The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Troubles with Einkorn

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

Troubles with Einkorn

Hi all,

I am an amateur baker, and have been experimenting with sourdough for the last two years or so.  Some time ago, I started baking with 100% home milled einkorn flour, partially for the taste and partially for the challenge.  I have struggled on and off with the occasional breakthrough to improve rising and handling of the dough, but I am finally feeling that some input from all of your experience might really make a difference for me.  

My primary issue is the slackness and stickiness of the dough after bulk ferment.  Einkorn has notoriously poor quality gluten, and even though I can get a decent window pain test and texture when mixing the final dough, the dough invariably becomes too slack and sticky by the time I am attempting to shape and proof it, after the 12 hour ferment, making handling the dough a bit of a nightmare.  Generally the loaves get enough oven spring to come out ok, but I'm still frustrated every time by the difficulty I have in shaping a decent loaf and I'm usually afraid it is going to flop, even though this has been a rare occurrence.

 The addition of eggs made a hug difference in my oven spring and the shelf life of the dough from the added fat and protein, but the liquid addition also threw off my initial recipe calculations, and where I was once adding 157r of flour to the final dough, I am now adding anywhere from 257-300gr, sometimes even more to compensate.  I recognize that using conventional wheat would pretty much be the easiest solution, but the family complains the flavor isn't as good (and I agree), and moreover, I just don't want to admit I can't master this.

My recipe is as follows:

Starter:

Begin with 12gr SD starter from the fridge.  Add 100% WW flour to water in ratios of 7gr:5gr, 14:10, 28:20, 56:40 at 3-4 hour intervals with the starter doubling in volume between each feeding.  I usually begin int he morning and feed throughout the day so the starter is active and of sizable proportions by the evening.  This feeding schedule was developed to allow minimal amounts of starter to be stored each time, and keeps me from having to though any out between loaves.  You may notice it also doubles the weight of the SD with each feeding to ensure adequate food sources and health of the starter.

Soaker:

293 grams of 100% WW einkorn flour

293 grams of water

4gr salt

Add all together 8-10 hours prior to mixing final dough.

Final Dough:

Add all of starter and approximately 150gr (saving the other 50gr for future loaves) of starter together with:

5gr of salt (for a total of about 2% of flour volume)

2 whole eggs

45-50gr honey

293 gr flour +extra

Mix all ingredients plus extra flour to reach a tacky, but not overly sticky, texture and knead for 3-4minutes.  

Let rest 5min and resume kneading for a few minutes until passing the window pain test.  

Ferment at approximately 70 degree F in a non drafty location for 10-14 hours.  

Baking:

Turn out dough, shape and proof for 1 hour.  

30 minutes before baking, turn on oven and place cloche or oven safe pot in oven to preheat to 500 degrees.

When ready to bake, turn out dough into cloche/pot and reduce heat to 450 degrees.  

Bake for 30minutes and remove lid or remove whole loaf from cloche/pot and let bake an additional 5-7minutes until crust is golden brown.  

 

BobBoule's picture
BobBoule

I've been experimenting the past year with only baking 100% Einkorn for all my breads and yes its slack. No matter what I have done thats just the way that it is. Thats not to say that you can't make a decent loaf with it, I've made plenty that my family really enjoyed. Shaping has never been easy, with or with autolyse so I now rely on the baking vessel to hold the shape together (a cast iron DO in my case). Just keep experimenting and enjoying your Einkorn, I've run the hydration all the way to 85% so I know that although it's very slack, I also know that it can be lightened up with plenty of hydration. Most of of all, have fun and enjoy your Einkorn.

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

I have also found that the higher hydrations work better.  I've stuck around 65-70% just because it is easier to handle, but I've found many times that the worst dough to shape has the best spring.  I've had to just about pour the dough into my proofing basket (lined with parchment since it sticks to everything else), and those loaves sometimes turn out the best.

BobBoule's picture
BobBoule

have all been poured into the DO, I learned to stop being concerned with shaping a tightly skinned loaf and just embrace the pour. LOL

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

or "Just embrace the Pour!"  

I like that.  Might put it on my T-shirt or Einkorn Apron.  :)  ...or is that too korny?

BobBoule's picture
BobBoule

ROFLOL its corny but funny. Next will be those who insist that the pour has to be left handed to e traditional, arguing with those that think that a right handed pour will give a better rise. I pour from the left even though I'm right handed.

