The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Today's bake 3-31-2019

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

Today's bake 3-31-2019

Sourdough Bread: March 30, 2019

David Snyder

This is another hybrid bread. It differs from my last bake in the following ways:

  1. I have increased the whole grain flour to a total of 30% of the total flour by adding 10% Kamut.

  2. I have increased the final dough hydration to 75%.

Total Dough

 

 

Ingredient

Wt (g)

Bakers' %

High-protein flour

147

13

AP flour

668

57

Whole Wheat flour

116

10

Whole Rye flour

116

10

Whole Kamut flour

116

10

Water

872

75

Salt

23

2

Total

2058

177

 

Starter

 

 

Ingredient

Wt (g)

Bakers' %

High-protein flour

110

88

Whole Rye flour

15

12

Water

62.5

50

Firm starter

62.5

50

Total

250

200

  1. Dissolve the starter in the water.

  2. Add the flours and mix thoroughly.

  3. Ferment at 76ºF for 8-10 hours.

  4. Refrigerate for 12 hours or up to 3 days.

Note: I have maintained my 50% hydration starter with feedings as previously described – a bit of rye and the remainder high-protein flour – with feedings about 3 times per week.

Final Dough

 

Ingredient

Wt (g)

AP flour

668

WW flour

116

Whole Rye flour

96

Whole Kamut flour

116

Water

789

Salt

23

Starter

250

Total

2058

Procedures

  1. Place the flours and water in the bowl of a stand mixer and mix at low speed to a shaggy mass.

  2. Cover the bowl and let it rest (autolyse) for 1-2 hours.

  3. Sprinkle the salt over the surface of the dough. Add the starter in chunks. Mix at Speed 1 for 2 minutes to distribute ingredients then for about 9 minutes at Speed 2 to develop the dough.

  4. Transfer the dough to a lightly floured board. Shape into a ball.

  5. Transfer the dough to a clean, lightly oiled bowl. Cover the bowl and ferment at 80ºF for about 3 hours with stretch and folds at 50 and 100 minutes.

  6. Divide the dough into two equal pieces. Cover and let rest for 10-30 minutes to relax the gluten.

  7. Shape as boules or bâtards and place in floured bannetons. Cover or place in food-grade plastic bags.

  8. Proof for 2-3 hours at 80ºF until the loaves have expanded by about 50%.

  9. Refrigerate for 12-40 hours (The longer the cold retardation, the more sour the final loaf).

  10. Remove from refrigerator. Check on degree of proofing. Proof further at 80ºF, as needed. (May need 1-3 hours.) If adequately proofed, proceed to scoring and baking.

  11. Transfer to a peel. Score as desired.

  12. Bake: If baking in Dutch oven, bake at 475ºF covered for 20 minutes, then uncovered at 450ºF for another 10 minutes or until done to satisfaction.

  13. Bake: If baking on the hearth, pre-heat oven at 500ºF for 1 hour with baking stone and steaming apparatus in place. Turn down oven to 460. Load loaf and steam oven. After 15 minutes, remove steam and continue baking for 20-35 minutes, until loaf is baked. (Depends on size and shape of loaf.)

  14. The bread is done when the crust is nicely colored and the loaf sounds hollow when thumped on the bottom. The internal temperature should be at least 205ºF.

  15. Transfer the bread to a cooling rack and cool thoroughly before slicing.

Tasting notes: It was severely yummy.

I divided the dough from this mix into 3 loaves. I baked two after 24 hours cold retardation. One went to a neighbor. The third loaf was baked after 40 hours cold retardation. It has a more open crumb than the one pictured above, and the flavor is significantly more sour. 

Happy baking!

David

 

Comments

MTloaf's picture
MTloaf

Good looking bread as always. I have started to use a Bosch Universal Plus mixer for my doughs after being a dedicated hand mixer. My breads have improved mostly because of better gluten development but sometimes it seems that a shorter mix time and only on speed one for about three or four minutes seems to be enough and longer times result in a tighter crumb. I was wondering how you determined the mixing time for your excellent results? Do you go for full development and window pane. Hammelmans bread recommends a thousand revolutions in the mixer and I think the Bosch does about 130 rpms on speed one and 150 rpms on two. I find the dough gets too tight if I go that long. It wraps around the center, sticks to the bottom of the bowl and seems to be shredding. I seldom get the dough to stay on one side of the bowl to let the arms do the kneading if the it is a 70% or greater hydration. I have the plastic piece that cleans the center column but it doesn't seem to help much. That being said my loafs have more volume than hand mixing and the results are better overall if the folding and fermentation are mysteriously done correctly. I am going to try proofing before retarding to see if I can achieve your success.

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

The mixing times for this bake were taken directly from the Mike Giraudo recipe that started me on my current string of "experiments." It seemed to give me good results, so I've stuck with it.

My mix was also done in a Bosch Universal Plus. It does a great job mixing, but it is a mess to clean up when your dough is over 70% hydration. This mix developed a nice window pane. If you mix a lot longer at a higher speed, you could end up with a more closed, even crumb, paler dough and poorer flavor due to carotenoid oxidation. I've done that purposely once with a KitchenAid, just to see if I could. That was with a 100% whole wheat yeasted dough.

I think I've been getting a nicer crumb with machine mixing than hand mixing, but I know one can achieve this with the right hand mixing techniques. 

David

hreik's picture
hreik

Can you tell me how the crust was?  I am very curious to know if it was thin and crisp/ crusty or thicker and crunchy / crusty.... or what?  I am thinking how the rye changes the crust quality and the Maillard reaction.... so wanted to know.  My 20% kamut loaves are very crisp and was wondering how adding a bit of rye would change the crust quality.

