unfortunately, one of my dutch ovens doesn't go higher than those loaves. Much agree on the darker crust, but the spouse objects.
I have a breadmaker, too, and will allow it to do its thing in a bind, but I already refer to the loaves on the oven there as utility loaves. They're funny around the edges because I let them do their second rise in the dutch ovens in parchment paper (instead of dropping them into pre-heated dutch ovens). No change in the bread, but the edges are unsightly from forming against crinkled parchment paper.
The bread tastes divine, though. I found this (easy) method by youtube long ago and can no longer find the video as I was in the early part of harrassing myself making "regular" quick bread in a kitchen that is never the same temp or humidity and wanting to make bread more often than I wanted to necessarily knead it.
Presume your recipe is the same - the ingredients from the title of your book, yeast is sparing (it's got all night to do its thing), one punch down the next day, reform the loaf, let it rise until it's the size you want and then bake. the overnight slow rise does something to the flavor that I can't match with bread made the same day, and that's OK, because the overnight rise is the easiest - it's totally tolerant of forgetting about it for 6 or 8 hours the next day, too, before going to the second rise because the yeast is working slowly and doesn't burn itself out.