Pumpernickel bread, made with a rye sourdough starter.  The first rise and the rise after shaping were a little lackluster.  I think the temperature in my house was a little too cool, and with 8 hours of rise time at the 78 degrees specified in the recipe, I really can't let it rise longer if I want a one day bread.  I'll have to build myself a proofing box :)
Anyway, here's what the loaves looked like sitting on my SuperPeel before popping into the oven.  They've probaby grown about 25% since I put them on the sheet.
 After about 5 minutes on my Fibrament, it looked like a bomb had exploded inside each loaf.  I've never seen oven spring like this!  They just kept growing.  It was really amazing.
After about 5 minutes on my Fibrament, it looked like a bomb had exploded inside each loaf.  I've never seen oven spring like this!  They just kept growing.  It was really amazing.
 They smell unbelievable.  I can't wait to tear into them tomorrow!
-Joe
They smell unbelievable.  I can't wait to tear into them tomorrow!
-Joe
        
 After about 5 minutes on my Fibrament, it looked like a bomb had exploded inside each loaf.  I've never seen oven spring like this!  They just kept growing.  It was really amazing.
After about 5 minutes on my Fibrament, it looked like a bomb had exploded inside each loaf.  I've never seen oven spring like this!  They just kept growing.  It was really amazing.
 They smell unbelievable.  I can't wait to tear into them tomorrow!
-Joe
They smell unbelievable.  I can't wait to tear into them tomorrow!
-JoeThose look awesome!!! My mouth is watering...; )
Would you share the recipe?
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They're on my counter, taunting me.  I keep touching them :)  I love that about artisan breads: the cool shapes and textures.
The recipe is from Bread Alone.
Since it's copyrighted, the rules say I can share the ingredients, but not the exact text, so here goes (Floyd, feel free to edit this if it's inappropriate):
Dark Pumpernickel with Raisins (I omitted the raisins)
2c raisins
1 1/2c spring water
2c rye sourdough starter
1c brewed espresso or strong coffee
1/2c rye flour
3 1/2c whole wheat flour
1/2c unsweetend cocoa powder
1c unsulphured molasses
1T fine sea salt (I used Kosher)
3-4c 20% bran wheat flour (I used straight bread flour, and I'm sure it was less than 3c.  I didn't measure, just kept adding until it felt right)
Basically, you mix the liquids and starter.  Then add everything but the 20% bran flour.  Knead, rise.  Punch down, rise.  Shape, rise.  Bake one a stone at 375 for 90 minutes, or until a thumped loaf sounds hollow.  I went until my instant-read thermometer read 205, about 85 minutes (thanksn Mr. Reinhart!).
Any suggestions on what would caused the bread explosion I had?  I mean, they look cool as all getout, but it would be nice to know what was behind it.  I'm thinking I needed more warmth during the rises to exhaust the starter a little more.  Those lil buggers were vigorous!
-Joe
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"They smell unbelievable. I can't wait to tear into them tomorrow!"
Isn't this always the case!
The warm burst in the oven caused an awakening, and 1 last feeding frenzy IMO.
KP
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Your directions say to mix the liquids and the starter, then 
add everything but the bran flour. 
So I take it that after those ingredients are mixed I start
adding the flour?
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Once all the ingredients are mixed, you add the 20% bran flour until the dough is how you want it.  I went for a firm, but still quite sticky dough.
It was delicious, by the way :)
-Joe
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I am sure it was awesome! That will be the recipe of the 
weekend next week!!
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Finally, a pumpernickel loaf that isn't as dense as a black hole.
 -Joe
-Joe
       -Joe
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I don't even like pumpernickel very much, but I gotta say, that is beautiful.
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