The Fresh Loaf

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Desem -- I take it all back

JMonkey's picture
JMonkey

Desem -- I take it all back


Laurel Robertson, I owe you an apology. I pulled a loaf of Desem bread out of my oven about an hour ago, and, unable to wait any longer, just cut a slice to eat. Without doubt, it is the most delectable, fully flavored whole wheat loaf I have ever eaten. Why it took me this long to get it right, I don't know. But I'm glad I did. When I'm making dinner bread from now on, I'll be making this.

First of all, folks should know that I didn't use a starter made according to the methods described in The Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book, which requires 10 lbs of freshly ground flour. I'm sure you can make it that way, but there's an easier method. I just took some of my regular whole wheat sourdough starter, created a dough ball at about 60% hydration when I fed it, and left it in my chilly (55 degrees F) basement to ripen. I fed it once a day for three days, building it up each time, until I had about 200 grams or roughly 7 ounces of dough. On the final build, I increased its size by a factor of 3, and let it ripen for about 16 hours at 55 degrees, more out of convenience and necessity than calculation. If you don't have a whole wheat starter, it's simple to convert. Just take some of your regular ripe starter, and feed it in the following weight ratio of 1:4:4 -- starter: water: whole wheat flour. Refresh it two or three times like this, and you'll have your 99.99% whole wheat starter. (I won't tell anyone if you don't that it's not absolutely pure).

I screwed up my math in preparing the dough, so I ended up with about 38% of the flour as starter rather than the 30% I'd hoped for, but I'm not sure it would make that much difference. You do want a fairly large amount of starter, if I'm reading Laurel's recipe right -- somewhere in the range of about 30%. I also went for the customary 2% salt and aimed at a hydration of 75%.

Here's my formula:

  • Whole wheat flour: 100%
  • Water: 75%
  • Salt: 2%
  • 30% of the flour was pre-fermented at 60% hydration.
That worked out to roughly:
  • 220 grams starter
  • 260 grams water
  • 320 grams flour
  • 8 grams salt
I mixed it up and kneaded for about 300-400 strokes, until I could stretch a small piece of it into a translucent film (i.e. the "windowpane" test). As for consistency, I was aiming for dough that felt very tacky, but not exactly sticky. Then I formed it into a ball and let it ferment for four hours at about 64 degrees F (the temperature of my kitchen). It more than doubled in size and when I poked a wet finger into the dough, it didn't readily spring back.

Next, I gave the dough a stretch and fold, let it rest 15 minutes, and then shaped it into a ball. I placed it in a banneton (well-floured) and then used my makeshift proof-box to keep it at roughly 85 degrees for 2.5 hours. At that point, the dough had inreased about 75% in size -- perhaps it even doubled. In any case, I slashed it and put it into my cloche, which had been warming in a preheated, 500 degree F oven for about an hour. I had a slight mishap getting it into the cloche (I was a bit too forceful with the peel, and slammed the loaf into the side of the cloche, turning it over on its side. It mushed it a bit, but nothing serious -- the bake took care of it, mostly. You can see the dent on the bottom right of the loaf above.). I repositioned the bread and covered it. The bake was 30 minutes covered at 500, then 15-17 minutes uncovered at 450. I let it cool for one hour.



As you can see, the crumb does not have the huge holes one expects in white bread (I'm just about convinced that any "whole wheat bread" that has sports huge holes probably consists of at least 50% white flour), but, even so, the bread is not at all heavy or dense. The crumb is light and chewy, with a wonderful crispy crust. The flavor? It's tangy, but not overpoweringly so. There's a buttery undertone, maybe? The flavor lingers long in the mouth after eating. Really, the flavor is tough to describe aside from being complex and delicious.

Like I said, when I have company in the future, this is the bread I'll serve. Utterly delicious.

Well done, Laurel Robertson. And thank you.

Comments

tomsbread's picture
tomsbread

Hi JMonkey,

Congratulations to you although I thought all your WW breads which you have made so far looked spectacular. This one is no different. So I am a little puzzled when you said that this is your first success. Is it the flavor that is different now or the loaf volume?

I made some 100% lean WW not too long ago with 85% hydration but it was just a yeasted version.

http://www.angelfire.com/planet/tomsbread/wholewheat100.htm

I did not follow Laurel's kneading method. Instead, I made the entire dough as a pre-ferment and left it in the fridge for a good 18hours or more. It was left out on the kitchen counter for a couple of hours after mixing. I did 3 rounds S&F before the bake.

The loaf turned out reasonably high and tasted sweet although no sweetener was added, only salt and yeast. It led me to wonder if the key to 100% WW is just sufficient hydration of the bran so that it won't interfere with the gluten network and Desem methods because it has that kind of long soaking needed.

Tomsbread 

JMonkey's picture
JMonkey

Tom,

I've been making whole wheat pan-bread or sandwich bread that I've liked for some time now, but haven't (until now) baked a lean 100% whole wheat bread that I liked. Either the volume was wrong, or the flavor was flat, or the crust was dry ... always something. This bread was finally perfect.

BTW ... wow! Those loaves are spectactular. I've tried 85% before, but the dough always flattened in the oven. I wonder if it was a shaping issue? The crumb you're getting is the most open I've seen from a 100% whole wheat bread.

So how'd you make it again? You mixed the ingredients just until hydrated, let it sit for 3 on the counter and then stuck it the fridge for 18 hours. Did you do the stretch and fold while it was in the fridge or on the counter after the 18-hour cold spell?

