Miche shaping

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I am thinking about baking a 2kg miche.  How large a banneton would I need for that much dough?  In fact, do I need a banneton at all, or can I use a bowl of some kind?

Many thanks.  I am starting to 'get' the natural starter thing.  It may become addictive.

 

Cheers,

Jim

 

They make bannetons for loaves of this size. I got this from SFBI, and it works well. Alternatively, you can use a large mixing bowl with a floured couche (or large kitchen towel) as a liner.

A colander lined with a floured dish towel also works.

Ford

and stuff out the box corners with wads of newspaper...  then drape with floured cloth.  Another trick is to take a medium size bath/hand towel and roll up the long side half way, then shape into a donut to support the floured towel and dough.  Set on a rack so air can get to the bottom and draw moisture from the dough.

You probably already have a basket about the right size.  The dough should be able to almost double under the rim, deep preferred to shallow.

Thanks to everyone for the ideas and suggestions.  I think I'll try the colander tip as I seem to be short on boxes right now.  I'll give it a shot over the weekend. 

I'll update with the results unless I really mess up.

 

Jim

I was lucky a while back to respond quickly to a "used banneton" sale.  Yay!  But otherwise I've been happy with prices at brotform.com   Check them out.  I like the ideas of using virtually any one of a number of bowls with floured linen (easily purchased at some cloth stores), or boxes, or whatever propped up with towels, etc.  Not everything needs special equipment.

I baked my first Miche over the weekend.  I used the colander idea.  It seemed to work well.  The crumb was good, taste a bit more sour than I like (I can adjust my fermentation temps to address that I think) but still very good.  And the shaping was a bit off.

I actually laughed when I opened the oven to see how it was progressing.  That was a lot of bread.

Thanks for all the help.