Mostly I use my bread maker, but I do enjoy making it by hand too. Thank you for the link!
We can't believe you about the crust and the chewy texture unless you share the recipe and technique


It looks fabulous in the photos.
600g Allinsons extra strong bread flour in one 40cm plastic bowl - add 2 teaspoons salt and and distribute evenly in the flour.
500ml lukewarm water - add 2 teaspoons sugar, let dissolve, then pour into a medium pyrex bowl, add 2 packets of instant yeast, stir and cover the bowl with a plate and leave to activate.
When the water/yeast/sugar mixture has a good head on it, the yeast is activated.
Add the yeast mixture to the flour/salt in the large bowl, get a metal spoon and stir thoroughly, so that there are no bits of mixture around the bowl and no dry flour. This is a very wet dough, so if you just put your hands in at this point and tried to knead, it wouldn't go well. So, I had a glug of olive oil to the side of the bowl and start to bring the dough together from that side, ensuring that I have oil on my hands. Once the oils has amalgamated with the dough it is easier to work, but only for a couple of minutes.
Then place the second 40cm plastic bowl upside down on top and leave it to prove overnight.
It should easily double in size.
When the first prove has done, you need to turn the dough out onto a floured surface. There is a huge potential for this to stick. I find shaking flour on top then rolling it on the floured worktop works. Then transfer it to a floured flat baking tray
Get a Dutch Oven or oval Le Creuset type covered casserole dish, heat the oven to 230C (mine takes 30 minutes), with the dish inside. Aafter 30 minutes, take the dish out, place it on a wooden board, then roll the dough off the tray into the dish - that is the most difficult part IMO.
Into the oven for 25 minutes lid on, remove from oven, take the extremely hot lid off and return to the oven for a further 20 minutes lid off.