RoundhayBaker's picture
RoundhayBaker

Hah, window pain describes the sometimes agony of trying to get my dough to that stage!

More seriously, have you tried a long, cold ferment? Your dough will stiffen up whilst it's still cold from being in the fridge, allowing shaping with more ease. Are you using a banneton with a cloth lining whilst you prove? If not, give it a go. The cloth absorbs some dough moisture giving you better skin and hence a better shape. With such a fragile cell structure to your dough might it also be affected by how carefully you place your dough in your pot?

Jumping backwards, I wonder if einkorn, like rye, can benefit from a long autolyse with the sourdough levain (before you add the salt, egg, and sugars)? The acidity of the sourdough destroys some of the rye enzymes which promote stickiness. I get a much more satisfactory crumb in my rye loaves by doing this. Might be worth a try? Maybe without the eggs?

BobBoule's picture
BobBoule

autolyse, cold ferments, etc. and found that Einkorn is just different that regular modern wheat. Its sticky and loose no matter what I do (to more or less a degree depending on the specific technique I'm testing that day). If I do a long to very long cold proof, then its not as sticky and doesn't run quickly but it won't hold a shape more than a few seconds before it starts to ooze. As it warms up to run temperature its benign to run and get sticky. I can stretch and fold it a few times and it does tighten up but then a minute later it just runs and looks like its not been shaped at all. If I perform a long fermentation and then throw it directly into the oven it will burn the crust before the center reaches 200∘ F. Long autolyse did not seem to change anything, it pretty much stays sticky and runny and develops pretty much the same structure (as far as I can tell) so that didn't seem to change anything. Its been a long slow process but I'm learning that 100% pure Einkorn is its own creature and conventional wisdom just does not seem to apply. I'll keep experimenting to see what works for me.

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

I haven't tried either autolyse or cold ferment.  The cold ferment is especially intriguing to me, though as Bobboule as pointed out, some of these conventional techniques may not work, but I'll still give em a try.  I'm proofing a banneton basket.  However, I often have to lay parchment paper inside because the dough is so impossibly sticky that nothing is safe outside of parchment paper slicked over with olive oil.  This defeats the purpose f the banter, but it still provides a mold before I transfer it to my oblong cloche.

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

Mini and Stu this one is for you.

Mini Oven and STUinlouisa are currently putting Einkorn through an intensive study. 

Einkorn is a difficult grain. Here is something to get you started...(tilt your head)

BobBoule's picture
BobBoule

for the past year. This is an Ok recipe and will obviously produce a loaf but I can get much higher hydration (at this low a hydration its very dense) and more flavor with a very long retardation in my fridge. I agree with this recipe that Einkorn takes a lot longer baking time than expected, I currently bake my similarly sized loads for 55 to 60 minutes.

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

Higher than a usual dough. I imagine after a long fermentation and the nature of the flour it'll make a very thick sludge whereas a wheat flour dough at 80% hydration can be made into a proper dough with the correct handling. When you find the perfect recipe then let me know and I'll try it again. 

BobBoule's picture
BobBoule

that there is a perfect recipe but if I find it I will certainly let you now. Right now I never go below 67% hydration. I have only tried 85% hydration a few times but it did not seem to make any difference ad it looked more like oatmeal soup than a dough. At this moment I suspect that a 100% pure Einkorn dough will not ever hold a shape like conventional wheat does nor will it bake up light and fluffy as well, but its good enough for my humble needs and I do intend on continuously experimenting with pure Einkorn loaves as my exclusive flour, into the future.

drogon's picture
drogon

in some respects. High hydrations, no real kneading, "pouring", etc. The local shop I bake for has some Doves Farm stuff that's past best-before date on offer, so I might get a bag to have a play with (it's otherwise just far too expensive to bother with)

-Gordon

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

Is from the side if a dove's farm packet of Einkorn. Becoming ever more popular here in the UK. Worth a try and you're right, it's a but like rye and should be treated the same. High hydration, long rise, bake like a cake. 

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

Its definitely like rye they way the structure can be there and then totally fall apart after a short period.  And I agree it is expensive, but the wife was disappointed after I baked a few with conventional flour.  Its a slight difference, but the einkorn has a naturally sweeter, nuttier taste, and conventional wheat has an almost harsh tannin flavor by comparison, even when used in the same recipes.  Truth be told, I still turn out a loaf for under $3.50, which is still cheaper than anything I can buy of similar quality.

