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Can anybody figure this out?

seybeats's picture
seybeats

Can anybody figure this out?

Hello,

 

I'm sorry to come here with such a stupid question.

But i feel helpless, because my google searches have turned up pretty much emtpy.

I have a bread recipe from way back, but i have lost the process pages. And now i cant track the recipe back to it's origns.

I would be greatful if anybody could provide a similar recipe with the method attatched, or the method to this bread.

The recipe goes like this:

Starter:

350g wheat flour

450 rye flour

1400ml water

The bread:

2L of starter

6kg wheat flour

7kg rye flour

3,5 l water

20g salt

20g yeast

As i understand from the starter, it's a sourdough bread, but the bread has yeast in it, how on earth should i go about making the bread.

 

Thank you in advance.

yy's picture
yy

I'm not sure that this is necessarily a sourdough bread. What the recipe calls a "starter" could just be a "soaker," which would not be unusual given the whole grain content. If it is, indeed supposed to be a sourdough starter, it would be quite a liquidy one, at 175% hydration.

However, the basic math doesn't seem quite right.

Let's calculate the hydration of the final dough, assuming all of the starter will be added to the final dough:

Water content = 1400 g + 3500 g = 4900 g

Flour content = 350 g + 450 g + 6000 g + 7000 g = 13,800 g

 

This amounts to a hydration of 4900/13800 = 35.51%, which is impossibly dry, especially with the whole grain content in this formula. Additionally, the salt content is incredibly low - only about 0.1%, which would leave your bread rather flat-tasting. For comparison, salt content in a french baguette is about 2%.

My impression is that something is not right with this recipe, and I would avoid it. There are plenty of formulas out there for breads containing whole wheat and rye that are tested and true.

Ford's picture
Ford

I suggest you try Mike Avery's recipe at this web site:

http://www.sourdoughhome.com/bohemianrye.html

Ford