The Fresh Loaf

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Seedy pain au levain

hansjoakim's picture
hansjoakim

Seedy pain au levain

Hi all,

After a great laptop-and-internet-free vacation the last couple of weeks, I've now pulled my starter out of its refrigerator retirement and given it a couple of feedings to get it back to its former self. The first couple of loaves I've baked after coming back, have been some pain au levains with toasted seeds. This bread is based on my pain au levain formula with slightly increased whole-flour amount, and roughly 7.5% - 10% toasted seeds. You'll find a copy of the formula here (written for 7.5% toasted seeds).

For the loaf pictured below, I used 10% toasted sunflower and pumpkin seeds, and applied some oat bran to the top of the batard after final shaping:

Seeded pain au levain

Here's the crumb:

Seeded pain au levain crumb

The loaf is similar to Hamelman's seeded levain in terms of flavour and crumb. After some bakes and trials, I've found that I prefer adding toasted seeds to the dough directly without soaking them first (for seeds where soaking is not necessary, of course). The flavour is stronger, more nutty, and the crumb turns out more open, at least for me. The crust stays fresh and crunchy for longer due to the lower hydration of these un-soaked seeded levains.

Vacation's been great - I've enjoyed hiking, fishing, cooking and reading at my parents' cabin, and the weather's been pretty decent as well. Some favourite books from this summer include Herta Müller's "Atemschaukel" (haunting), McCarthy's "Blood meridian" (how the west was won and where it got us...terrifying), "Sons and lovers" by D. H. Lawrence and some brilliant novels by Finnish writer Kjell Westö. I miss vacation already so I'll have to put some pastry-things together for my next blog post (comfort food). In the meantime I've got a lot of TFL reading to catch up on...

Comments

ananda's picture
ananda

Hi Hans,

Holidays away from it all are just so essential for me now.   I'm glad you had a similar escape from it all.   You end up being thrown back into the busy "everyday" so quickly.

Lovely bread, of course, and as always.   I agree with you about not soaking toasted seeds too.

All good wishes

Andy

hansjoakim's picture
hansjoakim

Hi Andy,

And thanks! I hope you had a pleasant and relaxing summer break too.

I agree entirely - some time off, removed from the hustle and bustle of our busy working days, is essential for charging mental batteries and regaining motivation and inspiration. There's no electricity and virtually no close neighbours at my parents' cabin (it's situated deep inside a fjord in south-western Norway), and I already miss waking up to the sound of birds and waves from the sea (instead of the all-too familiar sound of busses and cars that speed past my apartment).

Thanks again, Andy :)

ananda's picture
ananda

Hi Hans,

Yes we had a great holiday, thanks. I wrote about it here: http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/19167/anotolika-beach-house Not sure if you might already have seen this before you went away.

I wanted to ask about how you post your excellent recipes/formulae.   I've always included them in a blog post, or, referenced the author if used from another source.   Do you upload them to a specific place on TFL, then just link that to your posts?   Where do you upload them to?

Best wishes

Andy

hansjoakim's picture
hansjoakim

Hi Andy,

I haven't read your write-up yet, so thanks for the link!

I have all my recipes in spreadsheets, so to include them in blog posts, I open the sheet in question, take a screenshot of it, and save the content in .jpg format. I then upload it as a picture on my TFL account, and link to the picture as I write the post. Hope that helps!

SylviaH's picture
SylviaH

Welcome back!

The toasted seeds addition sounds delicious and the best way to go, I love the look of bran on the crust it is so appealing on whole grain breads.  Have you ever used it instead of flour to dust the banneton's to keep the dough from sticking? 

Fall is dropping in here and what a lovely hearty bread for a fall sandwich or toast.  I've saved your very nicely written formula, thank you, Hans!  Oh, yes, your vacation sounded perfect...a cabin vacation is my favorite, especially the fishing part, I have quite a love for fishing...though I'm a lake person 'fisherman'.

Sylvia

LindyD's picture
LindyD

Given that beautiful loaf, I take it you're as refreshed as your starter!

Your family cabin sounds wonderful.  Wood stove cooking or outdoors over a fire?  

Simple pleasures are the best.

hansjoakim's picture
hansjoakim

Thank you both :)

Sylvia: I enjoy fishing too, but I think I enjoy cooking freshly caught fish even more. I'm not very... patient when it comes to fishing (especially not if it's cold and rainy). I caught mostly mackerel and pollock this summer, which I either pan-fried or barbecued and enjoyed with pommes puree or vegetables and slices of bread. As Lindy said, simple pleasures are the best!

Lindy: Thanks :) Simple pleasures. When the weather's nice, nothing beats cooking outdoors over a fire or with an old, shaky barbecue. Otherwise, we use a primus stove to do most of the cooking. No way of getting a decent sourdough loaf, so that's something I've missed while away...