The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

New recipe from Mark Sinclair

pmccool's picture
pmccool

New recipe from Mark Sinclair

Mark Sinclair (mcs) has long been a contributor here on TFL.  He operates Sinclair's Bakery in Bozeman, MT. 

He posted a recipe for walnut bread on his bakery's Facebook page.  Anyone who makes the bread is welcome to post their pictures in the comments section of that post.

Paul

GaryBishop's picture
GaryBishop

Sponge

  • rye 16.8,
  • water 16.8,
  • starter 2.2

Soaker

  • water 24.5,
  • oats 5.1,
  • cornmeal 5.1,
  • honey 1.8

Final

  • unbleached white 46.1,
  • water 36.9,
  • whole wheat 25.8,
  • walnuts 18,
  • salt 1.8,
  • yeast 0.4

Total 201.1

I included all the flours, cornmeal, oats, and 1/2 the starter in the basis

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

Hi, Gary.

I am trying to calculate the total hydration of this dough, to have an idea of what to expect. My calculations assume the soaker grains are totally hydrated. I included 100g of the soaker water in the total water. Using this method I come up with a worst case scenario hydration of 75%. Not to hard to handle at all. What are your thoughts about the total hydration? Thanks for your help.

Will F.

GaryBishop's picture
GaryBishop

I get 79.2% 

total flour = 134 + 9 + 41 + 41 + 369 + 206

total water = 134 + 9 + 196 + 295

 

 

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

Thanks for joining the conversation.  79% hydration including the soaker grains. That still not to bad. However, since the idea of a soaker is to hydrate the grains to the point of saturation. ( can no longer absorb additional liquid) It is my contention that the soaker grains would not effect the total dough hydration. That's mostly a guess on my part. These are my hydration calculations. 

Total flour - 718g = 100%

From levian - 143g

Bread flour - 369g

W.W. flour - 206g

Total water - 538g = 75% 

From levian - 143g

From final dough - 295g

Left over from soaker (estimate) 100g

 

 

GaryBishop's picture
GaryBishop

I choose to divide all water by all flours and like components for simplicity and consistency. 

My loaf is baking now. The dough was stickier than I expected so I added 10% more whole wheat flour. That was probably more than needed. 

If I like the taste of this one, the next one will use fresh milled flour which should result in a less sticky dough.

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

My flegling walnut bread has just under gone the first set of stretches. It does seem rather "wet". I attribute this to the rye flour. I am shooting for an 8- 10 hour overnight proof. Then bake before the cows wakeup.

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

I am going to try this with the fresh "discard" levian from today's Forkish EIB Style country bread bake. The initial inoculation of the levian is 50% rye 50% bread flour. The build is with bread flour. 

Photo... Well, just because.

Pain de Campagne EIB (Forkish) style. Modified to E.V. AZ. Sourdough Foundation spec. Entering the final retardation proof phase.

 

pmccool's picture
pmccool

I'm anticipating good things when I get around to tasting it.

Paul

GaryBishop's picture
GaryBishop

I plan to bake a tiny loaf tomorrow.

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

Nice job. McCool!

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

The East Valley Sourdough Foundation variant. The still strong unfed starter is ready. I am only going to soak the soaker for two hours. This way my wife can take them to work for make your own taco day tomorrow.

 

GaryBishop's picture
GaryBishop

I used AP and white whole wheat from King Arthur along with home milled rye. Good flavor and texture. More sour than I expected. 

I'll bake this again using fresh milled hard white and hard red wheat.

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

Kudos to you my friend!

Halfway home with my inspired by, interpretation. Feeling very optimistic.

 

GaryBishop's picture
GaryBishop

I tweaked the recipe by omitting the oats from the soaker and saccharifying the polenta. The texture and flavor are great.

I saccharified the polenta the lazy way as discussed earlier in another thread. I simply poured boiling water over the polenta, let it cool to 150F, added the diastatic malt and let it cool to room temperature. The polenta became surprisingly sweet.

My tweaked baker's %

Soaker:

  •  polenta: 10.0 
  •  boiling water: 25.0 
  •  diastatic malt: 0.1 

Sponge: 

  •  rye starter: 1.0 
  •  water: 14.5 
  •  rye flour: 14.5 

Final:

  •  water: 30.0 
  •  oil: 5.0 
  •  honey: 5.0 
  •  hard white wheat: 45.0 
  •  hard red wheat: 20.0 
  •  flaxseed meal: 5.0 
  •  potato flakes: 2.0 
  •  vital wheat gluten: 3.0 
  •  salt: 2.0 
  •  yeast: 0.4 

Inclusions: 

  •  nuts: 15.0

 Gary