Sourdough hamburger buns

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- Kjknits's Blog
I needed to get a challah baked quickly because we were hosting a last minute brunch for which I was going to bake a ham, cheese, mushroom, red pepper and onion strata. So with little time to plan I bake this challah that relies on IDY for leavening. I was surprised at the slight tearing that this loaf had between the strands. At the time of baking the dough didn’t bounce back at all with the poke test. This is usually quite a reliable sign that the challah is well fermented, but in this case it could have used a bit more time in final proofing.
These were pretty tasty. I used my KAB starter, KAB bread flour, and pretzel salt from Boise Salt Co. The recipe is from Little Spoon Farm. We have an all-time fave soft pretzel recipe from an Amish cookbook I bought at a craft fair, but that uses regular yeast and I wanted to use my new starter. These are equally good as our fave commercial yeast pretzels…maybe a little chewier?
I am LOVING my new sourdough starter from KAB (KAF for the old schoolers).
I love to hear the crust "sing" when first out of the oven. Lovely crisp cracking sound.
i made a dough today using Lupin Flakes and Lupin flour @ 25% inclusion but this time i toasted the Lupin dry on the stove top in a skillet stirring continuously making sure it didn't burn.
The idea was to see how it performed and tasted, i also wanted to try the dough as a pizza base too,
so here we have a 2 hour bulk fermented dough ready to take
The new recipe for Salzburg Wheat Germ Rye by Markus Farbinger in Hamelman's Bread 3rd ed intrigued me, It's so different from the German detmolder ryes so close to Hamelman's heart. The bread involves a rye starter focusing on lactic prominence, a hefty dose of wheat germ, a cold pre-soak of just the wheat portion, and a mixture of aromatic spices (toasted coriander, fennel, caraway), along with toasted rye malt,.
I wanted to try adding an egg to my country sourdough again. I’ve seen other bakers on IG post their bakes and some of them achieve quite incredible rise and open crumb when adding an egg to their otherwise lean dough recipes. Then again, these same bakers always post super open crumb anyways, so who knows if the addition of the egg adds to this or just adds to the rise. When adding the egg one has to compensate for the water in the egg (74%) and reduce the water used to make the dough.
A recent comment by Michael Lily regarding dough bulk volume increase got me thinking about a topic I have already given a lot of thought to - volume increase during bulk and it's effect on the final bread.
In that post Michael suggested a bulk volume increase of 20% to improve oven spring, which I would agree with, but I think there may be a downside in terms of flavour development.