The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Question about an over night Pain de Champagne bulk fermentation using Ken Forkish's recipe.

Surfcast23's picture
Surfcast23

Question about an over night Pain de Champagne bulk fermentation using Ken Forkish's recipe.

Hello all,

 I am new to this site as well as to baking in general. I have been getting my feet wet by going through Ken Forkish's Flour, Water, Salt and Yeast. I would like to try to use an overnight bilk fermentation on his Pain de Champaign recipe and had a couple of questions. From what I understand when doing an overnight bulk fermentation one lowers the yeast/levian  percentage to allow for a slower fermentation. My question is if my assumption is correct what would the new yeast and levian percentages be? I was thinking of lowering the levian to 12% (216 g) to be inline with the overnight blonde recipe and the yeast to 1.2 g so that it remains 0.005 % of the levian as it is on the Pain de Champagne recipe . Am I correct in my understanding and reasoning? Thanks on advance. 

idaveindy's picture
idaveindy

A Pain de Campagne, page 140, modified into an overnight bulk ferment, _is_ the Overnight Country Blonde, page 168.    Instead of 50g WW+ 50g rye, just use 100g WW, if you don't have rye.   Both have 90% white flour.  Forget the dry yeast, because you have to make the levain anyway.

If you want a 12 hour bulk, _and_ a 12 hour proof, still do the OCB, and in step 6, do a 12 hr refigerated proof instead of  4 hour proof at 70 F.  (Don't go for a 3x in step 3. 2x would be sufficient with a 12 hr cold proof.)  And bake straight from the fridge.

Bon appétit, amigo.

Surfcast23's picture
Surfcast23

Ahh that makes sense thanks!