What is your favorite bread?

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I would like to discover a new favorite sourdough bread. It may also be featured in a Community Bake.

Please try to describe the qualities and characteristics of your favorite. If the formula and process are posted to the Internet, a link would be nice.

Some will probably find it necessary to mention more than one. In my case I have 2 favorites and I’d be hard pressed to choose a winner. In no alphabetical order.

  • Hamelman’s Five-Grain Levain - Outstanding flavor, texture, chew, & the roasted seeds
  • Teresa Greenway’s Sanfrancisco Sourdough - The intensely smooth & prominent lactic acid flavor

I appreciate your input.

Danny

Favourite for what purpose?

If "All purposes at once", then I think my real favourite has to be bread that is most excellently boring. Outstanding by being perfectly forgettable. Bread that is "just bread", but very well made. Nobody but a bread nerd would have any idea how great it was.

 

Edited to add: Definitely no seeds or special flavouring agents.

Dan: I don't ever want "Wonder Bread forgettable" (i.e. not worth remembering). I only want forgettable in the way that a really good knife is forgettable - it does its job so perfectly that it might as well be invisible.

with commercial yeast! Yeah! That’s it! Let’s see who can make a loaf as close as possible to wonder bread! ???

Dan, have no fear, I won’t start making white bread anytime soon. I have 150 lbs of berries to use up. ?

It seems that many bakers like lots of breads. I also like many breads, but only a very few rise to the top of my list. I like those few so much, that I seldom bake any others.

Dan

I have made this many ways including a vegan version, It is now a staple in our house.

 

This is a recipe  that I have adapted from Sarah Owens book Toast and Jam. It uses a rye tangzhong and has the option of making it with a combination of sourdough starter and commercial yeast or just using starter. I have done it both ways and it always comes out great.  If you are not using commercial yeast you will need to use 150 grams of starter.

 

I have found it is best to grind your 45 grams of buckwheat flour in blender. The little bit of extra effort is worth it. I use a bullet blender.

 

 

 

For the tangzhong

45 grams

Rye flour

115 grams

milk

115 grams

water

 

 

 

In a saucepan combined these ingredients with a whisk until smooth. Then place the pan over medium low heat stirring constantly until it thickens  about 3 to 4  minutes. It might be pourable and its ok if its thickened beyond that. 

 

 

 

Put this mixture in a 6 qt kitchenaid or large bowl if hand mixing it will be hot to cool it  your milk and butter should be cold

60 grams

Buckwheat honey or wildflower honey

230 grams

Milk

85 grams

,Unsalted butter,Cut up into cubes

Stir to combined then take the temperature make sure you get this mixture  to 90 degrees F or less before adding the other ingredients.

630 grams

Bread flour

100 grams

Active starter

45 grams

Buckwheat flour

1 tsp

Active dry yeast

100 grams 

2 eggs beaten

Combined all of these ingredients until you cant see any streaks

Let the dough rest covered in the bowl for 20 -30 minutes.

Then add

15 grams of fine sea salt *

*I also add seeds at this point

Knead thoroughly until a smooth dough is achieved, Let proof  till tripled in size. 3 hours if using commercial yeast longer if using sourdough. Watch the dough not the clock

1

Grease two small pullman loaf pans . Divide dough in half . Form loaves 1  Watch dough. Anticipate when dough will  almost come to the tops of the loaf tins, so you can preheat your oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.

 

Notes * I add black sesame seeds for flavor and it also ensures that my salt has been make sure that the salt is incorporated

 

1. I  am not going to tell you how to form a loaf of bread.

 

Profile picture for user Yippee

Why?  Because it doesn't make me sleepy 

Favorite? Maybe the one I'm making.  We'll see. 

Yippee