The Best JalapeƱo Cheddar Artisan Sourdough Bread Recipe

It only took 12 loaves, but we did it: this right here is a winning recipe for jalapeƱo cheddar sourdough bread.
To be honest, anyone can whip up a quick loaf of jalapeƱo cheddar, no recipe required. Just throw in some diced jalapeƱos and shredded cheddar, and you’ll be just fine.
What I’m trying to achieve with my borderline ridiculous recipe testing is perfection. How can I elevate the humble jalapeƱo cheddar loaf to new heights?
I want this to be the version you whip out when you’re ready to impress.

In laws coming for dinner for the first time, pops has an inkling for heat, and they know you make sourdough? Simple recipes better step aside, because jalapeƱo juice, a touch of fresh serrano, and nutritional yeast are entering the chat.
Some may say this recipe is overboard, and I agree to a certain extent. But after five rounds of recipe testing (and 12 loaves), I believe I’ve nailed down a truly mouthwatering combination.
I dare say it’s the best.
But don’t worry. You can deviate from the recipe as written, and I have all the tips at the ready. I tried so many variations and can guide you based on my findings.

Why Youāll Love This Recipe
- Perfectly balanced: The mix of fresh jalapeƱos, serrano for kick, and a touch of candied jalapeƱo creates layers of flavor. Itās spicy, slightly sweet, and cheesy in all the right ways.
- Cheesy in every bite: With both white and yellow cheddar folded into the doughāand extra melted on topāthis loaf is loaded with flavor. Add the optional nutritional yeast, and it takes the cheesy depth up one more notch.
- Not your average dough base: Instead of plain water, this dough uses a mix of water and pickled jalapeƱo juice, infusing every bite with a bold kick of jalapeƱo flavor.
- Three kinds of jalapeƱos: Yes, youāll need a few typesāfresh, candied, pickledābut each one brings something different to the table. Totally worth the extra grocery store lap.

The Journey: 5 Attempts (and 12 Loaves) to Success
This recipe started with your ideas. So many great suggestions came in when I asked for tips on making the perfect jalapeƱo cheddar sourdough loaf.
Biggest hurdle here – so many amazing ways to do it with no clear “perfect” one – just a matter of preference. How can I publish ONE recipe when there are probably 50 different winning ways to do it?!
Watch my full recipe testing journey here.
Here’s a full list of suggestions from all of you:
Cheese
- Pepper jack cheese
- Sharp white cheddar
- Sharp cheddar cheese
- Asiago & cheddar (smells like nachos)
- Habanero cheddar from Costco
- Chipotle white cheddar from Costco
- Habanero cheese from Cabot
- Flamin jack cheese from Sam’s Club
- Tillamook shredded cheddar
- Parmigiano Reggiano
- Spicy gouda
- Smoked gouda
Jalapeno
- Pickled/jarred (many say stronger flavor than fresh)
- Mezzetta jarred spicy jalapeƱos for super spicy
- Fresh
- Canned
- Cowboy candy (candied jalapeƱo)
- Add serranos to up the spice
- Jalapeno powder in the dough
- Freeze-dried jalapeƱos
Misc.
- Mikeās hot honey
- Regular honey (to balance the spice)
- Add bacon to make it jalapeƱo popper
- Sub 50g water for bacon fat
- Crunchy chili onion spread laminated in
- Use jalapeƱo juice in the dough
- Caramelized onion cheese by Boars Head
- Cayenne pepper in the dough
- Chili powder in the dough
- Add chives
- Red pepper flakes
Tips
- 30% cheddar / 20% jalapeƱos
- Half grated, half cubed cheese
- Add during stretch and folds/coil folds
- Chop jalapeƱos in a food processor
- Add more jalapeƱos than you think you need
- Roast jalapeƱos and make a paste
- Toss flour into the cheese so it floats in the dough
- Toss jalapeƱos in flour to absorb excess moisture
- Hoop cheese – doesnāt melt and holds shape
- Leave ribs in jalapeƱos, just ditch the seeds
- Dehydrate jalapeƱos first
- Use gloves when handling jalapeƱos
- Crunchy cheesy crust on top of the loaf
- Donāt buy pre-shredded cheese
- Use parchment instead of bread sling (it absorbs some of the cheese oil)
- Never enough cheese flavor (think of ways to add more cheese flavor to the dough perhaps? What about nutritional yeast?)
- Season the jalapeƱos (salt and pepper)
With my notes in hand, I got to work on my first recipe testing round.
Test 1: Finding the Best Cheddar Cheese Brand
I tested three brands of white cheddar:
- Cabot Extra Sharp White Cheddar
- Tillamook Extra Sharp White Cheddar
- Simple Truth Organic Sharp White Cheddar (Kroger brand)
Each loaf used the same base recipe with 15% pickled jalapeƱos and 15% cheese (in baker’s percentages). I also swapped out 15% of the water in the dough for pickled jalapeƱo juice.
To add the inclusions, I folded them in during the third set of stretch and folds.


