After making the dough for the Columbia Essential sourdough loaf (in Maggie Glazer's Artisan Baking) on Sunday and fermenting it in the fridge overnight, I put it in the oven Monday morning and ended up with this:
I was inspired to take the picture on my deck by mountaindog (loved the picture of your Thom Leonard Country Loaf). The slashes on this bread spread in an incredible way - I was really surprised, since by the end of the 2nd ferment, the dough didn't look particularly proofed. The oven spring worked magic - the loaves easily doubled in height and the slashes did what they were supposed to. The crumb has a nice look and taste, and the crust is fantastic - crispy, with lots of little bubbles just under the surface, but not hard, like my other sourdough loaves have turned out. This recipe is definitely a keeper.
Instead of the diastalic malt syrup called for in the recipe, I used dehydrated malt (Spray Malt - my husband brews beer) and added enough water to make a syrupy consistency. It seems to have worked fine.
Hi pseudobaker,
It looks like a nice photo, but the resolution is low, so I can't really see it very well. Any chance you could post it at a little higher resolution? I'm curious to see the crumb and the stripes more clearly.
Thanks, Bill
I'm trying to put my 1 MB photo in, if I can't get it to work, here's the link to the photo:
http://good-times.webshots.com/photo/2762208250064049407gvHNeW
Thanks, Floyd - I just figured out that webshots has a way to post various sizes of your picture. Previously, I was posting the smallest size - now it's at the 2nd largest size.
Now you can really see the crumb! (And the Japanese plum in bloom behind it...)
Pseudobaker,
Thanks, it looks great.
Bill