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

I think you're handling it too much. 

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

Noted.  I usually try and handle as little as possible, but then I worry the loaf will lack sufficient gluten development.  All total, I probably only knead a loaf for around 3-5minutes max.  The autolyse someone suggested above maybe a possible method to maximize protein development while sacrificing some kneading time?

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

Given enough time the gluten will develop. Kneading helps along the gluten for quicker breads where one needs to speed up the process. Doing a long fermentation will help. I think it's best to not think of Einkorn as Wheat. Why don't you follow the above recommendation of high hydration, long fermentation and baking like a cake just to get a feel for the grain and how it likes to be handled. From there you can tweak it with greater success. Follow the recipe to learn. If you've ever done rye then think of Einkorn in the same way. 

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

and then noticing differences.  Rye has a much shorter working time.  Einkorn seems to not break down quickly and is a sticky goo that can be played with much longer.  Long ferments, poolish preferment (100% hydration with pinch of yeast, 6+ hrs)  adding yeast late in the process.  Letting the dough almost double before baking.

My bag (unfortunately empty) of Einkorn has a 300g Einkorn to 200g Rye flour recipe on the back.  I can see the benefits of that combination.  Einkorn will extend the rye working time while two complement each others flavours.  Have not yet had a fluffy dough crumb.   Tangzhong experiments need more work.  I've also dug out my large roaster pan to use as a baking chamber. 

With such a sticky dough I find it never leaves my mixing container.  I use a sturdy spatula to mix and scrape out the container with two of them or with a blunt knife for scraping off the spatula.   A spray bottle with clean water helps smooth out surfaces if desired.   Soak all bowls and things first in cold water to wash up using a brush.  

Glad to see you're working with eggs.   And a salty sourdough starter.   :)

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

Really want to try it now. Been a long time. Okay Mini can you give me a really simple recipe for a sourdough Einkorn. One where I can mix in the morning, leave for 12-14 hours and bake in the evening? 

Sounds like you have an Einkorn drought where you are. Sure I cannot send you some?

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

(March 29)  have to edit today March 31st as the picture of the Dove's recipe is gone...?

Then raise einkorn hell.  (my poor starter!)   Don't know where it all disappeared to.  I've asked the people restocking and they have been kind enough to check in the stock room.  I may have to go the distance to the Reformhause.  I'm sure I can get fresh ground there.

A simple recipe.  Well, you already have one, the 80% sideways one off the bag with a few tweaks. (500g flour with 400g water)

  • Why don't your take 5% of the total flour, 25g einkorn flour, heat with 125g of the water amount, lets go full microwave oven power for 30 seconds, stir & repeat until the mixture is gelled.   Cool to room temp, stir this (150g roux)  into the recipe.  
  • Do the recipe with 475g the flour and 8g salt ...and plop one egg white (40g) into a large cup and add enough water (235g) to make 275g.  Use a pinch the yeast (written as total of 1 tsp) (unless you have 50g fermented starter)  and go for approx. 12hr rise fermentation.  
  • Pan or free form shape it (a good time to add last minute soaked and drained seeds and nuts) and let it expand under a moist towel until almost doubled.  
  • Bake preheated at 210°C with a full (enough for the hour) steam pan.  Foil covered or in a DO using your preferred trapped steam method. leaving covered for the whole bake.    Turn down the oven to 180° C after 15 minutes.  
  • Go for 100°C internal temp.
AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

I'm going to print this off and try it soon. The offer for Einkorn flour is always open. 

I'm in the middle of a recipe with chestnut flour but if I've halved the ingredients do I half the baking time? 

———————

METHOD

Put the raisins in a bowl with tepid water and leave to soak for 10 minutes, then drain, strain and dry. 

Sieve the flower into a large bowl. Slowly and carefully add 450ml of cold water in a steady trickle whilst simultaneously whisking the flour to create a smooth paste. 

Add the olive oil, pinch of salt and raisins and mix thoroughly. 

Line a shallow baking tray (24cm diameter) with baking parchment and carefully pour the mixture into the tin. 

Remove the rosemary from the stalk and scatter across the surface of the mixture along with the pine nuts. 

Bake the Castagnaccio in a pre-heated oven at 200C for approx. 30 minutes. 

Serve tepid or cold.

 

SERVES / TIME

Serves 8.