Results:
- Simple Truth: Looked best visually but flavor disappeared into the dough
- Tillamook: Punchiest flavor and amazing aromaācreated a crispy top with less oil
- Cabot: Creamiest and most balanced flavor without being overpowering
My pick: Cabot for balanced flavor ($3.79), but Tillamook ($5.29) if you want bolder flavor
Test 2: JalapeƱo Variations
For round 2 of testing, I made three medium-sized loaves* with different jalapeƱo combinations:
- Canned jalapeƱos
- Half pickled + half candied jalapeƱos
- 2 fresh jalapeƱos + 1 serrano pepper
*I realized at this point I’d probably be making a ton of jalapeno cheddar loaves… so I reduced my loaf size by about 25% to save on flour costs. I ended up loving the medium-sized loaves!!
As for the cheese, I wanted more of it (naturally). I increased the cheese from 15% to 20%. I also missed the yellow color (white disappeared into the loaf), so I switched to half white, half yellow cheddar.


Results:
- Canned: Dull flavor that nobody enjoyed
- Pickled + Candied: Complex sweet-tangy comboāa close second place for me, but the winner for my husband and his friend
- Fresh JalapeƱo + Serrano: Clear winner for me with the best flavor and perfect heat level
Also, the higher cheese percentage (20%) was definitely worth keeping!
Test 3: Adding Honey
I tested whether adding honey would balance the heat:
- Regular honey (7%)
- Mike’s Hot Honey (7%)

Results:
- Both doughs rose differentlyāregular honey rose more
- Both were sticky and hard to work with
- Flavor improvement was subtle and not worth the trouble of refining and doing more testing
- Candied jalapeƱos do a better job of adding sweetness
Test 4: Liquid & Flavor Boosters
For this test, I wanted to tackle two things at once:
- Water vs. jalapeƱo juice in the dough
- Adding nutritional yeast for extra cheese flavor
Note: A lot of people were divided on nutritional yeast, but I decided to give it a shot. I believe it’s an entirely optional ingredient, so if you’re not a fan, just leave it out.

Key finding: The loaf with just water was a loftier loaf, but it lacked the boost of jalapeƱo flavor. While the loaf with jalapeƱo juice didn’t expand quite as much, the flavor trade-off was well-worth it to me.
And the nutritional yeast? Slam dunk.
Test 5: Fine Tuning
For the very last test, I kept everything that worked with tiny tweaks to inch towards perfection.
The tweaks:
- Testing King Arthur unbleached bread flour: I’d been using Caputo Americana 00 flour, which I bought in bulk from a local restaurant supply store. I wanted to make sure this ingredient mix worked well using a more popular flour.
- Coating inclusions in flour: I also decided at the 11th hour to test coating the inclusions in a touch of flour before stretch and folding them in. A baker told me this helps them “float” better in the final loaf.
- Increasing the inclusions a little: Why not push the limits? I upped the amount of inclusions by a little to see if I could get away with it.
The result? After the initial mix, the dough with King Arthur bread flour needed a splash more water to achieve the same texture. But everything else was perfection.
I also do think coating the inclusions in a little flour helped them disperse more evenly (and stay put). See a side-by-side:

Other meticulously-tested recipes you can add to your baking to-do list:
- The Best Lemon Blueberry Artisan Sourdough Bread Recipe
- Cinnamon Swirl Sourdough Bread Recipe: No Stress, No Leaks
- The Best Sourdough Hot Cross Buns Recipe (So Soft!)
- Overnight Sourdough Hot Dog Buns (Super Soft & Easy)
Bakerās Timeline
| Time | Step |
|---|---|
| Before bed | Feed your starter |
| 8am | Mix the dough (bulk fermentation begins) |
| 8:30am | Stretch and fold |
| 9am | Stretch and fold, prep inclusions |
| 9:30am | Stretch and fold inclusions in |
| 10am | Coil fold |
| 3:30pm | Pre-shape (bulk fermentation ends); your timing may differ |
| 3:50pm | Final shaping, put in fridge |
| Any time the following day | Bake |

