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I "went one better" re NK bread, as a result of my essential laziness and urge to experiment. After my dough developed for a day I simply upended it into a greased bread pan, let it rise again, and then put it into a four-hundred degree F oven for half an hour. The crust was thinner but still crackly and chewy, and the inside had many, many holes. Sliced, it resembled an English muffin, and tasted great. None of the slices had holes large enough to allow butter and jam to fall through, but the smaller sizes held plenty.
I use an electric mixer with dough hooks to do the mixing. Again, my laziness...
Both are super high quality and expensive but should last for ages. Consequently, there aren't many people who've owned or even tried both and can offer an in depth side by side comparison. The owners are typically passionately in love with whichever they own.
I don't like Kitchen Aid as the mixing action does not simulate kneading like the above mentioned ones do. Plus kneading heavy doughs in a typical Kitchen Aid is over taxing on the motor unless you get the higher end "professional" grade models.
That's exactly what the no knead recipe is for.
You can use SAF yeast for best results.
There are two Bosch univerals listed on Ebay at pretty good prices AT THE MOMENT. One will need a new bowl because it is broken where the doughhook/whisks connect.
Bob