oil as well. It’s a pretty good all-purpose loaf that is a heck of a lot easier to make then, say, a traditional French baguette.

Once my loaves were cooled completely, I stored mine in the fridge, wrapping them twice in plastic wrap. They kept really well for the whole week!