Ingredients
- White cheddar cheese: Melts into the dough and adds a little something extra. Itās less visible but brings a lot of flavor.
- Yellow cheddar cheese: Adds color and that classic cheddar vibe. Also helps give the top a golden, bubbly crust when melted.
- Fresh jalapeƱo and serrano: Fresh jalapeƱos give flavor and crunch. The serrano brings the heat. You can skip the serrano if you want a more mild loaf.
- Candied jalapeƱos: Adds a little sweetness to balance the spice.
- Pickled jalapeƱo juice: Replaces some of the water in the dough which adds tang and a jalapeƱo flavor right from the start.
- Nutritional yeast (optional): Boosts the cheesy flavor and helps it permeate the entire loaf. You can skip it if you’re not a fan.
- Caputo Americana 00 flour: A soft, high-protein wheat flour that makes the dough feel smooth and easy to work with. Don’t worry ā you can swap in regular bread flour. Tips in the Substitutions section and Recipe Notes.
- Water: I just use tap water. It works great in all my sourdough bakes.
- Salt: I used sea salt here. Just avoid any with anti-caking agents so it doesnāt mess with the fermentation.
How to Make JalapeƱo Cheddar Sourdough Bread (Step by Step)

Step 1: Make the Starter
The night before (2 nights before you want to bake your loaf), mix 10g of your sourdough starter (active or discard) with 50g of bread flour and 50g water and stir until fully combined.
This will make a little extra so you can feed the leftovers to keep your starter going or add them to your discard jar in the fridge.
Cover loosely and let sit on your counter at room temperature overnight (about 10-12 hours).
By morning, it should be peaked and ready to use.
Learn more: Is My Sourdough Starter Ready to Bake With? How I Can Tell
Step 2: Mix the Dough
In a large mixing bowl, combine 180g water, 50g pickled jalapeƱo juice, and 86g active sourdough starter and stir to dissolve the starter.
Add 3g nutritional yeast (optional), 375g Caputo 00 flour, and 7g salt. The nutritional yeast is optional and no other adjustment is needed if you want to leave it out.
Mix the dough with your hands or a Danish dough whisk (affiliate link) until all the dry flour is mixed in. The dough will feel sticky and shaggy at this point.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it rest for 30 minutes.
Step 3: Stretch and Folds (+ Adding Inclusions)
We’re doing four rounds of dough strengthening total:
- Stretch and fold
- Stretch and fold
- Stretch and fold the inclusions in
- Coil fold
Each set is separated by a 30-minute rest.
While the dough rests after round two, prep the inclusions:
- Dice the fresh jalapeƱo
- Finely dice the serrano
- Dice the candied jalapeƱo and pat it dry with a paper towel
- Shred the cheeses
- Optional: coat all of these inclusions in a few teaspoons of bread flour (I found this helps them “float” better in the dough for a more even distribution)


During your third stretch and fold, youāll add all the inclusions in layers. The dough should feel stronger by this point.
Mix all the inclusions (jalapenos and cheeses) together in a bowl, and sprinkle about 1/4 of the inclusion mix onto the top of your dough. Stretch one side up and fold it over the inclusions, gently pressing them in.
Turn the bowl a quarter turn, sprinkle another 1/4 of the mix on top again, and stretch up and fold over again.
Repeat two more times until youāve used it all and completed folds on all four sides. Try to keep the inclusions tucked in as much as possible to avoid poking through later.
Here’s a visual of how to add inclusions during stretch and folds:








After another 30-minute rest, do a coil fold for your final fold by lifting the center of the dough, letting it droop down, and tucking the sides under as you set it back down.
This helps build tension without over-handling the dough. If the dough feels slack, do one more coil fold after another short rest.
Step 4: Bulk Fermentation
Cover and let the dough rise at room temperature.
You want to look for visual clues to tell when itās done. It should be jiggly and show bubbles around the edges, and easily pull away from the sides of your bowl.



