First attempt

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well first loaf baked using no knead method, rose really well but I think texture is bit close.

tastes good though, any thoughts or advice appreciated

 

For a first attempt and using a no knead method that looks pretty spectacular. Congrats!

You baked it in a long pan, I think? It is tough to get a wide open crumb with a wet dough in a tall pan. It simply doesn't have the strength to stand up under its own weight.  If you want an open crumb you could try baking on a sheet pan next time, though that presents other challenges like the dough spreading too much.

Thank you for response

do you think that not using the no knead method and having a dryer dough would help.

would a smaller tin help as the one I used was large, probably to large for the amount of dough

i know people use stones or Dutch ovens but at this point I don't want to spend to much on this til I find my feet a bit so it's flat tin or bread pans

once again many thanks for comments

If you want an open crumb, I'd stick with a wet dough and try the flat tin.  You just may want to try folding it once or twice and shaping it fairly tightly so it doesn't spread all over the place.

As Dabrownman said, if you are shooting for a sandwich bread then it looks like you are right on track. It might be able to climb a bit higher if the dough is a little bit stiffer, but too stiff and the crumb is likely to get even tighter.

Good luck!

If you have a shop near you that sells second hand good, you might try looking there. If you decide you like using it but prefer a new one, you're only out a few bucks.

Or even cheaper, see if you know anyone who has one they seldom or never use, and borrow it. 

no not enriched

recipe

500 strong white bread flour

300 water

150 starter 100% hydration 

teaspoon salt 

 

mix til combined cover and leave for 15 hours

fold twice

shape

rest for 4 hours

bake 450/230 for 10 minutes

lower to 400/200 25 minutes

 

just looked at a similar recipe which had 50 gram/Ml more of water so may try that

 

 

 

For hydration do what Gordon says.  The flour in the UK is very weak coppared to here so it takes much less water.  In the US, a rough rule of thumb is that it can take 10% more water than UK flour.  So when you see a US or Canadian recipe just take that amount of water out of it.  You are at 65% now and that is about right for the UK 

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In reply to by Jefftow

My daily SD bread has 285g of water for 500g flour and 150g starter - however 15 hours - mine get 10 at most, then it's stretch & fold, scale (as I usually make many daily), pre-shape/rest/shape/prove/bake... under 2 hours, so 12 in total - I can mix the dough at 8:30pm and its out of the oven before 9am.

More water will give you a bigger crumb - if that's your thing. (it doesn't sell well here in rural Devon) I use 12% protein flour too - yours ought to be fine with a little more water.

I'd probably bake it a little longer/hotter for a darker crust, but that's a personal thing - looks just fine inside!

-Gordon

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In reply to by drogon

thanks Gordon, I'm going to be busy with all this new information. This forum is great people have been very helpful

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In reply to by drogon

thanks Gordon, I'm going to be busy with all this new information. This forum is great people have been very helpful

especially for a first try! I am trying out sourdough too and frankly I'm jealous and encouraged at the same time! I will try out your recipe, thanks for sharing.