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THE OATSTANDING LOAF

🧀🌰🍏🌾 The Oatstanding Loaf




Apple, Cheddar, Hazelnut & Cider Bread – Straight Outta the Panasonic Mini






Introduction: A Loaf Worth Lifting the Lid For



There are loaves, and then there are legendary loaves. The kind you remember. The kind you brag about. The kind that—when you pull it warm from the breadmaker—makes the entire kitchen smell like you’ve kidnapped Mary Berry and locked her in your pantry.


This is that loaf.


Introducing: The Oatstanding Loaf. A glorious fusion of porridge oats, juicy apples, toasted hazelnuts, mature cheddar, and a healthy glug of dry cider. Made in a humble Panasonic SD-PN100KXC mini breadmaker, this golden, hearty marvel is the culinary equivalent of a campervan road trip through a cider orchard with the windows down.


It’s rustic yet soft, crunchy yet springy, sweet yet savoury. It’s the kind of loaf that works just as well at a Sunday brunch with friends as it does on a rainy night in Stafford with a mug of tea and a greedy grin.


And here’s the thing — this isn’t just about flour and yeast. This is a story about breadmaking joy, about flavour adventures, and about turning a small kitchen appliance into a powerhouse of artisan expression.


So, put the kettle on, butter your expectations, and join me on a deep dive into The Oatstanding Loaf.





Chapter 1: Where It All Began



The Oatstanding Loaf wasn’t born in a lab or passed down through generations of crusty-handed grandmas. It came from a simple moment of madness:


“What if I put oats, cheddar, hazelnuts, apple, and cider into the same loaf… and baked it in my mini breadmaker?”


Most people would question the logic. I embraced it like a warm slice of toast. I’d already perfected the original Cider Crunch—a rapid breadmaker loaf using dry cider, cheese, and apple—but I wanted to level it up. I wanted more texture, more complexity, and yes… more oats.


Thus began a series of bakes, tweaks, failures (RIP, sloppy cider sponge loaf), and test runs until finally, I pulled out a loaf so glorious it deserved a name. It deserved respect. It deserved a poster.


It became: The Oatstanding Loaf.





Chapter 2: What Makes It So… Oatstanding?



Let’s talk flavour profile.


This isn’t just a bread. It’s a symphony of ingredients, each with its own role:



🍏 Apple – Sweet & Juicy



Chopped small and blotted dry, apple pieces release little pockets of sweetness throughout the loaf.



🧀 Cheddar – Sharp & Savoury



Mature cheddar melts into the dough, creating flavour bombs that contrast the apple beautifully.



🌰 Hazelnuts – Nutty Crunch



Toasted before adding, these bring depth and bite. They add a “hang on, what is that?” level of sophistication.



🌾 Oats – Texture & Heartiness



Oats absorb liquid, add chew, and deliver a rustic mouthfeel that screams “artisanal bakery”.



🍺 Cider – The Tangy Backbone



Cider replaces much of the liquid. It doesn’t taste boozy but adds acidity, aroma, and a subtle fruitiness that ties it all together.


The final result? A soft, moist, golden loaf with just enough heft to feel proper, and just enough fluff to keep you coming back for slice after slice.





Chapter 3: The Full Recipe (450g – Panasonic SD-PN100KXC – Basic Rapid Program)




📝 Ingredients



Wet:


  • 170g dry cider (room temp)

  • 60g whole milk (lukewarm)

  • 10g soft butter

  • 5g neutral oil (rapeseed or sunflower)

  • ½ tsp lemon juice (optional but helps with rise)



Dry:


  • 220g strong white bread flour

  • 80g porridge oats

  • 10g sugar

  • 5g salt

  • 4g instant yeast (heaped 1¼ tsp)



Mix-ins (added at the beep):


  • 60g firm apple, small dice, blotted dry

  • 50g mature cheddar, grated

  • 40g toasted hazelnuts, chopped



🔥 Toast hazelnuts at 160°C for 8–10 minutes. Don’t skip this!





Chapter 4: The Method – Mini Breadmaker, Mega Magic



  1. Add to breadmaker pan in this order:


    • Cider

    • Milk

    • Lemon juice

    • Soft butter + oil

    • Sugar and salt

    • Flour and oats

    • Yeast on top (keep it dry)


  2. Set Panasonic SD-PN100KXC:


    • Program: Basic Rapid

    • Size: 450g

    • Crust: Light (for softness) or Medium (for chew)


  3. Wait for mix-in beep (usually 8–10 minutes in), then open lid and gently add:


    • Apple

    • Cheddar

    • Hazelnuts


  4. Let it bake (~1hr 55min), remove immediately, cool on wire rack.



Resist the urge to slice while hot. Letting it cool fully ensures the cheese sets and the crumb stabilises. Plus, anticipation adds flavour. Science.





