The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Very Disappointed With First Bake...

GRNutrition's picture
GRNutrition

Very Disappointed With First Bake...

Hi everyone.

 

After reading tutorials and talking to people on the forum, i decided today, i would try and make some bread.

 

Basically, this is the sort of thing i want to be able to bake, this is what i tend to buy from the supermarket, during the week. It is fairly crispy and tastes nice, and looks good. I have uploaded some pictures of what i bought from the supermarket today, so you can all see what i am trying to achieve with my baking.

 

This bread weighs around 200g, which is exactly the size, weight and shape that i want to achieve with my baking...

 

Bread

 

 

 

Unfortunately, this is how mine came out...

 

 

 

 

I'm very disappointed with this. They basically feel like a very hard outer shell, and the inside didnt seem that well cooked.

 

The recipe i used was...


This was to make a 200g loaf...

Flour = 117 grams of flour
Water = 77 grams of water
Salt = 2.34 grams of salt
Yeast = 0.702 grams of yeast.

 

I would really appreciate any help with this please as i was so excited about making the bread, but then it turned out nothing like i wanted to.

 

Thanks.

 

Gareth.

ehanner's picture
ehanner

Hi Gareth,

Your first bread looks better than my initial try. I'll try to help based on what I see.

The formula looks like it should work if you follow some kind of method to develop the dough and let it ferment.

First, at a temperature of around 74F-78F is where the yeasts will do their best work. You can adjust the water temp to arrive at a temp in that range.

Secondly, once you have mixed all ingredients, make sure you cover the dough and let it sit in RT for 30-60 minutes to let the water absorb.

Third, do a gentle kneading for just a few minutes to start developing the gluten. This will make the dough stronger and make the rise more productive later.

Forth, After kneading, cover the dough and after an hour, stretch it out into a square of about 10-12 inches and fold it in a letter fold in both directions. Cover again and wait for the dough to double in volume.

Last, Shape the dough gently into an oval or batard, cover with damp towel or plastic for1 hour or until dough increases by half. It is important that you understand that temperature will affect all of these steps. If it is much below 70F, it will take much longer to rise and proof.

Bake at 450F on a sheet pan dusted with corn meal or some course grain or on a stone if you have one that has been well preheated. The bake should take around 25-35 minutes. I generally leave the bread in the oven until it is golden brown to dark brown.

Try to not use much additional flour when handling the dough. I notice that you had a seam that didn't seal and blew out. There is a good tutorial HERE on scoring by dmsnyder. We are all working on scoring and personally it is my one desire to master.

I think your loaf may have been under baked slightly. The internal temp of French style breads should be 205F or there about.

Hope this helps,

Eric

GRNutrition's picture
GRNutrition

Thank you for the replies both of you!


The water was lukewarm, not hot, not boiling, not cold, luke warm.


The yeast i used was this...

 

I used the amount listed in my original post, which was slightly difficult as they come in packets of 8g, i did use scales though.


My kitchen temperature, i dont really know, it isnt warm, but isnt cold.


I put the recipe into a bowl, first the salt, then the flour, then the yeast and finally the water. From then, i took a wooden spoon and mixed the recipe together until it was all joined together.


I felt the dough before leaving it, and it seemed 'sticky', this is probably where my in-experience with bread making comes in, as i dont know if it should feel sticky, or whether it should be more on the 'dry' side of things.


I left the dough in a plastic bowl, covered with cling film and placed on a warm radiator (warm not boiling), for it to rise, for around 60 minutes.


After that time, i took the cling film off, and mixed the dough again with the wooden spoon. This made the dough go back to pretty much it's original size in the first place (i.e. you wouldnt have been able to tell that i had let it proof for 60 minutes).


I then rolled it into more of a ball before flattening it out somewhat and placing it back into the plastic bowl, again covering with cling film, and again placing on the radiator.


I left it for about 20 minutes, and then i took it out of the plastic bowl. I then shaped it into the shape of a baguette, and placed into the pre-warmed oven, at around 200-205 degrees.


