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Creating and Refreshing a Starter for a Specific Recipe

gosiam's picture
gosiam

Creating and Refreshing a Starter for a Specific Recipe

I am getting ready to bake Paul Merry's French country bread from Country Breads of the World by L. Collister & A. Blake and I can see that the baker builds the starter from the scratch for three days, refreshes it twice, over the following two days and then creates the dough after the time lapse of anywhere from 4 to 12 hours after last refreshment.  The built starter and the dough are 66% hydration.

My question is, since I have a healthy white starter in my fridge, 100% and ready to go, will it suffice to convert it to 66% hydration and then proceed with making the dough after the suggested time.  In essence, I would go strait to the second refreshment.  Will it matter that I did not keep the starter at 66% from the beginning of the process? And if so, what will this fact affect - rise, crumb, taste?

The second question has to do with the converter I am using.  I have this tiny Excel spreadsheet that enables me to calculate starter conversions from any higher hydration to any desired lower starter hydration.  It does it in such a way that I don't waste any starter, but build to exact quantity required by the recipe, by taking the minimum required quantity of the mother starter.  In other words, I only add flour (the amount calculated by the worksheet) for the firmer starter.  However, I am so used to adding both flour and water that it seems sacrilegious that I don't do this anymore.  Would "The French Baker" frown if he knew?

By the way, I will gladly share the converter tool if you are interested.

Gosia

xaipete's picture
xaipete

I'd give it a try. What do you have do lose except a little flour? I used PR's starter in a Hamelman SD bread (Lindy D said it would be fine) and it seems to have worked like a charm. Go for it.

--Pamela

hazimtug's picture
hazimtug

Gosia- I am not sure if I have that much experience or knowledge to answer your questions, but I agree with Pamela that you'd only lose some flour. Now that I think about it, for some of PR's sourdough recipes, you start out with a firm starter, which I make by adding only flour to my starter, which I think is close to 100% hydration.

By the way, somewhat related to the subject, I get a little confused about the whole hydration issue, or rather percentages. There is the starter hydration, then there is the preferment hydration and the final dough hydration... are these always considered separated? I wouldn't mind some light shed on this for me, or maybe can anyone refer me to a good source?

Can I also take a look at that spreadsheet please?

Thanks,

Hazim