Mine took about 7.5 hours, and my dough temperature was 75°F (24°C). The timing begins when you mix the starter into your dough and ends at the pre-shaping.
Step 5: Shaping
Lightly dust your surface with bread flour and gently turn the dough out onto your counter.
Note: I typically like to mist my surface with water during shaping, but the jalapeƱo juice in this dough makes it a tad stickier than normal. A light dusting of flour seems to help the shaping go more smoothly.
Using your bench scraper, gently coax it into a loose ball with some tension on the surface using a push-pull motion.



Let rest, uncovered, for 20 minutes so it can relax a bit. The top of the dough will also dry out slightly, making it easier to do the final shaping.
Scoop it up with your bench scraper and flip the dough over.


I like the caddy clasp method. To do this, fold the dough like a book.


Stitch up the center seam.


If you want to make a round-shaped loaf (called a boule), turn the clasped dough and repeat the clasping motion one more time. You may want to flip it back over and repeat the pre-shaping motion to round it out. Then, flip it into your banneton. I have a video tutorial in the Recipe Notes, if needed.
Step 6: Cold Retard
Dust a banneton with rice flour and place the dough inside seam-side up. Pinch the seam closed and stitch it together if needed to help keep the tension on the top of the dough.
Cover it with plastic wrap or a clean kitchen towel and refrigerate it overnight, or for 8 to 24 hours. I don’t recommend cold proofing any longer than 4 days.
Step 7: Bake
In the morning, preheat your oven to 450°F with a Dutch oven or bread dome inside for at least 30 minutes.
Flip your cold dough onto parchment or a silicone bread sling, score the top with a bread lame, and into the oven it goes. You can throw in an ice cube if you want blistering on the crust, but that’s optional.

Bake it covered for 25 minutes, then remove the lid and top the loaf with 20g of shredded cheddar cheese and 5 neatly placed slices of fresh jalapeƱo.

Bake uncovered for another 10ā15 minutes until your loaf is golden and that cheese on top is golden brown. The internal temp should be 205ā210°F.
Transfer the loaf to a cooling rack and resist the urge to cut into it until it’s completely cooled.

Substitutions
- White and yellow cheddar: I stuck with a blend of cheddar cheese to honor the classic jalapeƱo cheddar combo, but you can use virtually any type of cheese you like. Pepperjack is a crowd favorite, Gouda would be delightful, and I’d remiss if I didn’t at least mention the Cabot Wickedly Habanero cheddar cheese. That stuff packs a serious punch.
- Fresh jalapeƱos: You can use pickled jalapeƱo instead of fresh with no adjustments needed. I found I preferred the freshness of the fresh peppers, but the difference is minimal.
- JalapeƱo juice: Feel free to omit the jalapeƱo juice in the dough and replace it with additional water. I found I got a loftier loaf with all water, but I severely missed the bold jalapeƱo flavor you get from the added juice. Decisions, decisions!
- Fresh serrano: You can omit the serrano and just use fresh jalapeƱo if you’re not a fan of the heat.
- Nutritional yeast: I was shocked at the boost of cheesy flavor this added, but it’s entirely optional. Omit from the recipe if you desire.
FAQs

If you don’t lower the dough hydration to account for the added moisture, then yes. I reduced the hydration so you don’t have to.
I tested four types of jalapeƱos, and only canned ones disappointed with their dull flavor. Fresh jalapeƱos paired with serrano peppers deliver the best overall taste, while candied jalapeƱos add sweetness to balance the heat. Pickled jalapeƱos offer a tangy alternative, and their juice can be incorporated into the dough for extra flavor. My winning combination uses fresh + serrano + candied jalapeƱos with pickled juice in the dough, but feel free to experiment while maintaining the same inclusion ratios.
Adding inclusions during stretch and folds ensures even distribution without degassing fully fermented dough. This timing allows flavors to permeate while giving the dough enough initial structure to contain them without tearing. While you could add them during shaping with lamination, you’d risk deflating the dough and reducing oven springāfine for some recipes, but this method works especially well for jalapeƱos and cheese.
No – you can definitely use just one type for flavor, but I found that combining both white and yellow cheddar creates the perfect balance. The white cheddar delivers excellent flavor while the yellow adds that visual “cheesy goodness” you expect when slicing into a jalapeƱo cheddar loaf, giving you the best of both worlds.
Misting your surface with water usually works great, but if your dough feels a little sticky (which it might, thanks to all those jalapeƱo inclusions), you can sprinkle your counter with flour instead. Just avoid rice flour ā itās too nonstick and makes shaping harder. Save it for dusting your banneton and the top of your loaf before cold proofing.