The bread did rise, probably by a 1/3 when it was in the oven, but didnt rise much further than that.


Any help or comments would be great.


Thanks for your help.


Gareth.

 

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

cover with the same cling film or just a towel and let it rise some more (30 min minimum) before putting it into the oven.  Let it get puffy and when you gently poke it about 1 cm deep there is almost no resistance and the poke hole fills in slowly.  Slash and bake.  Helps to poke it just after you shape it so your fingers will know what resistance feels like.

I'm wondering if your bulk rise is long enough as you are using a very small amount of yeast 0.6%  of the flour weight.  That would double the rise times, so the dough would take longer than one hour to bulk rise, more like two or even three hours.

GRNutrition's picture
GRNutrition

Thank you for your reply.

 

I have seen some recipes that require different types of yeast, should i be using more yeast if it is fast acting yeast, as the sachets are only 8g each, and i hardly used any of the yeast in the packet.

flournwater's picture
flournwater

IMO, the amount of yeast in this recipe is slightly less than I'd have used (I'd use 1 gram) but that's a fairly minor difference.  The type of yeast you chose should work OK, but if you can get a "Active Dry" yeast to work with while you're learning you might like that better.  You'll need to adjust (using about 1 1/2 times as much ADY when compared to the fast activing variety) and it should be proofed in a small amount of warm (approx. 100 degree) water before introducing to the flour mixture.  "Fast Action" yeast has some additives that you might want to learn about.  Here's a link that might be of interest:

http://www.practicallyedible.com/edible.nsf/pages/fastactionbreadyeast

Looks to me like handling and proofing are the issues to be reviewed here but keep this in mind  -  the professionally produced loaves that you included images of don't look that much better than what you produced.  Yours looks to have a nice open crumb and I'll bet it's pretty tender.

Stick with it; don't give up.  One of these days you're going to want to celebrate that perfect loaf.  If you don't stick with it, it will never happen.  This group is behind you all the way.

Chuck's picture
Chuck

First baking attempts often involve something like creating a shapeless mass of dough then being unable to handle it, dropping dough on the floor, getting bits of dough stuck to your arms up past the elbows, or making a "brick". And French baguettes are one of the very hardest kinds of bread - as I remember it somewhere in Floyd's "ten tips" he mentions coming up with those tips when making baguettes all the time for a year. So take heart, take a deep breath, and prepare to try again.

 

Now as to some specifics on your first attempt (I wish I could feel as well as see a picture:-): As you've discovered, most bread has pretty much the same ingredients, so the ingredient list part of the recipe by itself isn't much help. The times and temperatures and feels matter a lot more. In this case -based on the additional information you provided- I suspect two different possible uses of the oven, and also two different temperatures, have all gotten jumbled up.

The step between shaping and baking, where the loaf expands a second (or sometimes third) time is called proofing. Unless your kitchen is drafty or cold or you're in an awfully big hurry, it's probably better to just let the loaf sit out (but covered:-) while it proofs.

Sometimes in special cases, people put the loaf in different places for proofing, such as a microwave or an oven that's been heated but then turned off. It's this use of the oven that I suspect might have gotten jumbled up; this is not baking. In fact, unless you really need to do something different, I suggest you simply leave your bread out while proofing and only use your oven for baking.

Typical oven temperatures for baking vary from 350F to 450F or even higher. You want the crumb temperature inside the baked loaf to be about 205F but this is not the oven temperature. To get the inside to 205F, the oven will need to be much much hotter. This is the other thing I suspect might have gotten jumbled up.

It's quite common for the "real" oven temperature to be different than what the dial says. So spending a few dollars for an oven thermometer is often a very good idea. (You need to read it several times though, and figure out the middle, as the way ovens work is by cycling between slightly below and slightly above the desired temperature, and only a single reading of the thermometer can by chance fall at one extreme or the other of this cycle, and so be quite misleading.)

