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How to make sourdough bread...

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    We went to a birthday party for a 2 YO little girl, (the granddaughter of my wife's best friend). It was a spaghetti dinner and my wife kindly volunteered me to make bread. So I made Forkish's white bread with poolish. I was very pleased with how they turned out, and the boules got rave reviews from the people at the party.

    First shot is a piece of parchment I cut to fit in the dutch oven. The wings make it safer to load the dough into the DO. All I did was trace around the outside of the DO, and then cut inside the line. I turned the risen dough out of the banneton onto the parchment, picked it up by the wings and lowered it into the hot DO.

    And the colors are off again. The shots were saved in the standard sRGB used on the net - don't know why they are off...

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    This is the first of two loaves. (It looks over-sharpened in this post...

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    Here is a shot of the gluten development.

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    And both boules.

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    Ron

    Comment


    • RonB
      RonB commented
      Editing a comment
      Potkettleblack - Once the dough is in the hot DO, I spritz with water then add the seeds. Adding them to the banneton should work too - I never thought of that.

    • Potkettleblack
      Potkettleblack commented
      Editing a comment
      Forkish has you do that for a bran encrusted loaf...

    • Thunder77
      Thunder77 commented
      Editing a comment
      Very nice work! Nice scoring and color on those boules.

    I'm intrigued. Nice work RonB I have saved Chef Jacobs video and will be trying this on the wood-fired Primo

    Comment


      Thanks looks mighty hearty and tasty!

      Comment


        Forkish Pain au Bacon. That’s right, bacon bread!

        Click image for larger version

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        Comment


        • Pequod
          Pequod commented
          Editing a comment
          Great stuff! Definitely be doing this one again.

        • Potkettleblack
          Potkettleblack commented
          Editing a comment
          Nice. I enjoyed this bread a lot.

        • Thunder77
          Thunder77 commented
          Editing a comment
          Beautiful loaf! Nice work!!

        Made another iteration of Field Blend #2, but wasn't that happy with the outcome. After the last bread I posted, I think I forgot to feed my starter, so did a week of rehab, and then got off my usual schedule for feeding ahead of bread making. I had been feeding the day before, in the evening, then making dough within 24 hours of that final feed. This time, I did a feed in the morning, and the starter wasn't fully recovered for the afternoon on Forkish's schedule, so I let it go another day. Starter was bubbly, but probably wouldn't have floated. So it didn't rise that well. Moist crumb, almost soggy.

        I have been using tap water with my starter. I've been reading a lot of people who say that chlorinated water impedes development, so next bread will be made with bottled, as an experiment, to see if it comes back faster.

        Got the pizza book for the holidays, my baking steel and peel are shipping today, along with some kitchen food wrap. Hope to produce a nice roman style pizza for NYE.

        Anyone else use bottled water, or non-chlorinated water on their starter or bread? Experience?

        Comment


        • Skip
          Skip commented
          Editing a comment
          I have always used our own RO (Reverse Osmosis) water.It seems to work fine.

        • Thunder77
          Thunder77 commented
          Editing a comment
          I use bottled water to begin a starter. Once it is developed, I feed it using regular tap water, and have never had a problem.

        • Potkettleblack
          Potkettleblack commented
          Editing a comment
          Revisiting this... this loaf actually wound up fantastic. It just needed a day or two for the flavor to develop. Not the greatest rise, but certainly a nice enough crumb.

        Potkettleblack I'd offer the thought that if you have been using chlorinated water all along, then chlorine is unlikely to be your problem. Also, if you do choose to do an experiment, you really should do side-by-side tests, keeping everything identical except the water. A test a week, or a day, later really won't prove anything. Chlorine will kill yeast, but I doubt very much that any residential water in the USA has enough residual chlorine to matter.

        FWIW, I never bother with the float test once I have an active starter that does pass it. Come to think of it, I'll likely never do a float test again should I make a new starter. Here's my rationale: if your starter will reliably respond to feedings and "bubble and expand", it's plenty active and it doesn't matter if it's past it's "float time" (unless you are trying to maintain a strict schedule). A less active starter may require more time to raise a dough, but it will raise that dough unless it's "sick" or dead. Similarly, you can make a loaf with commercial yeast using the amount prescribed in a recipe or you can use a significantly reduced amount. Time will be longer, but the yeast will act properly over that longer time. One of Forkish's pizza doughs uses only 0.1 grams of yeast! The bread pros all say that a longer rise time yields better flavor anyway.

        Probably a good thing to have done the afternoon that you delayed making the bread would have been to feed the starter again. The missed feedings may have hurt it a lot. OTOH, I think maintaining a strict feeding schedule is not necessary--assuming you don't go too long. Heck, you could probably feed it four times a day and be guilty of nothing except wasting flour and your time.

