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A Tale of Two (pairs of) Slippers. Ciabatta, that is

OldWoodenSpoon's picture
OldWoodenSpoon

A Tale of Two (pairs of) Slippers. Ciabatta, that is

On Friday night I baked the ciabatta from Rose Levy Beranbaums's The Bread Bible (TBB).  On Saturday I decided to try Peter Reinhart's recipe from Bread Baker's Apprentice (BBA) for comparison.  I am glad I did.  My results were success-failures.  I failed to properly shape the loaves from TBB, and as a result I ended up with broad, flat, spreading loaves with little or no loft/spring.  As a consequence of that I nearly over-baked them, although by appearance you would not think so.  I should have pushed the hydration more in the BBA loaves, because they ended up a bit "bready".  Here are my results.

First, Friday night from The Bread Bible:

 

 

As you can see, there was little true "spring" in these loaves, but the crust came out thin and crisp as it should, and the crumb is filled with holes both big and small.  I especially like the gelatinization of the starches that is evident here.  This bread is not perfect, but it is good to both the eye and the palate.  We have been slicing it big, then splitting it crosswise, and making very tasty sandwiches from this.

After these results I decided to try a comparison to broaden my experience, so I let Peter Reinhart challenge me.  Saturday night I baked the ciabatta from the BBA.  I have a couple more pictures from that bake than I do of the TBB bake above.

The shot above attests to how wet this dough was, although after the bake I concluded it needs to be wetter still.  Below are the (very) rustic loaves proofed, loaded on my "Super Peel" and ready for loading into the oven.

I baked these on my unglazed quarry tiles, as exactly according to direction as possible, even spraying the oven repeatedly during the early 90 seconds of the bake.

These loaves were not shaped perfectly, but they live up to "rustic" in character.

The folds are quite evident in my loaves, not that I think that is a bad thing.  It adds to the rustic character, and does not detract from the taste at all in my opinion.  The overabundance of flour, however, is another thing entirely, as the next shot shows.

This dough needed to be wetter, and the crumb attests to this.  The directions specify a variable amount of water from 3 to 6 ounces.  I used most of the 6 ounces.  In a sidebar Mr. Reinhart advocates raising the hydration even more, so long as the dough will sustain the stretch and folds needed to develop the gluten.  My loaves indicate this is not only a good idea, but necessary to achieve truly good results.

This closeup of the crumb shows how truly "bready" the crumb turned out.  It very much needed more water/less flour.  In addition, the small white "scrolls" in the crumb disclose my excess in flouring the dough between stretch and folds, and in shaping.  I was a bit too enthusiastic in "generously" flouring the dough between operations.  Controling this, too, will help me improve next time.

These recipes are for the same bread, but as I turned them out they seem to be from different planets.  Despite the lack of loft in the RL version I think I did the bestjob of that bread.  I got a much more true result, albeit altitude challenged!  The BBA recipe bears repeating as well, because with still higher hydration, and more moderation in that "generosity" between operations it will, no doubt, turn out a beautiful loaf.  I much prefer the bBA approach to shaping, and I like the rustic nature of the loaves once they are baked.

Two pairs of slippers: Two different ciabattas.  Too much fun!
Thanks for stopping by.
OldWoodenSpoon

 

Footnote:  For those not aware:  ciabatta is Italian for "slipper" and the shape of this loaf is supposed to evoke the image of a slipper when done correctly.  Hence the name.

Comments

highmtnpam's picture
highmtnpam

Please deliver to....:)

Pam

OldWoodenSpoon's picture
OldWoodenSpoon

Thank you Pam! 

Got a stamp?  Better yet, grab the books!! :)
OldWoodenSpoon

wally's picture
wally

I like the crumb on your first attempt, frankly.  Yes, you didn't get a lot of oven spring, but the cells are very open and very much what ciabatta should look like.  Your second, by comparison, is way too tight a crumb.

One observation and a suggestion: the picture of the wet dough you've included indicates to me a very underdeveloped dough in terms of gluten structure.  A ciabatta dough will benefit from at least one stretch-and-fold and even up to three.  I see no evidence that the dough has been folded at all, and that is really critical.

My suggestion is that you forego folding the dough in thirds to shape it.  Typically ciabatta is simply cut with a dough knife into the final shape you wish (rectangles, squares), and then allowed a final proof.  That's all the shaping that's needed.  If you look at how Reinhart makes his pain l'ancienne you'll see what I mean.

I think with a fold or two over a three hour bulk fermentation you'll achieve a nice strong ciabatta that can be cut, proofed, and will yield you the oven spring you desire.

Good luck,

Larry

 

OldWoodenSpoon's picture
OldWoodenSpoon

Thanks for the encouragement Larry, and for the suggestions.  I watched the Back Home Bakery tutorial on ciabatta again last night and noticed that Mark did not "shape" the loaves at all.  He did just as you suggest, and simply cut them and moved them to proof.  I will try that for sure next time I bake this bread because I know I am not helping things by trying to shape this dough.  I do prefer to bake as exactly according to the recipe as I can on my first try, though.

You make an astute observation about that wet dough.  It is not quite as bad as you suspect though.  That picture was of the lump of dough just poured out of the mixing bowl, so you are exactly right to observe that no stretch and folds had been done yet.  I did do the stretch and folds prescribed in BBA, and I even added a couple extras at the end because I was not happy with the degree of gluten development attained.  After that things were much more acceptable, and although you are right about the tight crumb, it is not under-developed.  At least, not as much as that picture might mislead you to think.  Based on other reading here on TFL about that BBA recipe I still think I must also push the hydration.

Thanks again, and full marks for your observations.
OldWoodenSpoon