On the Sea

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- bakers are such nice people's Blog
Sounds like ice cream, but nicer. Full of fruit and 100% rye it does not rise a lot, but it is a really tasty little loaf. A different method from my usual. I opted for sultanas and used a different rye flour too, so it was not as dark as the previous loaves I made. Really good with cheddar, blue cheese or just butter.
Method:
Returning after a long sabbatical, I have managed to save my poor 3 year old very malnourished starter Levi and with careful coaxing after almost a year of scant attention in my fridge, on occasions he was lucky to be fed once a month or longer. berate me if you will, but I have a plausible excuse and no need to go into it.
Anyhow, I dragged out an old Pierre Nury print out I was interested in a few years back and with my restored starter on track, I decided to just do it. Make some bloody bread.
I made a bread not that long ago using pecan meal in the porridge which came out great so I wanted to try another version and bump up the flavor profile a bit. The addition of the smoked cheddar cheese I bought on my recent trip to Vermont really makes this an amazing bread.
I also used some freshly milled whole wheat and rye flour in the levain and in the main dough. I grated the cheese coarsely this time, but you can also cube it instead.
Give this one a try if you can and you won't be disappointed.
1/1/2015 - New Years Eve Pizza
1/2/2015 - 50 % Whole Grain Sprouted 8 Grain SD/YW with Japanese Black Rice & Seeds
1/9/2015 - 50 Percent Whole Sprouted 16 Grain SD with Lake Havasu Desert Magic IPA
After Abe’s recent success with his new yeast water, Lucy went looking for our cherry YW in the back of the fridge where it has been neglected for months. Plus, I was bit shaken with Lucy’s latest attempts to make all of us redundant and nothing shakes the Lucy Blues she creates with her computer apps as much as a nice jar of cherry yeast water. It was time to give it some refreshment.
Lucy tried to find the last time we used dates in bread and it was 2012. We prefer figs to dates because you don’t have to pit them and they taste better but dates in bread have been around for thousands of years and not to be overlooked.
Sourdough Fermentation Data
We all know that all other factors being the same, the more sourdough starter in the dough, the faster the rise during bulk fermentation.
Since your starter may resemble dough (60 to 70% hydration), others may use a liquid starter (200%+ hydration), and mine is the consistency of mashed potatoes (100% hydration), The percent of flour used in the starter (as percent of total flour) is unaffected by hydration. This is a concept I’ve seen in print somewhere and one I find very useful.
First time post. Kamut is such an amazing flour to work with and eat. The depth of flavour, subtle sweetness and tender crumb has me absolutely hooked. Now I just need to find someone who will sell it to me in large quantities!! I loosely follow the recipe from Chad's Tartine Book 3. I don't add the wheat germ and my starter is my own 50/50 white and wholemeal 100% mix.
As the porridge bread received the thumbs up from the parental unit, I thought I'd have another crack at it for this week's bake. With sound advice in my head and a better sense of timing than starting to make bread at stupid o'clock in the evening, I set to it. I started out with the same recipe, scaled it up by half to give me two medium loaves and made a few minor tweaks to the ingredients, namely ditching the dried active yeast entirely, swapping the spelt in the soaker for wholegrain rye and reducing the water in the dough.
Soaker:
113g porridge oats