        Comment


        • Willy
          Willy commented
          Editing a comment
          @potkettleblack: I have done that (wine cooler). My experience suggests (YMMV) that a daily feeding is still required at 55-ish°F. The yeasts are still active and don't SEEM to slow down appreciably until below 40°F.

        • Potkettleblack
          Potkettleblack commented
          Editing a comment
          That's really not the problem I'm having at all.
          My starter in generally healthy, even if I miss a feeding. I do a rehab feeding or two at room temp, and back in the fridge.

          My concern is that my starter doesn't fit Forkish's schedules, and that I'm not getting the oven spring that I see others get. I'm gonna mess with the water.

        • Willy
          Willy commented
          Editing a comment
          Potkettleblack I don't follow any schedules; I just judge "doneness" by watching the dough rise. I have a rough feel for times and the luxury of being retired. If it takes a few extra hours, no prob. Lately, I make the dough with cold water (or malty beer), stick it in the fridge, then do as the dough dictates the next day.

        I was away from home for work almost a month, so here is my first offering in over 5 weeks. 70% hydration boule.
        Attached Files

        Comment


        • gwschenk
          gwschenk commented
          Editing a comment
          Awesome.

        Critiques welcome. 400g white flour with 70% hydration. Baked for 19 min with steam (SS Bowl and pizza stone) then additional 7 min uncovered. Eating it tonight. I added 100% (all) the flour and water together last night (no yeast or salt until this morning).

        No ears, but I don’t think I’ve ever gotten ears (sad face). Decent rise.
        Attached Files

        Comment


        • Potkettleblack
          Potkettleblack commented
          Editing a comment
          Curious why no Yeast the night before.
          I’d cook darker, but that’s just me.
          Looks great otherwise.

          If you want more SD flavor, maybe do a poolish and incorporate, rather than maintain a starter.

        • Thunder77
          Thunder77 commented
          Editing a comment
          Nicely done!! 👍👍 If you want to get some ears, possibly slash a little more deeply, and angle your blade so you’re almost cutting a flap, rather than straight down.

        • gwschenk
          gwschenk commented
          Editing a comment
          Looks really good.

        Potkettleblack no yeast the night before because why not just add yeast the day-of? I’m getting all the flavor from the flour and water by letting both interact overnight (100%). I’ll just use yeast for yeast’s-sake... for rising dough. (Not saying I’ve never added yeast the night before... I’m just experimenting)

        Yeah, I like a darker crust too, but my wife likes them a little blonde. Plus if my <2 year old eats it, I don’t want him to struggle with the crust.

        Comment


          66% hydration mini-batards. Trying for baguettes, but didn’t quite get there. No matter: they were delicious! I took them
          to a holiday open house at my sister’s house, and they were devoured as I basked in the praise.
          Attached Files

          Comment


            How cool! I can read barbecue/grill info and bread in one site! I don’t even know how to sift through this thread but I’ll follow it now.

            im a bread lover, although I don’t make it as much these days. My starter hates me for that but, oh well. I also have done well with the no knead type of breads, and have come up with some great breads with green Chile added.

            Heres my christmas bread read made from my starter. Not the best looking, as it cracked on me but turned out to be good eats.
            Attached Files

            Comment


            • Thunder77
              Thunder77 commented
              Editing a comment
              Looks tasty! You got great oven spring. đź‘Ť

            I realized what my problem was, after getting less of a ride and very little spring from that pizza recipe. That didn’t use any of my starter, so it’s not King Arthur. It’s the commercial yeast I’m using. Not using the right thing. My bad.

            Comment


              Finally! Nailed it! Well, the past few attempts of bread have been awesome. This one is probably my best. I was struggling for SO LONG with not much oven spring. I tried so many techniques, but I THINK the improvement had to do with using a 9” banneton (not 10”) and allowing for more time between the stretch and folds to allow for the dough to develop better gluten structure. I believe I was doing it too soon (5-10 min) which didn’t allow enough time to rest inbetween the stretch and folds. I wait 10-20 min now and I get better gluten development and oven spring (not flat and bleeding out). Now, I need to nail down using the lame, though what I’m showing in the picture is not bad!

              70% hydration and 10% semolina and 90% white bread flour.
              Attached Files

              Comment


              • EdF
                EdF commented
                Editing a comment
                My wife picked this one up 10 or so years ago, and our bread game went through the roof. Including a wild yeast thingie she captured in our kitchen that is apparently all over New England now.

              • RonB
                RonB commented
                Editing a comment
                Great job Scott.

              • Thunder77
                Thunder77 commented
                Editing a comment
                That is beautiful! You nailed it!

              Looks good, scottranda Breadhead would have been proud.

              Comment


              • scottranda
                scottranda commented
                Editing a comment
                Thanks!!! My bread game is accelerating and I’m starting to make a loaf that I feel confident/good about giving away!

              scottranda
              Nice work!

              Comment

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