The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Fermentation

RICHARD HAMILTON's picture
RICHARD HAMILTON

Fermentation

A lot of recipes call for a fermentation period of 14 hours.  Usually the subsequent mixture is used to make

dough which rises for 2 hours before baking.  Can baking bread be delayed.  In other words 

place your fermentation in a refrigerator and then later use it for mixing dough?  Because of work

and other prior commitments I cannot continue the bread making process after 14 hours of

fermentation?   Comments would be appreciated.. 

 

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

SD in bulk or to proof after a short ferment is dine all the time and the way to fit baking into a particular  schedule the longer the retard the less levain you want to use.  All of my breads are retarded it seems - to bring out the flavor and the sour.

Happy baking

Xenophon's picture
Xenophon

With the breads I'm baking lately, I use a small quantity of sourdough starter, mix it with white bread flour to produce giga at about 65% hydration, let ferment for 12-16 hours at room temp, then place it in a 4 centigrade refrigerator.  When I get back home I use that for the final build which then goes through about 1.5 hours bulk proof at room temp (aiming for a 23 centigrade final dough mix), and then after shaping there's another 1 hour or so of final proof before it goes in the oven.

I do find that the flavour develops further, even at the low fridge temperature.  I own a couple of books but many of Suas' 'Advanced bread and pastry' bread recipes propose this as a method, either with sourdough bigs and a final mix with/without additional bakers' yeast added.