Preparation Time: approx. 40 minutes

Baking Time: approx. 30 minutes

INGREDIENTS300g Chestnut FlourAdd50g Pine Nuts30g Organic Raisins1 Sprig of Rosemary2 Tbsp EV Olive OilAddPinch of Salt
Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

recent recipe, I was playing with yeast and sourdough amounts.  I won't edit anymore.  :)

Half the baking time?  not really,  Let the first 15 minutes stand then reduce the baking time.

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

So 1st 15min proceed as normal then carry on till ready. So might not be the full half hour but certainly not half the time. 

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

a difference if you used half the size baking surface or made the original recipe thinner.  Making it thinner will drastically cut baking time.

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

This is a really nice simple recipe. Makes a good treat and healthy ingredients. From lina stores London. 

AbeNW11's picture
AbeNW11 (not verified)

it's still there!

I'm not entirely sure how pictures work on here. Do you need to keep them on your file even though they are uploaded onto the forum topic?

It's confusing.

Thanks for the update. I've never done a roux before. Basically however much I take off the recipe to do the roux I just have to remember to take the flour + water amount used off when adding it into the final recipe.

I got rid of my microwave to make room for my oven. How would I do a roux on a stove top?

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

flour & water into a small sauce pan (weigh it and write it down) wait 15 minutes for the flour to hydrate,  place on the stove and bring up the heat stirring often or constantly.  Start at med heat.  it doesn't have to boil just thicken.  Boiling is overdoing it and there will be an obvious water loss.  When cool, put it back on the scale and add any missing water.  

Got rid of a microwave?  

Yes, if you erase them from your file they don't show up in any posts.  If you link to a bucket, that's something else.  I still can't see it but maybe I can with the next server update.  Anyway...  I've done that recipe with the tweaks myself and I like the dough feel with the egg white.  It feels bouncier.  The sourdough is now in the fridge overnight after sitting out 6 hrs.

A second loaf is smaller and based on my rye ratio with chia seeds.  I mixed up the dry ingredients (230g flour, 16g chia, 5g salt) and divided in half.  To each bowl I added 25g of starter (100% hydration.)  Put 30g egg white + 90g water  in one bowl and 120g water in the other.  Stirred well, covered and tucked into the refrigerator.  They will be baked together in one pan to compare.  I have enough left over einkorn whole flour to keep the starter fed for weeks.  :)

EDIT:   Results are here:

http://www.thefreshloaf.com/comment/322329#comment-322329

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

I find the easiest way to add eggs is simply put a bowl on the scales, "0" then break the eggs or egg whites into the bowl and add water up to the desired weight.  (the same with cups)  That way you don't have to be messing with reformulating the flour, salt, etc..

Mini

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

Great idea, I'll definitely try this next time.  I'd avoided adding eggs because I do 100% of the water as a soaker that sits are room temp for 10-12 hours and I worried the eggs would get funky.  Next time I'm thinking I'll just sub the soaker for a 20-30min autolyse, so the eggs are going in:)

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

if worried about funky eggs, then you must have warm kitchen temps.  Park the soaking into the refrigerator for most of the 12 hrs.  Start off with a warm temp that cools down chilled.

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

(I underlined some points)

Please follow these useful tips for the best results.

  • Einkorn may be substituted cup for cup with regular whole wheat flour in some muffin, pancake, cakes and cookie recipes. However, sometimes, the amount of liquid in the recipe needs to be reduced by roughly 15-20%.
  • When consulting jovial’s recipe section, it is best to work with a kitchen scale. We will never measure the same cup of flour, but our scales will be in harmony.
  • Don’t substitute jovial’s einkorn flour in recipes that call for whole grain einkorn flour ground from our wheat berries and vice versa without considering that the added bran and fiber in whole grain flour absorbs more liquid than the all-purpose flour.
  • If your bread dough mixes up at a normal texture because you add more flour to lessen its sticky texture, your dough will end up drying up and baking dense later because einkorn absorbs liquids much slower than regular wheat. Make sure your dough is nice and wet and sticky, but that it doesn’t expand too much on your work surface after kneading.
  • All einkorn bread dough are no-knead, because excessive kneading does not help develop einkorn’s gluten. Knead with your hands just until the dough is completely hydrated and avoid using a standing mixer.
  • Einkorn’s gluten is weaker than normal flour, so when you let a loaf of bread made with dry active yeast rise, don’t let it proof to the old standard “let the dough rise until it has doubled in size”. If the dough rises too much, it will deflate in the oven. Make sure the dough springs back when you press on it with your finger. It is better to under-proof than over-proof with einkorn.
  • Because einkorn contains less starch than regular wheat, cakes can bake a bit denser so we like to add an extra egg or egg white to the batter.
  • Beat less and at lower speed or by hand for lighter textures in cakes and muffin recipes.

