The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Fig Nut 123 challenge bread

Lazy Loafer's picture
Lazy Loafer

Fig Nut 123 challenge bread

I issued myself a challenge (posted here in the Challenge forum) to see what kind of fun I could have with a simple 123 method sourdough. In other words, 1 part fresh starter, 2 parts water (or other liquid) and 3 parts flour. Also, a customer had asked me to create a 'sweet' version of my Three Friends Levain (Tom[ato], Olive and Rosemary) that she could have with peanut butter and jam. So, a double challenge!

My first version was bread flour and whole wheat flour, 100% hydration fresh levain, chopped Brazil nuts and dried figs, and a bit of cardamom. It turned out very nice, but still needed something. Oh, and just as an aside - I use Brazil nuts because they are about the most environmentally-sustainable tree nuts around. They grow best in an intact rain forest!

I had to try it with my home made nectarine jam, just to check! :)

Good, but still needed a couple of tweaks.

Today's version was much the same, but I toasted the chopped Brazil nuts and added a bit of honey and some poppy seeds.

Here's the formula:

Bread flour22575%
Whole Wheat flour7525%
Water20067%
Starter10033%
Honey207%
Salt62%
Chopped Brazil nuts3010%
Chopped dried figs5017%
Poppy seeds83%
Ground cardamom (1/2 tsp/loaf)00%
 714238%

The method was pretty basic:

  • Mix flours, water and levain and let sit for 30 minutes
  • Add salt and add-ins and mix [note, I mixed this in the big Univex mixer (Max) because I actually made six loaves today; you can mix and develop the dough in other ways]
  • Stretch and fold every 30 minutes over the next couple of hours, until the dough is strong, stretchy and springy
  • Leave in a cool basement to bulk ferment overnight [in the morning the dough had nearly tripled in volume and was beautiful - soft and jiggly but with a nice dome on it and still a lot of strength]
  • Bench, scale and pre-shape
  • Shape and let proof for about an hour
  • Load onto peels, then into hot stones (475F) with steam. After 5 minutes, turn heat down to 425F. Turn loaves after 15 minutes, then bake for another 15 to 20 minutes. Internal temperature around 205F

It looks a little rough at the pre-shape stage but was actually beautifully strong and springy.

You can see how nice and taut the shaped dough ended up.

Slashed and ready to load.

Very nice oven spring and burst, and a lovely colour on the crust.

The crumb is divine - very moist and chewy, and the flavour is now everything I was looking for.

So, over to you! See the 123 challenge on the Challenge forum for details... :)

 

Comments

Ru007's picture
Ru007

Not much more to say than WOW! That looks great! 

I'm a fig and nut fan (pecans being my fav so far).

I totally get the whole PB & J thing. I actually think a slice on its own is like a PB & J, but you can never have too much PB or J! 

Great job LL! 

Lazy Loafer's picture
Lazy Loafer

I was inspired by your fig and nut bake! It's just ending fresh fig season here and I was looking for a bread made with figs, but fresh figs are just too moist I think and I couldn't be bothered to dry any local ones. Now to figure out what to do with an abundance of nectarines and pears!

Floydm's picture
Floydm

Very nice.

Lazy Loafer's picture
Lazy Loafer

I probably wouldn't be doing half the things I'm doing with bread, if it wasn't for this site and the great people on here. Thank you for setting it up and maintaining it!

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

Bread.  Brazil nuts just aren't used enough in breads.  Yours is exemplary.  Well done and

Happy baking 

Lazy Loafer's picture
Lazy Loafer

So glad you like it. I'm trying to use more sustainable ingredients, like Brazil nuts and hazel nuts, but our hazel nuts here on the West Coast were nearly wiped out recently by disease, and it will take a while to get production back up to commercially viable levels for farmers.

Vast abundance from the garden right now. Hmmm, can I use green beans in bread? :)

Truth Serum's picture
Truth Serum

I am working on this challenge and I came here for a salt measurement.

Lazy Loafer's picture
Lazy Loafer

The salt should generally be 2% of the flour weight, so for 300 grams of flour you should use about 6 grams of salt.

cgmeyer2's picture
cgmeyer2

i'm definitely going to try to make this bread. it looks so yummy

claudia