Can someone get me close to that % hydration I would have given some of these details.
I starter with a starter that was 100% but over time my feeding have come to this:
1/2 up starter
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup AP flour
1/2 cup whole wheat......
is this still 100%. it is a stiff starter now compared to what I starter with. and does it really matter in the end>?
thanks
Dave
Knowing ingredients in weight is the only sure way to know.
So I'd say if this is your regular feed then its near enough 100% hydration. Or 94 - 98%
I appreciate your thoughts
Dave
If it matters depends on many factors Abe is on the right track, but because volumetric measures of flour can be so different, it is really hard to know.
Cup and a half of flour is about 200 g. Half cuf of water is 120 g. Comes to 60% or so yes, stiff.
I see one cup.
Oh, yeah, my bad. Make it ~90% then.
Dave, I am no expert, but it does not matter if your hydration is 95% or 100% . If it is a big difference, say 75% v. 100%, yes it can matter. I find that the wetter the starter, the quicker it develops, so if you made a 75% starter and a 100% starter, and let each one sit out the same amount of time, the 100% starter may have already peaked and started to recede while the 75% starter may still be rising. I also understand that hydration level can impact the sourness of the starter - and while I have read contradictory info, my understanding is that all other things being equal, a more liquid starter will be more sour than a drier starter. Finally, I agree with everyone else, get a scale, preferably electronic, they can be found for under $20 at a number of places. As an aside, one thing I can't understand is when recipes say to use 1 cup of starter - as we know, the volume of a starter is always changing, increasing at first and decreasing later, and the mere attempt to measure it will lose some volume. So how 1 cup of starter would have any set meaning is a mystery to me. On the other hand, 100 grams of starter will always be 100 grams, whether if fills 1/2 cup, 1 cup or 1 1/2 cup depending on how much it has increased in volume since its last feeding.
I do have a scale and weigh everything I do but I saw a video from someone on feeding your starter and he made it sound like there was no big issue if you just scoop flour, water and starter with a measuring cup. Up until I saw that video I weighted all my feeding ingredients.
I enjoy baking SD bread but I find I am now enjoying trying to understand the science behind it.
So thank you for the time it took for you to give me your take on this issue
Dave