We have been working with einkorn flour for more than five years and can help answer questions. We want you to love this precious ancient grain as much as we do, so please contact us at info@jovialfoods.com. We’re here for you.

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

I think I'm good on all these except the water and kneading.  More water, no kneading.  I'll have to post back in a week with the outcomes from the tweaking.

STUinlouisa's picture
STUinlouisa

I've been working with Einkorn for a relative short time compared to BobBoule or Mini Oven and have made some progress with their help. The latest attempt came down to the realization that I couldn't really handle the dough and that a machine could do it. Maybe the gluten needed more exercise. 

400g Einkorn and 300g water were mixed and let sit at 50F for sixteen hours or so then let warm up to room temperature. To the bowl of a stand mixer add the autolysed mixture 100g Einkorn starter ( 100 % hydration newly fed and active ), 30g honey, 30g olive oil, 10g salt and 5g IDY. Knead with dough hook stopping occasionally to scrape the gloop off the hook while adding more Einkorn, I can't tell you how much exactly probably half a cup. Knead for 10 min until it looks like there is some gluten built.

Let the dough bulk ferment until some obvious expansion is noted 40-60 min then poke with a silicone spatula and slightly stir to access the structure, realize there isn't much and prepare a pullman pan. Dump the dough into the pan and proof until once again some expansion is obvious. Cover the pan and place in a 325 F oven.  Come back 30 min later and remove the lid to reveal a loaf with a sunken center an obvious case of over proofing. Finish the bake until the loaf is 200F.

Time to sit back and think of what to try next. Einkorn is not easy that is what makes it so much fun plus the taste of course.

Stu

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Might stimulate some enzymes.  

I got my hands on a kilo whole einkorn flour yesterday.  I am eager to mix flour into my starter today. 

I've had the einkorn starter sitting out warming up from being in the fridge, stirring and breaking apart the chunks of bread with a fork.  All the stirring is making it difficult to judge the yeast population by gas/dough expansion.  I want to make sure it is as fermented as it should before feeding it with the flour.   Enjoying sniffing it.  It's wonderful!

I thought rye starters fed with altus smelled and tasted great, but einkorn sourdough starters fed einkorn altus smell fantastic!   Way up there on my joys-of-sniffing starter scale.  I'm looking forward to the bread from this starter before I've even made it.  It's smelling very yeasty after a few hours at 23°C.   I don't even care if it's a brick!  but I will try very hard to get a more open moist crumb.   I've got 25g of flour soaking with 125g of water to make tangzhong or water roux to include in the dough.   Time to zap it.  :)

I noticed with the simple recipe I posted, I forgot to subtract the 25g of flour used in the roux from the 500g flour in the March 29th recipe.  Perhaps 475g should be the corrected amount.    

I want to slip in a small chia loaf into the works.  

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Here is the crumb results of the simple recipe with water roux and egg white and a starter with lots of altus in it.   Six hour ferment 22°C then chilled.  Next day shaped and left to almost double, baked in clay baker.  Whoops!  Bottom rack is a bit too hot!  This loaf smells and tastes like it had molasses in it.  (that must be the altus)   

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

Nice crumb Mini!

I've had a few come out close to this, but not quite.  There are usually areas of more density in my loaves.  6hrs seems so short for a sourdough (I don't usually get sour flavor till 12hrs).  How long do you cold ferment it for?  Do you feel this gives you adequate flavor development?  Or was the chill just to aid in shaping?

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

I wanted to go to bed and not bake in the middle or the night.  I forgot to put my small dough gauge into the fridge and found it the next day sitting on the counter top in full "double" for how long, nobody knows...  The fed starters were put into the fridge after they started rising (about 1/3 to peak) and they continued to rise in the fridge as well, just slowly.  Brav  little starters. 

