Bread - What are you baking today…..
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@sabergirl Marcia's loaf looks great. I'd love to see more pics of what people are doing with their bread! ME ME ME I'll go first!
I was initially using AP flour because it's all i lazily grabbed at the store, but i had forgotten we have a special High Gluten flour from a pizza crust project at work. that's been a game changer for me and my bread. It's incredibly chewy and springy. It also grills up perfect after brushing with a little ghee as seen in our grilled vegetable sandwich.
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That’s a lovely bread @jordanscollected and wonderful idea with the grilled veggies
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Just got this weeks bake going. I’ve revised my schedule so that the starter refresh is at 0630 and the autolyse starts 1700. So my starter will be 11 hours old when it goes in, folding and bulk ferment will continue until about 2200 and the bake will be around 0800 tomorrow. Hopefully I will avoid the overproofing issues I’ve been having.
Documention will have my wheat/whole wheat on a rye starter first and spelt/wheat on a spelt starter second.
Starters:
Autolyse:
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Always interesting to see what happens when you change things up. As well as a shorter proofing time, I used a different spelt flour, and both doughs had a higher hydration than normal…
Spelt prepared for the oven...
And done…
And the crumb…
Much better oven spring and not over-proofed.
The crumb was quite different however. Very irregular, with quite dense areas, contrasted with large holes. Whether this was the increased hydration (I was a tad over 80%), the shorter proof, or the new flour, I couldn’t tell you.
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Pizza for dinner, using Forkishs 80% Biga recipe and 00 flour. The texture is noticeably different and better than with ap or bread flour. Wife said it’s the best pizza I’ve ever made. I’ve got one more dough ball in the fridge for tomorrow…
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@Chap @Giles @neph93 being what I have come to think of as the artisanal gurus about these parts, how long did your first starters take to become levain? I'm 6 days in, using a BBC Good food recipe… Done the browsing youtube/multiple websites etc but thought I'd check with the forum.
I started with 50g org white and 50g water, and a 2nd batch of org stone ground (same vols). I kept adding 50/50 for 4 days as per recipe, then discarded half the mixture yesterday (made delicious savoury pancakes that tasted of mild marmite :D). The I topped of with 100g/100g flour/water. Looking OK today, but didn't pass the float test yet.
I guess they are ready when they are ready, as long as they don't start to smell like sour milk?
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Count me out. I got bored of keeping the sourdough healthy. So currently I am working on and experimenting with pre-ferments…
I'll likely get back to starters and levains at some point, but I'm enjoying the Poolish and Biga journey and tweaking ratios/timings and flours...
I'm doing an 80% Biga at the moment with 20% Buckwheat flour (it was all I could get from the supermarket at the beginning of the crisis). Buckwheat contains no wheat (
) and is gluten free, so it's going to be very interesting to see what happens....
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@Stuart.T I currently have two starters on the go, one from rye and one from spelt. I ditched the mix of wholemeal and bread flour early on, in fact the spelt starter has only been made on spelt.
Both of mine took only 48hrs before they were ready but I have a cupboard above my fridge freezer with a constant ambient temp of around 26C. I’ve seen people say 4-7 days. So it may take a while yet.
Temperature is important. Steady and above 20C is ideal, no drafts. The type of flour should be high in protein, wholemeal and organic. The quality of water may affect things. I’ve read that water with a lot of chemicals can cause problems by killing the bacteria on the flour. Finally don’t seal your container. The starter needs air.
Post some pics… I feel like I should be able to spot a living starter by now.
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Thanks folks. No hope of finding spelt or rye in these parts. 3 local wholefood shops cannot get them back in yet. I've had problems buying flour at all, so settled on organic strong white and stoneground. I haven't mixed the flours, thought I'd try them separately first. Pics later.
I read on the sourdough.co.uk site that live (dried etc) yeasts need heat, natural yeasts need to be slightly cooler.
I keep mine in plastic cannisters (started with Kilner jars… Photogenic but impractical!), lid ajar, ambient temp approx 20c during the day, slightly less at night. Feed them once a day, some sites say you can do this twice a day. They smell pretty good, the stone ground slightly vinegar, the white slightly sweeter.
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@Stuart.T These guys have reasonable stock levels of some flours:
https://www.fwpmatthews.co.uk/
Including Spelt
https://www.fwpmatthews.co.uk/product/white-spelt-flour/And rye
https://www.fwpmatthews.co.uk/product/matthews-dark-rye-flour/