What am I doing wrong

Toast

I seem to be having a issue getting my loaves out of the bannatons after being in the fridge overnight. I have tried an assortment of flours, bread flour, semolina, rye, wheat and they all seem to get somewhat stuck. I do put them into an airtight bag before going into the fridge and they (the baskests) seem damp when I get the dough out. It seems the more flour I use is better however getting it all of the loaf before baking is a challange as well as I don't want to deflate my loaf. Am I being to gentle? Thanks so much~

Rice flour is sort of like teflon.  Use a 50-50 mix of rice and wheat flour and I think your problems will be over.  Just be sure to pack it into the spaces between the coils of the brotform.  

If  you are using a banneton, which has a linen liner, a rice flour mix would work on that as well.

I found rice flour at my local health foods store, but if you have a mill or a grain grinder for your mixer, you can make your own.

Hope this helps....

I make 78% - 88% doughs and use brotform with no liner everyday and nothing sticks with rice flour. I also retard for 16 hours and go straight from refrigerator to oven. Also try to minimize handling during final shape.

Rice flour is all I use and have no problems with even a really wet dough sticking anymore.

I have never tried mixing it with ww.  Will have to see how that works too now that someone has mentioned it. :-)

I also brush out my baskets after each use so I have no flour build up in them....attracts insects who lay eggs that hatch..... :-0

GOod Luck,

Janet

 

Non glutenous rice flour works for me as opposed to the glutenous variety which I have not used.  Even mixed 50-50 with AP it works every time and I use regular baskets rather than cane brotforms.  But, I am not as easy with the dough as I uesd to be either.

The beauty of linen bannetons is that they wick surface water away (so does willow, but to a lesser extent), leaving a skin on the loaf that bakes into a really nice crust in the presence of steam.  By retarding the bulk ferment, you have the advantage of a long, slow autolyse and flavor development, while benching, shaping and same-day proofing will eliminate the banneton sticking problem. 

I tend to stay away from rice flour because even though it's non-stick, I don't like the taste or consistency on my breads.

Stan Ginsberg
www.nybakers.com

can be brushed off easier after baking & cooling.  Just go outside with it (stand upwind) or hold it low in the sink as you take a clean dry brush to it.   :)