As to the crust, the goal is different for different styles of bread: thin and glossy and "singing", thick and crunchy, decorative, chewy, very deep brown, and so forth. But what it won't be no matter what is "like storebought". The bread you buy in the store is often made with chemical additive "crust softeners", something you probably don't want to do on the "more authentic" bread you bake yourself, not even if you could.

Chuck's picture
Chuck

Do I understand correctly that the top two pictures are what you bought at the store?

If so, I'm rather surprised, as the uneven shape, mediocre slashing, broken crust, and blowout (unplanned expansion) all look more like a first attempt at home than like something a professional baker would put out for sale without significant embarrassment.

jowilchek's picture
jowilchek

Don't give up, keep trying!! My first loaf was so hard my neighbor wanted more "bricks" to build a BBQ with!!!!

Chuck you are so right, if those top pictures are the store bought baguettes then I would find another store. I am very much a beginner and baguettes are a little tricky to shape but mine look 100% better than these store bought ones. I can't give advice on shaping as I am still learning...but I hope some of you will help with the shaping, so she doesn't try to imitate these loaves.

Good luck

GRNutrition's picture
GRNutrition

Thank you everyone for your replies again.

 

I will have another go with the baking either today or tomorrow.

 

I will pay close attention to the handling and shaping this time.

 

I will try and buy a small thermometer this time, and i will take more photos along the way during the making process, so that everyone can see what i am doing at each stage, and i will try to include pictures of the dough, temperature, etc... whilst i am doing it.

 

This is a fantastic forum, i have to say, the amount of help, advice and support is brilliant. One of the best forums i have ever been on, with lovely, genuine people!

 

Thanks again.

 

Gareth.

Juergen Krauss's picture
Juergen Krauss

Hi Gareth, Looks great for a first.

To find out about technique, well, Bertinet's videos helped me a lot, they are somewhere on the internet.

And his recipe for baguettes always works for me:

500g Flour, 350g water, 10gfresh yeast (equals 3g dry yeast), 10g salt

I find it easiest to work with about 1000 to 1500g of dough,

with too little dough I can't develop it that evenly, and it dries out faster during proof.

I found the flour quite important: I use Shipton Mill , or the Waitrose brand Leckford Estate.

And remember, bought bread usually has additives, the baguettes you show have probably some active malt in them to convert starch into sugars and create a golden crust.

Good Luck,

Juergen

 

 

BellesAZ's picture
BellesAZ

Gareth, a couple of things.. sometimes we assume that bread needs to rise in a warm place and while the warmth may help speed up the process, it can also be too warm and cause problems.  Let your bread warm in your oven with just the oven light on.. that's all you need.  Make sure you keep your dough covered with a towel or loosely with the cling wrap.. don't wrap it too tight.

Secondly, you did not allow your bread to rise one more time before putting it in the oven.. that's a huge mistake and obviously, what happened. 

Third, your salt may have killed your yeast.. I generally don't add salt in my dough until the very end.  Try using instant yeast or activating an Active Dry yeast.  You'll probably have better luck.  That wasn't alot of yeast in your recipe.. but then again... who knows.

Finally, you tackled a rather difficult first loaf in the baguette.  Of all the breads, they are often the hardest to make - even for the more experienced baker.  Try making some basic breads at first, learn what dough should feel like in your hands, learn to knead properly.  Then tackle the baguette.. even for us veteran bakers.. baguettes can be a real challenge.

Good luck, don't give up.

intelplatoon's picture
intelplatoon

to tell you the truth, i think your loaf looks better than the store bought loaf. 

dont know if anyone has mentioned this yet. I  skimmed through most of the thread and didnt see it. :/

did you use steam at all during baking? if not, that could be why the oven spring stopped early. the steam helps keep the outer skin of the loaf wet or "supple" as i like to say, so that it can expand to its full potential before drying out and stopping the rise. it also helps give the look of your loaf a  little shine.