My usual starter lives on the counter top and is fed every morning a 1:2:2:4 ratio of starter, bread flour, whole wheat flour and water. The temperature in the kitchen is a stubborn 66-70F in the daytime and dips quite a bit at night so the starter lives on one feed a day for most of the week with 2 feeds per day in the run up to bake day. I've been managing my starter like this for about a year (with additional feeding in hot weather), it leavens bread just fine so I've had no reason to complain.
Just for fun, I took a few days to gradually convert a bit of this starter into a rye starter (as I'd read somewhere here that wheat starter can need time to adjust to being fed rye flour). After a single feeding this appeared to have been way too pessimistic. The starter loves eating wholemeal rye! Seriously, it was climbing out of the bowl trying to find moreā¦ The starter fed with rye was making its wheat cousin look slow and cumbersome by bubbling ferociously after 4 hours. This has lead me to wonder whether it would a good idea to keep a rye starter instead of wheat.
Ingredient | Leaven (weight) | Final mix (weight) | Baker's percentage (Total) |
---|---|---|---|
Wholemeal Rye flour | 150g | 100g | 21.7% |
Wholemeal Wheat flour | 200g | 17.3% | |
White bread flour | 700g | 61% | |
Water | 150g | 700g | 74% |
Sprouted rye grains | 360g | 31% | |
Salt | 25g | 2.2% | |
Honey | 50g | 4.3% | |
Butter (melted) | 40g | 3.5% |
- (Day 1) Mix leaven ingredients with 25g rye starter and leave at room temperature for approx 12 hours.
- (Day 2) Mix all flours and water, cover and leave for a 40 minute autolyse.
- Add 300g of rye leaven and mix well until combined, leave for 30 minutes.
- Add salt and fold the dough until combined and leave for 30 minutes.
- Add remaining ingredients and fold into dough. Fold the dough 2-4 times every 30 minutes for an additional 2 hours.
- Total bulk fermentation should be about 4.5 hours at 68-70F.
- Shape the dough gently into boules and retard in the fridge.
- After 4 hours the loaves were ready to bake as the dough was expanding out of the banettons!
- Bake in preheated dutch oven, 20 minutes covered at 250C, 10 minutes covered at 200C and 20minutes uncovered at 200C.
These loaves darkened a lot more quickly than usual once the lid of the dutch oven was removed due to the added honey. Perhaps next time I would consider reducing the oven temperature a little further.
This bread is a bit like a posh version of mighty white a bread I was obsessed with as a child (in my opinion that's a good thing!). I've also been baking some oat porridge bread but the results are acceptable but not great so far. Some of the results are documented here: http://jennybakesbread.blogspot.com/2016/03/scoring-experiments-whole-oat-porridge.html Happy Baking!
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Nice loaf! I bet it tastes amazing! You got a wonderful crumb too.
beautiful :) Poster bread!
bread too! Love the shew they give to the crumb. This is one fine looking bread inside and out. Has to taste fantastic.
Well done and happy baking