JalapeƱo Cheddar Artisan Sourdough Bread
Equipment
- Oval banneton (5% off with code TSG5) | Size I'm Using: Oval ā Spiral MD
- Oval Dutch oven ($15 off with code REBEKAH15)
Ingredients
Sourdough Starter
- 10 g sourdough starter (active or discard)
- 50 g bread flour
- 50 g water
Main Dough
- 180 g water
- 50 g pickled jalapeƱo juice
- 86 g active sourdough starter (that you made, from above)
- 3 g nutritional yeast (optional; adds more cheesy flavor)
- 375 g Caputo 00 Americana flour (see Notes for substitutions)
- 7 g sea salt
Inclusions
- 46 g sharp yellow cheddar (Cabot or Tillamook) | (freshly grated)
- 46 g sharp white cheddar (Cabot or Tillamook) | (freshly grated)
- 40 g diced fresh jalapeƱo (about 1 jalapeƱo)
- 5 g finely diced fresh serrano (about 1/2 of a serrano)
- 30 g diced candied jalapeno
Cheese Topping
- 20 g white or yellow sharp cheddar (Cabot or Tillamook) | (freshly grated)
- 5 slices fresh jalapeƱo
Instructions
- Make the sourdough starterĀ the night before. In a jar, mixĀ 10 g sourdough starter, 50 g bread flour, and 50 g water. Stir until fully combined, then cover loosely and let it ferment overnight at room temperature (about 10-12 hours). By morning, it should be peaked. You'll have a little more than you need (feed the leftovers or add it to your discard jar in the fridge).
- Mix the dough.Ā In a glass mixing bowl, combineĀ 180 g water, 50 g pickled jalapeƱo juice, and 86 g active sourdough starter, stirring gently to dissolve the starter. AddĀ 3 g nutritional yeast, 375 g Caputo 00 Americana flour, and 7 g sea salt. Mix with a Danish dough whisk or your hands until no dry flour remains. The dough will be shaggy and sticky ā thatās normal! Cover with plastic wrap or a bowl cover and let rest for 30 minutes.
- Perform a set of stretch and folds.Ā To do this, grab one side of the dough, stretch it upward, then fold it over itself. Rotate the bowl and repeat on all four sides. Keep going until the dough resists being stretched. Cover and let rest for 30 minutes.
- Perform a second set of stretch and folds in the same way, followed by another 30 minute rest.
- Prepare the inclusions. Dice the jalapeƱo, finely dice the serrano, and dice the candied jalapeƱo. Gently pat the candied jalapeƱo with a paper towel to reduce its moisture. Shred the cheeses. Optional: coat all of these inclusions in a few teaspoons of bread flour (I found this helps them āfloatā better in the dough for a more even distribution).
- Incorporate the inclusions during the third set of stretch and folds. Mix together 46 g sharp yellow cheddar, 46 g sharp white cheddar, 40 g diced fresh jalapeƱo, 5 g finely diced fresh serrano, and 30 g diced candied jalapeno. Add a quarter of the inclusions at a time during the third set of stretch and folds, layering them evenly as you perform each fold to ensure even distribution.

- Final coil fold.Ā After 30 minutes, perform a final coil fold to build additional dough strength. To do this, lift the center of the dough, allowing the edges to drape down, then tuck them underneath as you set the dough back down. If you feel the dough is slack or not strong enough, you can do an additional coil fold after another 30-minute rest.
- Bulk ferment. Cover the dough and let it ferment at room temperature until it is puffy, jiggly, and has visible bubbles on the surface and sides. The exact amount of time this takes will vary. The temperature of your dough is the biggest factor. For reference, it took my dough about 7.5 hours at 75°F (24°C). The timing begins when we mix our dough.

- Pre-shape the dough.Ā Lightly flour your work surface with bread flour. Gently turn the dough out of the bowl. Using a push and pull motion, shape the dough ball into a round shape. We want the surface to be taut. Let rest, uncovered, for about 20 minutes, or just until the dough relaxes a bit.

- Final shaping. Ā Flip the dough and use the caddy clasp final shaping technique to fold it into a boule or batard. See the Notes section for video tutorials.

