Formula Development V – The City Bear Jamboree
Sometimes I get giddy - and that isn't a pretty sight.
But I had just survived a week in a city that had its coldest recorded temperatures ever and departed from the airport like a traveler fleeing a disaster zone - no restrooms in the terminal - no lights on the jetbridge (a big "thank-you" goes out to the helpful gentleman who downloaded the flashlight app on to his iPhone!) A little cold in what should be a warm place and things go haywire. While sitting in what can only be described as a stress position on a regional jet, I tried to escape from the reality of the situation by thinking about bread. I came up with the idea to make two batches of panned bread with different sweeteners.
My theory was that they would be two different colors and I could make a pretty loaf or two by combining the doughs in creative ways.
Arriving home to greet the new lunar year - the year of the Rabbit - I did have to confront the reality that my feng shui advisor tells me my kitchen is now in situated in a very inauspicious direction and I should eat out every meal and avoid turning on the oven.
Just this moment I'm thinking that is good advice. Although at the time I didn't allow it to stand in my way.
I went back to 10% of the total flour in the pre ferment and that flour being freshly ground triticale, but vowing to use more local ingredients decided to make one batch with 3 oz of honey and the other batch with 3 oz agave nectar instead of molasses . Both of these are truly local. The agave nectar was a deep brown in the bottle and claimed to taste like molasses - so I thought it would be a good substitute for the somewhat less local molasses, and would turn the dough a darker color.
Which is why my friends, I don't trust myself to improvise.
Both batches were the exact same color - so my little plan of a "pretty loaf" was pretty much gone. The doughs were pale - like a standard white loaf colored only by hints of the pre ferment.
Of course, they didn't taste bad, but they lacked the nice molasses flavor of my earlier loaves. Local - schmocal - this Dutchie wants her molasses! It is a taste not everyone enjoys, but I grew up on the stuff. I could eat it straight from a spoon.
To tell the truth, I would be hard pressed to tell the taste of the bread sweetened with honey from that sweetened with agave. They were both nice white breads with mildly sweet flavor. I consider that if I could get my hands on strongly flavored honey, like chestnut honey (which, of course would not be produced locally) I might have a different taste on my hands, but alas my access to this is limited just now and well, if I'm going to go non-local - I want my molasses!
The general formula is below. Just use honey - or agave for all of the sweetener. See earlier blogs for the technique. It doesn't change.
Total Dough Wt |
|
62.478 |
oz |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ingredients |
|
|
Percent of Flour in Levain |
0.1 |
|
Final Dough |
|
|
|
% |
Wt |
UOM |
% |
WT |
UOM |
Ingredients |
Wt |
UOM |
Total Flour |
1 |
27 |
oz |
1 |
2.7 |
oz |
Total Flour |
24.3 |
oz |
KA AP Flour |
0.9 |
24.3 |
oz |
|
|
|
KA AP Flour |
24.3 |
oz |
Triticale Flour |
0.1 |
2.7 |
|
1 |
2.7 |
oz |
|
|
|
Levain Water |
0.06 |
1.62 |
|
0.6 |
1.62 |
oz |
|
|
|
Rolled Oats |
0.17 |
4.59 |
oz |
|
|
|
Rolled Oats |
4.59 |
oz |
Steel Cut Oats |
0.11 |
2.97 |
oz |
|
|
|
Steel Cut Oats |
2.97 |
oz |
Boiling water |
0.74 |
19.98 |
oz |
|
|
|
Boiling water |
19.98 |
oz |
Shortening(leaf lard) |
0.04 |
1.08 |
oz |
|
|
|
Shortening(leaf lard) |
1.08 |
oz |
Agave Nectar |
0.112 |
3.024 |
oz |
|
|
|
Agave Nectar |
3.024 |
oz |
Milk Powder |
0.04 |
1.08 |
oz |
|
|
|
Milk Powder |
1.08 |
oz |
Salt |
0.028 |
0.756 |
oz |
|
|
|
Salt |
0.756 |
oz |
Yeast |
0.006 |
0.162 |
oz |
|
|
|
Yeast |
0.162 |
oz |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Seed |
0.008 |
0.216 |
oz |
0.08 |
0.216 |
oz |
Levain |
4.536 |
oz |
Totals |
2.314 |
62.478 |
oz |
1.68 |
4.536 |
oz |
|
62.478 |
|
But the lack of the strong molasses flavor did do one thing - it allowed the flavor of the grains to come through. If you look at the original formula and how it has evolved, I've taken some care to reduce the yeast and slow down the overall fermentation process. I'm sure that this has had some impact not only on the flavor but on the crumb - still generally a fine grained tender crumb - which I hope to see when I bake the real original vs. my original vs. my final - which will come in the next so many weeks - or next year depending on my feng shui situation. (See, it's getting the fermentation "right" - which means right for the style of bread you are baking.) The true original would not have survived the lack of molasses - it would have had no depth (but still would be better than some of those things they sell in the supermarket). My current version could stand on its own. I had to wonder, though, if I had "over molassesed" the whole affair and obscured all that hard work on getting the fermentation "right" for this style of bread.
I also began to think (because I apparently I do this kind of thing) about adding a little of that brown color back - not with the color of the molasses but with whole grain.
"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood", but unlike Mr Frost, I may well have the opportunity to travel both. It is only some grain, yeast, salt and other ingredients - and that most precious one of all - time.