Also, is your mother starter always 50%?  If so is that for ease of maintenance?

hester

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

Thanks for the compliment!

The crust is crunchy, and it stays pretty crunchy for a few days. This happens to be how I prefer it. 

I think 10% rye is enough to enhance the flavor but not enough to significant effect the crust texture or crumb structure. I think dough hydration, steaming technique, and baking time and temperature are more important factors.

For years, I have kept a "mother" starter at 50% hydration in the fridge. It is fed with a 70:20:10 mix of AP:WW:Rye. I generally feed it twice to adjust hydration and flour mix called for in the recipe and to jazz it up before baking with it. I mix a new mother every 3-6 weeks. I mix a total mother weight of 350g. This results in quite a lot of discard with each refreshment of the mother.

For the current series of experiments, I mixed just 70g of mother and fed it 3 times per week with 70% high-protein white flour and 30% rye. This really cuts down on the discard. When I'm activating a starter for a bake, I use 60g of the mother to make 250g of starter and use the remaining 10g to mix a new mother - 10g mother:30g water:10g rye:20g high-protein bread flour. It seems to work nicely.

David

syros's picture
syros

David, you’re killing me! I love the look of that bread. Now I seriously have to do this one. Your SF versions have been inspiring. And I love that you have kamut in it. I love the crumb. It looks delicious! Thank you!

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

Let us know how it works for you.

Happy baking!

David

not.a.crumb.left's picture
not.a.crumb.left

and it would be so nice to be able to taste each other's bread!

One thing I am not sure is, how do you calculate what amount of starter to use with a firmer starter...

Using a 100% hydration starter with most formulas you get a feeling that it is normally up to 20%ish  as a generalisation...I also understand that with firmer levains I need to up the water a bit and less flour in my overall percentages...and bear that in mind...but how about the allocation of LABS and yeast...in a liquid levain versus a firm levain?

So what is the impact of using 50g of 50% hydration levain compared to a 100% hydration levain in a dough...apart from considering the difference in flour and water in the dough percentages. Probably a totally silly question...but one does not learn, if not asking...Thank you.....so much. Kat

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

I generally use starters with about 20% of the total flour in the dough, whether using a liquid or a firm starter.

Generally, liquid starters result in greater dough extensibility. That's desirable when making baguettes, for example. Firm starters generally favor more acetic acid production. For the home baker, in my opinion, the important thing is to be aware of the total amounts of flour and water in whatever starter you use so you know the true hydration of the final dough.

In practical terms, the biggest difference is in the feeding demands - liquid starters are usually fed more often. This has different implications for a commercial bakery and a home baker. If you are baking once a week or less often, a firm starter may be easier to maintain. If you are a retail bakery and need to have fresh breads coming out of your ovens 3 times per day, a liquid levain gives you more flexibility - it ferments faster, and with more frequent feedings you can have your levain at the same stage of ripeness several times each day. Consistency in product is important. Your customers expect it.

Your question isn't "silly" at all, but it probably doesn't make a big difference for us home bakers.

David

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

78% hydration. Lucy wants to do am overnight bulk on the counter at 72 F, say 8 hours to say 100% and then do a longish 24 hour shape retard to see what that one tastes like.  Will drop it to 75% hydration to try and sow the bulk down on the counter.  Lucy loves all the experiments you are doing and now she is jumping in too!  That's some nice bread and it has to taste better than it looks! 

Well done and happy baking David.

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

If you do an overnight BF at room temp., what amount of starter to do you use? (% pre-fermented flour)

This has been a productive series. I've learned .... or re-learned .... a bunch of things.

David

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

sift out all the bran and get it all in there first and then use the HE flour for the rest of the 60 g in the levain at 100% hydration.  Will use 12 g of NMNF starter to kick it off.  Will do 2 hours of slap and folds and stretch and folds on 30 minute intervals and then let it bulk on the counter overnight for 8-9 hours at 75% hydration overall.  

 

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

this one a try. Loaves are proofing in the warming oven now and will be going in the fridge in a couple of hours. I plan to bake them after 16 hours or so of retardation. I followed your recipe very closely with only a couple of changes; I used strong bakers unbleached flour for all the white flour and I added my usual ~30 g of yogurt. Keeping my ??that they turn out as well as yours. 

 

cfraenkel's picture
cfraenkel

The first time I made it I fell in love.  It is very forgiving time wise, which is what I need when I'm working.  The DH (choose adjective of the day - in this case darling - husband) will put the bread into the Dutch ovens for baking and is getting pretty good at watching them, and he'll do a fold or two, but that is as far as he is willing to go at the moment.  Since his favorite loaf is always something really sour, this one is the answer.  I have found I can sub freshly milled wheat for the WW with no real repercussions. Today's batch has Einkorn and hard white wheat.  Thanks David!

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

I'm glad you like this bread.

I seldom bake exactly the same bread twice in a row, but most are variations on this theme. They are all mixed grain sourdoughs. I haven't baked enough with Einkorn to have a feel for it, but I have some Einkorn berries and should use them. These days, all my whole grain flours are freshly milled.

Happy baking!

David

ecelis858's picture
ecelis858

Hi David,

 This loaf looks great. I wonder how you got it not to colapse with such long proofing times and such a high hydration %.  My breads usually flatten under these conditions. Any suggestions on how to avoid this?

 Love your posts

 Esteban

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

Almost all the proofing time was at 40ºF. My breads show minimal expansion (fermentation) during cold retardation, although the lactobacilli must be active, because there is significant change in flavor.

Regarding hydration, with 30% whole grain flour, 75% hydration is really not so high.

In addition, good gluten development and tight shaping help a loaf maintain its structural integrity. 

Hope that answers your questions.

David