Cooling the sourdough did not help in shaping as I spooned it onto a wet towel (I just had to test it) and it stuck (ugh)  so I floured the exposed surface and flopped it into the mould trying not to fold the flour side into itself.  I then took a spoon and scraped off the towel releasing the dough into the clay mould.  Scraped off more dough from the towel and then with very wet fingers smoothed out the top surface.  I then deflated the gauge with a wet finger and made use of it.  Sure enough when it showed almost double, I baked the loaf.  Seems like this dough can rise up and deflate,  rise and deflate, rise and deflate forever...  (I will have to test that.)

This is a very flavourful loaf.  Let's see... from mixing up the dough (2 pm) to baking the next day (10am) was about 20 hrs total wet time.

Today it's even better and I prefer it to the Einkorn/Chia tastes, much softer crumb.  

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

He

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

I attempted a few of the suggestions with this last loaf.  As you can see, we have already eaten about half of it.  Instead of the long soaker, I performed a 30minute autolyse with all but 50gr of the flour and was pleased to see it had no adverse effect on the flavor from starch breakdown, the flavor was excellent.  On Mini's advice, I cracked the eggs in with the water so there were no issues with over hydration.  I held off on about 50gr of flour with the belief that higher hydration is probably better, but in retrospect, I think it it wouldn't have made a difference, and I might have even been able to use my banneton proofing basket without lining it with parchment paper, which I often do when the dough comes out too wet and sticky.  I did notice that the crust is much smoother than normal, and I think I was loosing some of my gluten from the long soaker, and this was preserved with the autlyse method.  While I've gotten similarly open crumb before, I do thin this was just a little more open.  Texture is nice and soft with well developed malty flavor in the crust.  

I think a little more tweaking might see further improvement.  I've definitely gotten taller loaves in the past, and I'm not sure if I just used way less flour with this one and so its just generally smaller, because the crumb is relatively open/airy, and the smoothness of the outer crust makes me think there was better gluten development than before.  I also think that I could have kneaded it a bit more with out issue.  I kneaded less with on someone's suggestion, but I didn't feel this was beneficial in the end, and an extra minute of kneading might have given me a tighter dough ball.

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

and crumble into the Einkorn sd starter or into the dough.  If dried, add enough water to bread crumbs to get same as dough hydration.  If moist, decide if crumbs feel moist enough and add a spoon or two water.  Crumbs or chunks of bread do fall apart easier if added to the liquids, allowed to hydrate and smushed a bit.  

You will love the flavour boost!

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

 

My little kitchen helpers.  The gauges help me determine the rise of the loaf and when to bake.  

Tiny glass has a flattened ball of dough from the loaf in the clay baker.  Similar thing, just before the volume doubles in the glass, I bake it.  Depending on how fast it rises, I judge the time I need to heat up the oven. 

The paper pinned to the side... when the einkorn loaf rises almost to the paper (paper is at "double") remove, cover and bake.  Next time, more dough in the pan or a smaller pan, this is definitely an under-filled pan.  

teaman4077's picture
teaman4077

do you proof in your clay baker?  I have always preheated mine in the oven and transferred the loaf

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Yep, I don't mess with hot clay bakers.  I do soak this one for 10 minutes under water.  It has no glazed surfaces but it helps to let it drip dry (a few minutes) after soaking and smear the lower half with a light film of butter.  Then I put the dough in to proof.  Bake on the next to lower shelf or lower middle of the oven.  I can even put it in a cold oven (shorten the proofing time) and turn the fan on full blast for fast high heat.  When the temp is reached, I start timing the loaf bake and after a few minutes turn down the heat to desired.   

After baking with it, I let it dry out opened on a radiator for several days before putting away. 

Alchemist42's picture
Alchemist42

I am trying my hand at 100% Einkorn as I type this.  Just tossing it all in, so to speak.  12 hour autolyze, levan ala Terwilligaer, over night and fresh poolish, and a 24  hour retard in the fridge (with about 3 hours doing very gentle stretch and turns after combining everything).  Lot's of wet hands work.  I like how it is behaving, but I can see final proofing is going to be interesting.  Or more to the point, releasing from my proofing basket is going to be interesting.  I'm thinking I might cold proof and right into the oven.  I'll judge depending on how it looks in the morning.  I have to check my final numbers but I think I am hovering at 80% hydration.

