Feb. 3, 2021. For the Durum Community Bake! https://www.thefreshloaf.com/comment/480584#comment-480584
https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/67151/community-bake-semolinadurum-and-similar-grain-breads
I've spent over a year touting durum flour (the finely ground flour, not just the gritty durum semolina) from Indian grocery stores... so I felt I had better walk-the-walk and join this Community Bake.
I haven't done actual durum flour since getting into sourdough -- but did use some durum semolina in recent bakes. One was 100% semolina, except for the bread flour in the starter, https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/66452/24th-bake11232020-semolina-chia
Here's a photo from my kitchen/stove as evidence of which variety I got, Fiber Wala, from Sher Brar Mills of Canada:
Patel Brothers grocery was all out of their house brand whole grain durum, so I bought this at $12.99 for 20 pounds.
I stopped by a friend's house on the way back from the store and gave him about 4 pounds, since it will take a while to use this up.
The package calls this "whole wheat" but I'm not convinced it is 100% extraction.
Mix:
- 553 g Fiber Wala durum flour. 3 cups, not sifted, using "scoop and sweep".
- 11.0 g salt
- 1.0 g instant dry yeast. 1/4 tsp.
- 470.5 g bottled spring water. 470.5 / 553 = 85% hydration.
That it easily took 85 % hydration, I take to indicate that it is high extraction, if not 100% extraction. I had started at 69.6% hydration (385 g water) and it was too dry, so I kept adding water until it felt right. Fortunately, I weighed the water at each addition.
Mixed, rested it a bit, kneaded it by hand for a few minutes. There were some small lumps that disappeared during kneading. I take this to mean that the flour should have been sifted or otherwise fluffed up before mixing.
Drizzled a little regular olive oil on the dough ball, turned to coat, covered bowl with plastic wrap and put in oven to rise.
12:40 pm. Start bulk ferment (when yeast was wetted, not at end of mix/knead). Dough ball weighed 1014 g, not counting what stuck to the bowl and my fingers.
1:32 pm - Stretch and fold. Dough is now nicely hydrated and supple. No tearing while stretching.
2:25 pm - stretch and fold.
[ 12:40 - 3:32 pm. 2 hours 52 minutes bulk ferment. ]
3:32 pm - stretch and fold. I realized this was progressing faster than I planned. So, remembering the CB talk about short or no bulk ferment, I decided to shape and start the final proof. I put it back in the oven, as opposed to the fridge, and left to do my errands.
6:04 pm - Returned and upon inspection, I realized it might have over-proofed. Took it out of oven and started pre-heat at *475 / 450 F.
[ 3:32 - 6:50 pm. 3 hours 18 minutes final proof.]
6:50 pm. Start bake. Covered, 450 / 425 F. 15 minutes.
7:05 pm. Covered, 425 / 400 F. 15 minutes.
7:20 pm. Uncovered, 425 / 400 F. 20 minutes.
7:40 pm. Interior temperature 208.5 F. Thumps well.
(* first number is the oven's thermostat setting, second number is temp reading of a cheap oven thermometer. The thermometer reads 25 degrees cooler in the 400+ range.
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Next bake, my #2, in the Semolina/Durum Community Bake: https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/67323/37th-bake-02052021-78-ww-durum
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Crumb is too dense, moist and rubbery. Likely under fermented, and/or I knocked out too much gas during shaping.
I'll try again with 12% bread flour, and less hydration.
Taste is rather neutral after getting used to the spiced and sourdough-fermented mostly whole grain loaves.
Friday the 5th. It tastes a lot better!
I've been cutting it up and toasting it to make croutons. But today I tried some of the untoasted bread and it is much better.
So don't give up on a bland tasting loaf of whole wheat. Give it 36 to 40 hours, and it might improve!