Dabrownman’s TFL Blog Index - 2012 -2014

1/1/2014 - New Year’s Panettone - 2014
1/3/2014 - YW SD Spelt and White Whole Wheat Miche
1/5/2014 - Saturday Night Pizza - 1/4/2014
1/1/2014 - New Year’s Panettone - 2014
1/3/2014 - YW SD Spelt and White Whole Wheat Miche
1/5/2014 - Saturday Night Pizza - 1/4/2014
This is the same dough we used for the Italian YW buns we will have tonight with put Italian hamburgers. The only difference was this half of the dough was retarded overnight. Here was the bun post if you want to know the method and recipe.
http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/38836/italian-yeast-water-buns
I bake 100% whole wheat pan loaves every week for my wife's lunchtime sandwiches. The initial formula and process came from Peter Reinhart's Whole Grain Breads. But the good Br. Juniper's cumbersome "epoxy" method and profligate CY habit begs for simplification. My current alternative is soft, tasty, simple and seasonally robust enough to share with fellow Loafers. My wife loves it.
I've been in a porridge bread mood lately. The thing to note with porridge breads is that the water in the porridge can lead to a very wet and slack dough that can be hard to handle. Two months ago I tried to make an oat porridge bread. The dough was so wet that I wasn't able to shape it. After struggling with it I finally just scooped the dough into the brotform. After cold proofing, the dough stuck and I had to scrape it out of the form. The resulting baked loaf was very flat and very sad.
I was going to make Pain au Levain in the tartine style, 12% Prefermented flour, warm water in the levain, fermented for 8 hours, 1 hour autolyze. My target hydration was 81%. I poured the (warm) water for the autolyze and realized it felt... runny, not just wet (I routinely do bread in the 80-85% hydration range, but really wet. I looked at my paper where I had made the scaling calculations to make 3 boules and I found, upon double checking, that my dough was 100 percent hydration!
Still in the process of fine tuning formulas we liked from last years markets. This was from Week 9. The only change made was to use a 3 build levain opposed to a 12 hour overnight levain. I almost added some honey as well but opted to keep to fewer changes. Next time honey will be added and the cracked wheat increased. Then I think it'll go to the final formula books.
Hi hi...
I baked yesterday for the first time in a looong time. Had my ripe starter ready to go, only to discover that the battery in my scale had died. So I completely winged it.
My best guess is that this ended up around 20% rye and a little lower that 70% hydration.
I know, I know! I haven't posted for over 8 months. I could say I've been very busy, which is true, but isn't everybody? So, I have little in the way of excuses. As you are about to read, however, I have recently moved into a proper unit and set up a bakery, so, any posts would really be about out-and-out commercial production, and that is really beyond what this great website seeks to offer.
I'm really loving the whole porridge in bread thing. Last week I adapted the original version to my own technique and it came out great, so now I figured it was time to get some more whole grain goodness into this formula.