- Cold proof overnight.Ā Place the shaped dough into a floured banneton (rice flour works best), cover with a flour sack towel or plastic wrap, and refrigerate overnight (8-24 hours). This slow fermentation enhances flavor and makes the dough easier to score before baking.
- Covered bake. Preheat your oven to 450°F (230°C) with a Dutch oven inside for at least 30 minutes. (I use convection.) When ready to bake, carefully transfer the cold dough onto parchment paper or a bread sling, score the top with a bread lame, and place it into the preheated Dutch oven. Cover and bake for 25 minutes.

- Cheese topping and uncovered bake. Uncover the loaf and top it with 20 g white or yellow sharp cheddar and 5 slices fresh jalapeño. Then, bake for another 10-15 minutes until golden brown and the internal temperature reaches 205-210°F (96-99°C).

Video

Notes
- You can substitute the Caputo 00 flour for King Arthur unbleached bread flour (or an equivalent). Just add 10g additional water in the initial dough mix.
- I tested three brands of cheese and found Cabot and Tillamook to be the best. Tillamook has a sharper flavor while Cabot is a little more balanced. Either is a great choice.
- You can omit the jalapeƱo juice in the dough and replace it with additional water. You’ll lose some of the jalapeƱo flavor but will end up with a slightly loftier loaf.
- Omit the serrano if you want jalapeƱo flavor without too much heat.
- Substitute pickled jalapeƱo for fresh in a pinch. Just pat the pickled jalapeƱos with a paper towel before incorporating into the dough.
Conclusion
After five rounds of testing (and 12 loaves), this spicy, cheesy sourdough loaf finally hit all the right notes.

Itās bold, flavorful, and looks as good as it tastes.
If you try this jalapeƱo cheddar sourdough bread recipe, let me know how it turned out and drop a picture of it in comments. I canāt wait to see your loaves!
Another recipe to try: Italian Herbs & Cheese Artisan Sourdough Bread Recipe



