Hi All,
I'm new, as I've said. I inherited the Peter Ortiz book The Village Baker when my father died a couple of years ago and just started to read it about a month ago. A recipe intriqued me that is based on an apple starter - 8 days of fermentation of pureed apple with honey and water. Then feeding it up with flour, water and honey and a final addition of butter fried apple bits. During the 8 days of fermenting I discovered The Fresh Loaf and refined what I am looking to do with bread baking. The whole complex butter-sauteed-apple-bits nature of the recipe was no longer of interest, but the starter was bubbly and alcoholic, and I didn't want to throw it out, so I carried it through two days of fermentations with additional flour, water and, yes, honey, with some salt at the end. Anyway, it's the most classically rustic boule in appearance that I've done yet and I wanted to share it. I think it's beautiful. I dont believe the crumb or the taste are very intersting. I'm on a quest to conquer a simple recipe first and that's all that I'm obsessed with at the moment. I don't even know what I did along the way, I didn't keep track and won't try it again for some time if ever. This is the first boule to come from my newly acquired proofing baskets from SFBI, where the purchase supports their students. I orginally contacted them to get some plastic bowl scrapers that are impossible to find here, and, you know how that goes - as long as I'm ordering...
Without further ado:
Boule top
Boule side
The crust is not quite as black as it looks here. It's the crispiest crust I've gotten to date. From the BBA I learned to throw a piece of parchment paper over the boule when it was plenty browned but the internal temp was still around 160 and it needed to bake longer without incinerating the crust. It's 1400 gms. I wanted to share with you loafians my artistic triumph. Now it's time for toast and tea.
Paul
With the natural lighting in that top photo, everything looks perfect. Nice coloring, scoring, and picture framing too. You're right, it is classic and rustic looking.
-Mark
http://thebackhomebakery.com
It is Beautiful. Just looking at the side profile I'm wishing to reach through the screan and tap on it with my finger tips.
Mini O
Definitely looks beautiful. The early darkening is probably due to the presence of ample amount of sugar, from the honey.
Rudy
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My TFL Blog Page
I agree. I was just reading the BBA today and came across that very bit of advice. In retrospect I would try 400F instead of 425F. Since it was so large it took quite a while to get the internal temp up to 207, which is what I shoot for, for some bizarre reason. Thanks for the advice. It's as dark as possible without being burnt. We are really enjoying it, but it's taking some work for the two of us to go through it. The trials of bread baking!
Paul
David
Yes, actually the apples do come through. It's somewhat sweet, but for 1400 gms there is less than two tablespoons of honey. The initial ferment was 2 apples, peeled and smashed up and a little honey and water. After a couple of days it started smelling like alcohol and after 8 days it was bubbling. I kept it warm the whole time, mostly in the oven with the light on. Otherwise I did not add any yeast. The recipe said the initial mix of flour and water with the fermented apple stuff should rise in 8 - 10 hours. It did nothing in that time and I considered throwing it out as a mistake but I just left it and when I went to clean out the bowl after about 24 hours covered, it had risen! So I went from there adding more flour and water and teensy bits of honey and by golly, I got a groovy loaf out of it. We're down to about the last 1/3. Yes, it is a LOT of toast!
Paul
Hi David,
The bread was a hybrid fluke, but it came out so pretty and it's been such fun, really to eat, that I'm going to try again with 3 peaches that a hitchhiker gave to me a few days ago. Just peel and mash (maybe I'll leave the peel), add a teaspoon or so of honey and a cup or so of water and see what happens in a week or so of sitting in a warm area. I'll post some results in a week and a half or so.
Paul
Yes, that's a bread you can be proud of! Looks nice. It's a very interesting bread. I was looking at my grapes in the garden this morning and got thinking about a new starter, just to see.
Jane
Hey Jane,
It's been so much fun and so interesting, I'm starting a peach batch today. One of those Quebecois I was talking about gave me three peaches the other day. I'm going to mash them up with a teaspoon of honey and a cup of water and let it sit around for 8 days and see what develops. Let me know if you start something with your grapes.
for you, you are ready now, it's just a click away...
Baking with Yeast water, not sourdough
Mini O
Thanks Mini O, just when I was realizing that I need a rest, it's been a WILD 3+ weeks since I found The Fresh Loaf, just then, you drop this in my lap. Wow. If that is yeast water, then what I've used is yeast mud. I just drop the whole fruit in the container with some local honey and a little water and go at it with the blender wand. Mud. My spouse is a Physicist. i told him you just introduced quantum sourdough. Thinking of combining yeast from my tomatoes in the garden with water from the lake across the street.... I'm swooning.
But I must rest. Thank you so much, and stay tuned for further developments.
Over and out. (for a while)
Paul/Pablo
You need a break. You've had a crash course and it's time for a holiday.
Just don't wait until spring when the tadpoles are all along the shore line.
I think we will still see you popping in now and then. Have a good one,
Mini O