Alchemist42's picture
Alchemist42

Well, not unexpectedly, my final loaf spread out a bit instead of going vertical.  But, I had zero sticking issues and it slashed beautifully. I think if I had put it into a pan, it would have done very well.  Regardless, it was reasonable and very flavorful.  Unfortunately (or fortunately in a way) I don't think I am a huge fan of Einkorn.  The fortunate part is that I won't be obsessed to get this right. :)  I'll probably play with some 20-40% additions and see how that goes.

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

to tackle this again.  

Raspberry einkorn/spelt muffins were a real hit last weekend using substitutes in Mike Avery's blueberry sourdough muffins.  I've now got a water diluted very ripe einkorn starter chocked full of einkorn/hazel nut bread cubes (frozen, toasted and cut) fermenting on the counter top at 20°C  (heat turned off in the house so starters are naturally slower than normal) And thinking of combining long fermented einkorn sourdough with muffin thinking and fast rise of soda to reduce the sour and raise the bread.  The late warm roux addition behaved in such a way as to make me think that part of the rise in that well risen einkorn/hazelnut loaf was due to a acid<>base neutralizing reaction in the dough.  

Back to muffins... to lengthen the wet time... a real challenge with a "quick bread"   ...or is it?  

I'm looking at the title recipe and thinking this is not unlike a muffin recipe.  It only needs a little oil and soda... soda at the last minute, because it clumps usually sifted and blended with the flour, stirred minimally and portioned into a form.  Also would adding soda to a finished water/flour rough increase the reaction good or bad?

I might change the recipe at the paragraph on "Baking."   Instead of turning out and kneading, this would be the time to add soda taking advantage of the soured dough reaction and pop the dough into the pan or shape a loaf.  How long to wait?   No wait, push the dough into the hot oven.   

 

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Einkorn Sourdough    with eggs, water roux, and soda

 80% hydration ... experiment

  • 1.  Make the dough with 475g the flour and 10g salt ... plop one or two eggs into a large cup and add enough water to weigh 275g.  60g soft butter or oil.  Add 225g fermented starter  and go for 6 hour fermentation.  Chill until ready to bake dough.  
  • 2.  Before baking, prepare a water roux.  Take (5% of the total flour) 25g einkorn flour blend into 125g water and let hydrate for 15 min, Heat with full microwave oven power for 30 seconds, stir & repeat until the mixture is gelled.   Cool to room temp, stir 2 tsp (11.6 g) sifted baking soda into 150g roux.  
  •  
  • 3)  Stir roux into dough thoroughly (along with any seeds, or nuts)
  • For this experiment I will Split 1206.6g dough.   (2 x 603.3g)   To see what has a better crumb...
  • 4)  Pan or free form shape dough bake immediately.    
  • 5)  Pan, cover to prevent drying,  let rise until almost doubled, bake.
  •  
  • Bake preheated at 210°C with a full (enough for the hour) steam pan.  Foil covered or in a DO using your preferred trapped steam method. leaving covered for the whole bake.    Turn down the oven to 180° C after first 15 minutes.  

Go for 100°C internal temp. or about an hour of baking for one whole loaf.  Uncover and brown longer in oven if desired.

All comments welcome.

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Looks very promising and fresh from the oven...  Soft crumb (still warm)  and this is only half of the dough!

When the second half loaf rose as high as the baked first half, I popped it into the oven covered with foil. (it's still in there)  The first half loaf took 40min total time in the oven. The hole in the middle was made from my probe thermometer.  

 I find it tastes too salty, next time lower to 6 to 8g

This is almost as soft as W-bread!

I mixed up the dough at 9:30pm and put it outside to drop to 11°C in the morning, then 8am it stood in my 20° kitchen getting good and ripe, tripling in volume until I deflated it and added the soda/roux at 3:30 pm.  

The second loaf went into the oven at 4:37 pm.  After 30 min, I removed the foil and am giving this flour dusted scored loaf  another 10 minutes to brown.

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Actually the volume is not very different but the shape is.  I dusted and scored the top of the second half loaf and allowed it to rise, the scoring didn't come thru or the flour dusting.  The first loaf has a more "muffin" shape with an expansion crack.  The second loaf more flat and even.  

dull and flat or winkled and krinkled

Not sure I like the soda in the recipe, I prefer the taste of sourdough.  (I might cut the baking soda down to 1 teaspoon.)

Just found a 2kg (holds 2kg of water to the rim) loaf pan 30cm x 11cm x 7cm deep and come with a carry box, no more plastic bags!  Pressed Steel pan with rounded edges from Zenker for under €7.