This is by far my favorite loaf with inclusions! I couldn’t get candied jalapenos here, so I googled it and made my own. The sweetness with the heat plus all that cheesy goodness…oh my!
I love all the time and testing you do! So amazing, thank you!!!!!
Yay, so happy to hear you enjoyed the recipe Sue!
Can you bake in a loaf pan?
Yes!
I can’t wait to try this after I get the peppers and cheeses!!! I think my son grew jalepeƱos so will get his garden ones!
Your explanations and pictures are awesome. Thank you for the time and effort to make this post.
Question: in your explanations you suggested parchment paper due to the sling absorbing oil (or something like that). In the photos yours had the sling and I noticed others also used the sling. Does it make that much difference or is the parchment better?
Thank you and have a restful day!
I go back and forth and either is fine but I ultimately prefer parchment.
I made this yesterday but my dough was so wet and sticky and it wasn’t even done bulk fermenting. Any suggestions would be great.
You may need more flour in your mix. I’m filming a YouTube tutorial this week that should help identify any issues. But it could be a hydration issue or an acidic starter issue. Those would be the top two culprits.
Where can I find jalepeno juice? I use fresh peppers, so buying a jar of pickled peppers just for the juice isnāt cost effective.
That’s fine, you can use all water instead.
This bread is phenomenal. This bread is bursting with flavor!!! Itās my favorite savory inclusion loaf so far. The instructions were concise and easy to follow. Thank you for all the hard work that went into creating this recipe, it is very much appreciated!!
Beautiful!! So glad you loved it Shelly!
I donāt eat cheddar or jalapeƱos but I made this for my son who does⦠the whole family ate it, including myself! The house smelled amazing, the bread was beautiful and it was so chewy and flavorful, Iām making a second one as I type this! Amazing recipe!
Awesome, I’m so glad to hear that!! Your loaf looks beautiful!
Tasty and spicy!
Just baked two loaves. I used only water, no jalapeno juice. For me, I found the dough was dry, the 249 gr liquid (180 + 50 + 10) was not enough. I’m using bread flour from Costco, I think it’s Harvest brand. I just kept adding bits of water until the dough consistency felt right. I cold proofed for 36 hours. It baked up beautifully!
I’m so glad you had the confidence to add more water as needed. Great, great job!!! Looks wonderful.
I agree!!! My dough was SO DRY!
This came out wonderful! I didn’t have the candied jalapenos or the serrano pepper and the heat was perfect!
Thanks so much for all the work you did to create this!
It’s very flexible! I’m glad you enjoyed it!!
Iām going to be making this recipe for the first time in my Brod and Taylor proofing box (havenāt used this tool yet) ā¦. Any thoughts on what temp to set it for bulk fermentation? I live in Florida and donāt know if this matters at all š.
I typically avoid the proofing box for any recipe that has acidic components added to the dough. If you can, just leave it on the counter!
Perfect and thank you!
I am not a fan of jalapeƱos but a friend of mine is, and she asked me if I would make one for her. I thought, sure, why not?
This recipe is amazing! I couldnāt find the exact flour the recipe calls for, so I used Caputoās Chefās Flour Tipo ā00ā. I also used extra sharp cheddar cheese. The dough mixed up great and was pillowy soft. When I baked it, my home smelled more like a plain loaf than a jalapeƱo loaf. I couldnāt wait to try it, and as I said, I donāt like jalapeƱos. The bread was so soft. I was worried it was going to have a really strong jalapeƱo flavor, but it didn’t. My friend doesnāt like super spicy, but I kept the Serrano peppers. The candied jalapeƱos added a little bit of sweetness. And I ended up eating several slices because it was pure heaven.
Rebekah, I admire your passion for perfecting your recipes. Thank you for sharing your hard work! š
Yay, so glad you loved it!! Looks beautiful!
Prettiest loaf Iāve made!
This is the BEST jalapeno cheddar bread Iāve ever had. Hands down. I love to bake breads, cook and eat great food. This is at the top for bread! The only omission was the Serrano pepper š¶ļø as I didnāt want my husband to think I was trying to take him out lol. He does t do spicy. This omission provided the perfect amount of heat. It really delivers on flavor!
Yay, so glad you loved it Linda!! Looks beautiful!
I absolutely love this recipe (though I haven’t tried the Caputo flour method yet) as does my family! It’s definitely a weekly add-on! My only problem is I go through more jalapeno juice than i use in the pickled jalapenos!!!! any recommendations??
No, I have the same problem. I’ve been stewing on this ā like I wonder about blending up the pickled jalepenos or something similar. I’m not sure but it’s definitely a problem!
I canāt believe how good this turned out! I used 100% semolina flour and the chew is just awesome. It was my first time making an inclusion loaf and I will 100% do it again!
I was not impressed with a recipe I tried before this one so decided to try yours. Although the crumb on my first attempt was great it lacked flavor in the bread and didnāt have enough of the inclusions in my opinion. For this recipe I had to cook it for an additional 25 minutes after adding the toppings which caused it to burn on the bottom slightly. ( Iām sure this was all me, being as Iām a newbie). Even with the extra baking time it came out gummy after waiting 2 hours to cool. I love the fact that you added the internal temperature. I followed this recipe exactly but kept this in the oven until it registered 210 F. Also I sliced instead of diced as thatās how we like it. Looks great on the outside even though the bottom was a little darker than I intended. Great flavor! But the inside is gummy. What did I do wrong??
Hey friend, this is a starter issue!! If you email me, I can help you get your starter back to good health. This video may help you in the meantime: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BzQO9gCaJY
I made this recipe especially for my brother-in-law who I just found out loves very spicy food. My husband and I don’t care for spicy, so I’m not familiar with cooking that way. We took the loaf to him today and I asked him to taste it while I was there. He loved it! I made the recipe with the Serrano addition. He said he wouldn’t change a thing. He also mumbled while eating that this loaf wasn’t going to last. Thank you Rebekah! Making people happy in Reno, Nevada!
So glad he enjoyed it! Looks beautiful!
Question – when you bake in a loaf pan, do you put it in the loaf pan right after shaping and cold retard in the loaf pan or do you put it in a banneton in the fridge and then pour into loaf pan in the morning?
I personally would put it in the loaf pan right after shaping and do the cold retard in the loaf pan!
Hi! I made this recipe and it was so delicious!! My bread was a little gummy in the center. Baked it until it was at 205. Any tips??
My top tips for this situation is 1) bake to 210F next time to help dry out the interior, and 2) make sure the loaf is fully cooled down before slicing (which maybe you did!).
Iāve made this twice now and it is delicious! My only question is that my starter is not really dissolving in the water, so I have been just making sure it is well mixed when adding the remaining ingredients. Is this normal or is there a problem with my starter?
Normal!
Thank you!! I also had an idea for the unused pickles jalapeƱos. Maybe put them in leftover brine from the candied jalapeƱos and let those marinate for a bit? And then sub those for the candied jalapeƱos? I havenāt tried it yet and wouldnāt exactly the same but maybe similar enough?