Chapter 5: What It Tastes Like




🔸 The Crust



Golden, oaty, lightly crisp. Holds its shape. Toasts like a dream.



🔸 The Crumb



Soft, open, and fluffy with a gentle chew from the oats. It doesn’t crumble—it rips.



🔸 The Flavour



It’s balanced and complex:


  • Sweet apple moments

  • Creamy melted cheddar

  • Crunchy nut surprises

  • The zing of cider weaving it all together



Honestly? It’s deeply moreish. One slice becomes two. And by the time the kettle’s boiled… the loaf’s half gone.





Chapter 6: Serving Suggestions



You can serve The Oatstanding Loaf however you like, but here are some of my tried-and-tested winners:



🧀 Cheese Board Saviour



Serve with blue cheese, fig chutney, and a crisp cider. You’ll never touch crackers again.



🥓 Fry-Up Foundation



Toasted slice. Fried egg. Crispy bacon. Splash of brown sauce. Welcome to flavour country.



🥪 Next-Level Sandwiches



Cold roast pork, grain mustard, rocket. Boom.



🧈 Toast + Butter



Don’t overthink it. Just toast, butter, and munch.



🥗 Croutons (if there are leftovers… unlikely)



Cube, toast, and toss into a salad with rocket, apple, and walnuts. Fancy? You bet.





Chapter 7: Campervan-Ready Baking



Now here’s where it really shines. Because this loaf is:


  • Made in a compact machine

  • One-bowl, one-loaf, no mess

  • Fast (under 2 hours)

  • Easily stored for road trips



I’ve baked this in my van, Vanilla, more than once. The smell wafting out of the pop-top makes neighbouring campers lean out and ask what’s cooking. It’s the ultimate road trip loaf.


Slice it up, pack it with ham and chutney, wrap in foil, and boom: lunch sorted. It even doubles as a hot snack if you toast it over the Cadac BBQ or warm it up on the hob next to a pot of soup.


It’s the kind of bread that makes you feel like a master baker, even when you’re parked on a gravel pitch halfway up a mountain.





Chapter 8: Storage, Slicing, and Freezing




🧊 Storage



  • Wrap in a tea towel or breathable bread bag

  • Keeps soft for 2–3 days




🔥 Reheating



  • Best way to refresh? Dry pan toast for 1 min per side

  • For extra indulgence: butter both sides, fry like French toast, add a fried egg




🧊 Freezing



  • Slice before freezing

  • Defrost slices in toaster or oven

  • Stays fresh for 2–3 months






Chapter 9: Custom Loaf Variations



Feeling adventurous? Here are a few twists on the Oatstanding Loaf formula:



🍐 Swap Apple for Pear



Works beautifully with blue cheese.



🥜 Use Walnuts Instead of Hazelnuts



Adds a more savoury, bitter crunch.



🌶️ Add a Pinch of Chilli Flakes



For a subtle heat that kicks in just after the cheddar.



🧅 Add Caramelised Onion



Make it a proper ploughman’s loaf.



🐐 Goat’s Cheese Instead of Cheddar



Creamier, funkier, brilliant with apple.


Let me know if you want me to test these variations and create “Oatstanding: Volume Two.”





Final Thoughts: This Loaf Deserves Applause



So there you have it: The Oatstanding Loaf. It started as a cheeky idea, built up layer by layer, and now it’s a full-blown breadmaking sensation in my kitchen and campervan alike.


It’s proof that:


  • Your mini breadmaker is capable of greatness

  • Good ingredients don’t need to be complicated

  • Oats, cheddar, apple, nuts, and cider really can live together in harmony



Whether you’re baking this to impress, snack, road-trip, or just experiment with a new combo — this loaf is your trusty, fluffy, flavour-packed friend.





📥 Want the Poster or Recipe Card?



I’ve made a full poster for The Oatstanding Loaf and a printable recipe card — just message me or drop by the recipe hub on johnsdrones.net.


If you bake it, tag me:

📸 @johnnickolls on Instagram

or use the tag #OatstandingLoaf so I can drool over your creations.


Cheers, carb comrades. May your loaves always be fluffy, and your cider always cold. 🍺🍞





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