Those breads really are remarkable. I'll have to try that.

marieJ's picture
marieJ

Hi all!  I've just realised from reading JMonkeys fabulous blog that my weekly loaf is in fact a desem loaf. 

I bake once a week, more if I'm creating a loaf for a friend or donating to a charity, and this is how I prepare my loaves.  I use a starter that is fed with stoneground wholemeal and build the loaf with stoneground wholemeal spelt as well as the stoneground wholemeal wheat flour.  At time I have also used stoenground wholemeal Kamut (Egyptian Gold) in the early stage of building the loaf.

Like you I came up with the method to fit in with my schedule and to bring out the flavour of the grain.  I understand the concept of cool maturation to bring out the grain's flavour.

It is almost impossible to describe the amazing flavour to folks who have not sampled bread prepared in this way.  The flavour has so many aromatic layers and nuances - equally akin to a beautifully crafted wine.

Thanks for sharing because you've shown everyone and managed to convey to all of us what I have been struggling to describe to people for a long time.

Well done!

Cheers Marie

 

tomsbread's picture
tomsbread

Hi JMonkey,

Here is how I made the 100% ww. The whole idea is to use the entire dough as a pre-ferment. I used 85% hydration because I thought the bran in the ww would need the additional water. A really tiny(less than 1/2 of 1/8 tsp) amount of yeast was added to the 60oz ww flour before I added the water. After the dough had been mixed, it was left on the kitchen counter (temp about 85F) for around 2 hours. The mixing bowl was then covered with cling wrap and left in the fridge for around 18hours. I'd like to believe that this period of time allowed slow fermentation for flavor as well as to give the bran sufficient time to absorb  water to soften it suffciently so that it won't 'cut' the gluten strands. ( This is just my hypothesis and I may be dead wrong about all this).

The followng day, the dough is taken out and warmed up for an hour. Salt is added followed by yeast. I normally follow the standard proportions where salt and yeast are concerned ie approx 2 %. I use Himalayan pink salt but don't think it makes much difference.

My way of adding the salt and yeast is a little like folding it in because I use a wooden spoon with a mixing bowl. I like to keep my hands clean until the S&F and shaping. About 30min after the addition of salt and yeast, do the regular S&F, shape,  then proof in brotform. I usually proof for an hour. I bake at 210C for around 35-40min with steam at the beginning of the bake of course.

Tomsbread 

mountaindog's picture
mountaindog

Wow that's great - I'm glad you think it's worth it and so glad you detailed out your methods here - I'm going to follow them. 

 

I didn't realize you could get away with just feeding the starter for 3 days after converting it from your regular whole wheat starter, I thought it needed more time as a stiff doughball. Mine I think needs more time, because I kept it in my cool root cellar, but with the extra cold weather we've been having, I didn't realize my root cellar temps were getting down to 39F, so the desem was not rising once a day after each feeding. I took it out of the root cellar and left it in the main part of my basement where it is 59F instead, and now it is rising, so I figure I needed to start over feeding it to get it active for a few more days. Maybe I'll be ready to try your formula above by the end of this week.

JMonkey's picture
JMonkey

For what it's worth, I keep my whole wheat starter very stiff (about 50% hydration) when I store it in the fridge. So I guess it was probably part way there ....

mountaindog's picture
mountaindog

JMonkey - I have been feeding my desem starter for 2 weeks now every day, and it has gotten nice and spongy, so yesterday I built it up to a preferment amount and am following a combo of your technique above, plus Allan Scott's method from The Bread Builders, plus looking at Laurels's book as well. My final desem dough is now rising in my 68F kitchen and has about another 2.5 hours to go. My only problem is we unexpectedly have to go out this evening at around 4 PM, right after I would have shaped the loaf for proofing, so I will need to retard the loaf in the fridge until I get home later tonight to finish it. I hope this does not mess everything up - if so, I'll start over again tonight with another preferment. It will be interesting to see how this one turns out.

JMonkey's picture
JMonkey

Good luck with it! I'm planning to bake some tomorrow for dinner -- if I have time, it'll accompany Braised Chicken with 40 Cloves of Garlic.

I know, I know. Laurel wouldn't approve, but I promise I'll have lots of tasty veggies to go with it ....

jimmykx250's picture
jimmykx250

I was wondering at what stage if any i could referidgerat the dough? I was thinking to let it ferment for the first 4 hours fold it shape it then stick it in the fridge overnight. Any help on this would be greatly appreciated.  jimmykx250

sannimiti's picture
sannimiti

hi there, i just got laurel's bread book and while it's absolutely fun to read ( though maybe a little ideologically for my palate) i come to think that " many cooks spoil the mush" as it's a German saying. help, I'm confused, it's so unlike the bread books i'm used to but concerning desem i wonder what's the difference compared to a regular sourdough. aside from being whole wheat. i ask this  because in germany it's common to keep a firm starter, normally made of rye flour ( and whole rye, btw) and i know the concept of keeping the starter in the flour bucket from my grandmother, who admittedly wasn't that good in the kitchen but baked bread because she had to. other older people i talked to did the same. still, i also make german sourdough breads with my bba starter and they taste as they should...i write all this because i really wonder where the difference is and also to sneak my way into making desem without going through all the fuss making the starter the way laurel describes:-)