1st sourdough
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- thespencers06's Blog
So I can't give you a recipe becuase this was kinda fly by the seat of my pants. I let my hands tell me when the dough was right and I didn't measure or weigh anything. It was kind of an accident. I made some whole wheat sourdough starter build for some whole hweat sourdough bread and left it fermenting in the fridge too long. So I decided to bust out the yeast and make a loaf of whole wheat yeast bread instead. My husnand really liked this whole grain honey wheat his mom had the other day so I went for an oatmeal honey wheat. Came out beautifully.
As some might have seen from my plea for help yesterday, the baking of this Miche did not go according to plan. It being only my third attempt at Miche making I was a bit freaked-I had looked forward to this bread so much!
The bread gods above must have been looking upon my endeavor kindly,though, because I do think it turned out just great!
Here are the points in which I deviated from the orginial recipe from the book "Bread":
-I used mature rye starter as my jumping off point for the levain
I am about halfway with my earth oven being built from Kiko Denzer's book. I also have the Alan Scott book, but decided on an earth oven as the reuse of material appeals to me. Many friends are highly sceptical about building with clay.
Hey All,
Just wanted to share with my my bake from last night. Pain au Sarrasin, or Buckwheat Bread. I think they turned out pretty nice. I'll use slightly less salt next time, but I'm pretty happy with the result. Enjoy!
Tim
Ingredients:
600g - AP
250g - BF
100g - Organic Buckwheat Groats (freshly milled)
50g - Organic Rye Berries (freshly milled)
This is the first time I ever use Bread flour, i'll admit. Organic dover farm's Wtrong whole meal flour (Made of Red Hard Spring Wheat) With 12.6% Protein.
I've made old-fashioned ginger beer, and root beer using champagne yeast, but I'd never heard of bacterially fermented soda. Does anyone on the TFL make it? If so, can you point me at your favorite websites, or recipes. I want to try this, especially when peaches from our northern neighbor, Georgia, ripen.
David G.
A few of you may recall a short thread I posted last week describing, with photos, the difference between upward oven spring, and overall expansiion of two loaves made from the same batch of dough, baked coincedentally, wherein the only differences were the slashing patterns used, the loaves positions on the baking stone, and one loaf was loaded approximately one minute, or less after the first.
I've been seeing some comments about Hamelman's Multigrain SD with a rye SD starter and how good it is. I think I've gone past this recipe in the book a few times because of the high % of high protein flour. I decided to bake it today but with a lot of changes. Cut home formula in half
1.Replaced all high protein flour with whole wheat flour +4tbsps of vital wheat gluten
2. Replaced sunflower seeds with millet
3. Replaced rye chops with rye berries (I just haven't found rye chops anywhere and don't have a mill yet)
As the girlfriend is a big fan of Granary bread (c) I tried a "normal" dried yeasted loaf, which though tasted proper granaryesque, it did not have much oven spring and was therefore a pretty unimpressive specimin and certainly not worthy of posting on these august pages (especially if the brilliant Shao-Ping has just posted some absolute blinders!) So, as my sourdough always comes out consistantly i've given the old Granary the full SD treatment with my Rye starter.