The Fresh Loaf

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An Easy Bake For St. Paddy’s Day - 5 Sprouted Grain Sourdough

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

An Easy Bake For St. Paddy’s Day - 5 Sprouted Grain Sourdough

With a corned beef; making, soaking and smoking going on for the big day, we don’t have a lot of time to mess around with this week’s sprouted sourdough.  Lucy wanted to do Ballymaloe’s SD brown bread  which would have been perfect and we really like it, but that takes more time than I wanted to spend rounding up all the stuff that goes into it.  Plus, what we need in the freezer is a white bread.

So, we whipped up a 20% sprouted 5 grain SD at 78% hydration using a 10% pre-fermented bran and high extraction sprouted, 2 stage, 100% hydration, levain where the sprouted bran was the first stage.  The 5 sprouted grains were red and white wheat, Kamut, spelt and rye.

We didn’t have time to retard the levain once I was built and it went straight into the 1 hour autolyzed dough flour made up of equal parts of LaFama AP and Albertson’s bread flour that had the 2% pink Himalayan sea salt sprinkled on top.

We immediately did 50 slap and folds to get everything mixed together and then did 2 more sets of 6 slap and folds and 3 more sets of 4 stretch and folds al over 30 minute intervals.  We just left the dough in the counter and covered with a stainless-steel mixing bowl between sets.

 

After a pre-shape and final shape, we dropped the dough into a rice floured basket for a 12 hour overnight retard in the fridge.  We took the dough out of the fridge and fired up the oven to 500 F with the combo cooker inside.  When the oven was ready we unmolded the dough onto parchment, on a peel, slashed it tic tack toe style, dropped it in the CC and then put into the oven between the two stones.

We baked it at 450 F for 18 minutes under steam and then removed the lid and continued to bake for another 6 minutes at 425 F convection before removing the bread entirely from the CC and placing it on the bottom stone to finish baking – about another 6 minutes until it hit 208 F in the inside.

It had risen bloomed and browned well in the oven but we will have to wait in the crumb shot when we make some kind of  sandwich for lunch.  Well no sandwich for lunch but we did have some Irish stew that needed sopping up and this bread was perfect.for doing so.

The crumb was so soft we almost couldn't cut it at all.  We really had to squish it down to get the bread knife to take hold.  The crust was still crispy and had not gone soft yet so it was still warm in the middle.  This bread is delicious and the perfect SFSD white bread to sop up some fish stew made famous there.  You an't go wrong with this recipe.

Formula

Levain

10% pre-fermented sprouted bran and high extraction, 2 stage, 100% hydration levain

Dough

10% High extraction sprouted 5 grain

40% Lafama AP

40% Albertson’s bread flour

78% overall hydration

2% pink Himalayan sea salt

Comments

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

It truly is a beautiful loaf. If I understand right, your 5 grains all went into the levain and the rest is white flour?

I can't wait to see the crumb!

Oh and that is a stunning sunset by the way!

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

The levain had all if the bran and some high extraction flour but only half of the sprouted grain.  The other half of the sprouted grain was all high extraction and it was in the dough flour.  I will go back and fix the formula.  We love the sunsets in AZ.  They are stunning..  Her is another shot of the same sunset.

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

Those sunset pictures almost look fake. What a treat to be able to see that in the evening!

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

Margarita!  The best sunsets adnd margaritas are found right by the Lucy's pool!

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

Built up my immune system after 30 year of these sunsets and chasers:-)  Lucy is totally looped right now!  She got back from the groomer who said she was near nasty today - Sadly, this is her normal state before the tequila takes effect!  Margaritas are like bread, the better the ingredients the better the margarita!  Here is to St Paddy and the day named after him!

cgmeyer2's picture
cgmeyer2

bread looks yummy; especially with the irish stew and salad.

claudia

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

was perfect for smoked corned beef sandwiches last night.  Just delicious!  Here is a pix

Happy baking

alfanso's picture
alfanso

the crumb was so soft.  Any ideas?

Your kitchen doesn't have a clear division of responsibility and job tasking.  As long as Lucy dons a hair net to work around food instead of just barking out orders, she should be managing the bread.  However i can imagine the mess when she tries to do a window pane test with all four paws at once.  Maybe just get her trained on checking up on the corned beef and leaving the bread to you might work better.

And you are correct.  Your bread looks like your bread and my bread looks like mine.  That is, until Castagna gets involved although up to now she is relegated to the consumption only side of the equation and acts as though she doesn't want to get her nails dirty.  Insolent beasts, I say.

Good looking boule, inside and out, and as you know I still have a thing for a majority white flour loaf.

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

the oven and the crust was still crispy..  To get the bred knife to get a hold to cut you had to moosh, Lucy's favorite baking term,  the bread quite a bit.  I really isn't any softer than normal, sprouted, bran levain ,sourdough white bread once it cooled off and the crust went soft.  There is no changing Lucy.  She isn't smart enough to be anything other than a 2nd class baking apprentice and she is too old to change.  She sure looks and smells better after getting back form the salon - Whew....she was pretty ripe.

You would like this white bread a lot and it would make some fine baguettes.

Happy baking Alan

Ru007's picture
Ru007

The crumb and crust on this one both look fantastic!

Happy Baking, 

Ru

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

St Paddy's on Friday.  We will get moire wholesome and whole grain next week but this bread has been great for smoked beef sandwiches all the same and you would like it sans meat.

\Happy baking Ru 

Isand66's picture
Isand66

Great looking open crumb on this one....perfect for that melt in your mouth corned beef.  I'm on my way home from the Chicago HSW show and can't wait to get Baking again.

Happy Spring and Happy Baking!

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

home the the wife will have walked the black ones so you can get right to baking bread:-)  There is no St Paddy's day without Dijon smothered, smoked, corned beef that is finished off in the oven in a brown sugar glaze.  We also smoked a brisket point, not corned, and all kinds of chicken that was brined.  We are having the BBQ smoked chicken tonight for dinner.  It is so much fun having the future son in law here for Spring break and showing him how to smoke meats,  My daughter got him a smoker for Christmas and now he is getting 50 years of free experience:-)  All the meats were just grand.  Glad you liked the post Ian and

Happy baking   

IceDemeter's picture
IceDemeter

... not quite the same as what us beginners would use!

Beautiful bake, as always, but it's nice to see that you and Lucy can enjoy a more simple approach as much as your intricate creations of flours and sprouts and mixin's.

Thanks for the inspiration!

 
dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

sprouted grain ones are our favorite by far especially with mix ins but our least complex breads now a days are still sprouted and have at least 3 different grains in them:-)  Sprouting 3 different grains is pretty easy - like making pie  or painting an abstract landscape:-)  We all need white bread no mater what!

Glad you liked the post and happy baking IceD.