Hi, sourdough enthusiasts. I've been trying to work on my sourdough technique and I'm running into a problem whenever I try to use 100% starter, 0% yeast spike.
Basically, the dough grows in size, full of beautiful holes (I ferment it in a glass bowl), but when I turn it out for shaping, there is no gluten formation. The texture is like a crumbling rubber sponge. No windowpaning at all.
What's going wrong here? Too much starter? Contaminated starter? Overproofing?
I don't have this problem when I use a little glob of starter for flavor and get most of the leavening from dry yeast.
It is so frustrating to be unable to master this fundamental skill that peple have been using every damn day for thousands of years!
I'm using the multi-step recipe from Crust & Crumb, beginning with my own firm starter instead of his barm.
"I am not a cook. But I am sorta cooky."
Cooky was heard to say:
Barm is not a sourdough process. If you do some reading of more authoritative sources, you find that barm is a process most used in England that involved harvesting yeast from actively fermenting beer. It was a way of NOT using sourdough.
You can't make a barm out of sourdough any more than you can make a vegetarian meal by starting with a pork chop!
I am told that Peter Reinhart has said he regrets that misuse of the term barm and the confusion that it has engendered.
Mike
Cooky, I don't keep a pot of barm in my kitchen either, but I converted my starter to 135% hydration starter as Peter asks, to obtain the results he promises.
So take a piece of your firm starter and feed it with water and flour in proportions necessary to convert it into 235g of barm. Once your barm is ripe, proceed according to the recipe. This recipe requires both liquid (barm) and stiff (biga) starters to build flavors and strength.
If your dough looks like desintegrating rubber, it's because your starter is stronger than Peter's or more acidic to begin with. Acids from your starter destroyed the gluten network in the dough. Reduce fermentation times and you will be successful.
Could you be more specific on your recipe and process so others can be more helpful, please? Not all of us have C&C or the time to look up the recipe, nor can we safely assume you are religeously and correctly following the process...
Lee
Lee, the recipe is
San-Francisco Style Sourdough
makes 1890g of dough, enough for 4 loaves.
Barm
235 g of barm (135% hydration sourdough starter)
100 g bread flour
135g water
4 H at room t, then 8-24 refrigerated
Stiff sourdough
430g refrigerated barm
245g bread flour
1-2 tbsp water if needed
Knead for 4 min. Bulk fermentation 8H at room T, Refrigerate for 8-24h.
Bread dough
730g bread flour
675 g refrigerated stiff sourdough
7g malt (diastatic I assume) or 7 g sugar
20g salt
475g cool water.
Chop soudough into pieces prior to adding it to the mixer bowl along with flour and warter. Mix the dough for 1 min on first speed, then knead for 6 min on second.
Bulk fermentation 4 h at room T. Shape, place it in proofing baskets and cover. 4hr proof at room t then 8-24h refrigerated.
Prior to baking take out loaves in the baskets from the fridge. Let them sit at room T for one hour, while the oven and baking stone are preheating to 475F.
Slash, and bake at 450F, with steam, for 30 min. Turn off the heat and let the loaves sit in the oven for 10 more minutes.
Cool bread for 1 hr before slicing.
***
When I tried to follow the times in the recipe, I failed. The dough was way overfermented and ugly. The resulting loaves were gray and pale (no sugar left in the dough, too much damage to gluten from acids in the starters).
So I redid the recipe, this time not following Peter's times, but following his descriptions of how starters and dough should look like at the end of each stage and was successful.
I.e. I gave 'barm' one hour at room t ( until it began to bubble), then refrigerated it
Stiff starter . I gave it one hour at room t ( until 1.5 times increase in volume), then refrigerated it
Dough. At room T until 1.3 times increase in volume, shape and proof at room t until 1.5 increase in volume, then refrigerate.
By letting the dough dictate me the times of fermenation, instead of rigid time schedule I got a great loaf bread out of Peter's recipe. Beautiful, tasty, sour, and fragrant.
Pictures
Following Peter's time table
Following Peter's descriptions of how starters and dough look when they are 'ready',
If that recipe is giving you trouble, you might try a simpler one.
I have a fairly nice and gentle introduction to sourdough at my web page. Surf over to http://www.sourdoughhome.com/sourdoughfasttrack1.html for my "Fast Track to Sourdough"
Also, it isn't clear where you got your starter, what condition your starter is in, or if it is a healthy starter. Having a good, healthy, active starter is the key to making good sourdough bread.
Mike
David