I've been baking yeasted bread at home for more than forty years; and have always paid particular attention to the life of the yeast. I am now baking bread in four-loaf batches about two or three times a week. I am not particularly interested in "sourdough" bread as such; but I am very interested learning more about prefermenting dough.
Through this site and other baking sites, I've found some fascinating recipes using prefermented dough. But have been unable to find general information and principles.
My general question is: Are there any usually recommended proportions between the prefermented dough and the "baking" dough? For example, My four-loaf batch of bread dough usually includes about 8-9 cups of whole wheat flour (no white) The yeast is usually about 2% of the dough. What would be the quantity of prefermented dough used for a batch? What would be the added dough (with new yeast?) amount in general percentages. Are there useful rules of thumb for expected outcome? i.e. taste, densities, textures, etc.
Also, in general, how many prefermented batches should be made at one time? Same question in different words: How long will a refrigerated batch of prefermented dough last?
I hope my questions are clear. And I am grateful for any and all observations, responses, opinions, etc.
Just so we're comparing apples to apples: when most people talk about %'s here, they mean baker's percentages - that's ingredient x's proportion compared to the total amount of flour used, not compared to the total weight of the loaf.
For example, I use a 70% hydration pâte fermentée, or old dough, using 96% white bread flour, 4% bran, 2% salt and 1% instant dry yeast. I've seen formulas including up to 30% (of the total flour weight) of old dough in the mix - I tend to use between 10 and 15% in my breads (all leavened with instant dry yeast, not sourdough or other similar levain). I store my old dough in a covered food container in the fridge.
I find the old dough gives it a deeper, more developed flavour than without. The longer, cooler ferment leads to enzymes and stuff to be created that you don't see with a shorter, more intense ferment. I'm also told the pre-ferment helps improve the structure of the loaf, but I haven't done side-by-side comparisons.
I do a new batch of old dough every couple of weeks or so, sometimes carrying over a bit of the previous batch to help "seed" the next batch.
Others may have different info, depending on how liquid or solid their preferment is, and what the rest of their baking process/routine is like.
Hope this helps.
In my case, most of my breads are in the 70-75% hydration range, but as All At Sea mentioned, they don't HAVE to be identical in hydration.
Using baker's percentages, you go by the weight, not the volume, of the eggs. I find large eggs out of the shell weigh between 52 and 55 grams each, so that about 11 ounces of egg you may not be not including in your calculations. Unless I'm not reading you right, of course.
.... even if it doesn't work as you planned - use it to learn from it.
Good luck, and let us know how the pre-ferment adventures go.
Why? That's the fast lane to staling.
Paul
is done on a cooling rack at room temperatures, not in a refrigerator. Air should circulate around the loaf as it is still giving off steam until cool. Then wrap in cloth, paper or plastic and left at room temp. By cooling bread below 10°C into the fridge, the bread is officially stale. Crumb gel hardens. Recovery of crumb softness is done by toasting.
Chilled bread will not have the same aroma and flavours as when the bread is kept & eaten at warmer room temperatures. Same with starters and cold pre-ferments. Once warmed up the aromas bloom and flavour is more complex. Cold, they seem very mild.
The preferment percentages in Peter Reinhart's "Bread Baker's Apprentice" are quite high. In his "Poolish Ciabatta" formula he uses 169% poolish. The French Bread formula in this book uses 160% pate fermentee; the Pane Siciliano uses 100%. For his basic sourdough formula he uses 49% firm starter. The lesson I take from this is that you can be generous with preferments as long as you tweak the amount of commercial yeast you add with them, since the preferments bring a host of beasties with them into the party. I use 90% BIGA in a formula for white bread that I developed.
The fun is in the experimenting! Remember, you can still eat your mistakes and if they come out too bad for that, the birds will most likely bre grateful for the handout! :D
So, if a formula, for example, calls for 150% of preferment, you would use 15 ounces of preferment for every 10 ounces of flour (10 x 150% = 15).
All the ingredients in a bakers formula are calculated this way.
Making a bit more sense?
foodslut explained it well. Thanks! Baker's math is very unlike the math I was taught in engineering school indeed! :) Remember the numbers are just a shorthand for describing proportionality and not meant to come to a discrete answer.
Reinhart varies the amounts of preferment based on his (and his students') experimentation, as far as I can tell, so the actual amount used is apparently dependent on the formula and the flavor profile he is looking for. Different amounts will affect the flavor of the final loaf in varying degrees, I've noticed.
One thing I do to save time is that I freeze a number of different prefermented doughs so all I have to do is defrost them and throw them into the mix when I need one. I've done this successfully with biga, pate firmantee and poolish. Freezing and thawing adds time as well, which can sometimes help the flavor along. It's just important to make sure the preferment has developed a good bit before freezing and then, when you use it, warmed enough so the final dough isn't too cool.
as a base and add the rest of the recipe to it. Especially when all the yeasts are in it.
What kind of sourdough recipes (flour)(author) are you looking at that mix in the preferment just before the "last rise?" ("Last rise" might not necessarily be the last one if the author of the recipe calls the very last rise a "proof.")
It is my understanding that preferments are made adding commercial yeast and sourdoughs are a different slower yeast/bacterial culture altogether. Sourdough bread recipes that adds a delayed preferment (with yeast) is something I haven't yet tried. I have taken sourdoughs and added instant yeast to speed up the ferment after seeing too slow a rise in the sourdough. That was done before the last proof simply because I didn't think my dough could take any more slow fermentation and in danger of over-proofing. I have also taken yeast bread doughs and added very ripe sourdough (wet or dried) to kick out a little extra flavour.
One of my favorite methods to boost flavour is simply wetting the flour and letting it sit 8 - 24 hrs and then adding the yeast and rest ingredients to raise the dough when I'm ready for it. There are many ways to affect the flavour of dough.
One way of looking at bread and flavours is to look at what's really happening. When grain or flour is moisturized it begins to decompose to return to to basic elements. It goes thru steps of fermentation which give off flavours and aromas. Yeast and bacteria attack and speed up decomposition. So does warmth and enzymes. Some sooner than others. Some stronger than others. We stop the process of decomposition when we feel we've trapped enough gasses baking the dough into bread. Ferment too long, the dough decomposes breaking down before we get it baked. That's your time window to play with your dough, from wetting flour to it falling apart. :)
Good Afternoon,
I am late to the discussion and haven't read through all the comments so forgive me if I am repeating what has already been said.
I use 100% whole wheat in all of my breads and the method that I discovered a couple of years ago made a huge difference in the outcome in my loaves. All came from the book Whole Grain Breads by Peter Reinhart. Sounds as though you aren't close to a library where you could check a copy out....He does a great job explaining about the different pre ferments as they specifically relate to whole wheat commercially yeasted as well as with wild yeast breads
I did find a thread here of someone who also has a blog where she has his basic ww recipe written out so am attaching it HERE so you can give it a try yourself and see if you like the results as much as I do.
Have fun :-)
Janet