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Panne Siciliano
Panne Siciliano - crumb
I found the flavour and texture to be better the next day (and not in the 2 hours after baking), and there was a little sourness. Is the durum flour meant to be sour? (My "sourdough" is not really sour and it's not previously imparted any sourness to breads).
This was something of an unusual weekend in bread-baking for me in that I made two recipes that were fairly experimental. I just posted my experience with this week's sandwich bread, a 100% sprouted wheat bread. My dinner bread this week was the German Sourdough Rye recipe from Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book. I had not originally planned to make this, but got both whole wheat and rye sourdough starters going this past week and just couldn't resist trying one out. I was leaning toward this recipe for my first attempt, and
Almost every weekend, I make one loaf of what I think of as "sandwich bread". As you might expect from this nomenclature, this is the loaf that I'll be using for sandwiches in the coming week. I generally pick recipes that are reliable, fairly plain, and light enough to make a good sandwich (admittedly, I like dense breads, so I might be less strict about this last criterion than many of you). My more experimental recipes, or those including fruit or nuts or lots of herbs or other goodies, or those that are just extremely dense, fall under what I think of as my "dinner bre
Since it’s been spring I’ve been back in my springtime habit of sprouting things. I get all into it and sprout anything I can get a sprout out of and then I just eat them in or on everything. They’re just wonderful. This got me thinking about sprouted grain in bread, which is something that has crossed my mind more than once in the past, but I’ve never done.
I thought it would be interesting to compare four different approaches to sourdough fermentation. I've baked four test loaves, each with 500 grams total flour (using a 50/50 blend of Heartland Mill Strong Bread Flour and Heartland Mill Golden Buffalo for a blended ash content around .85%), 72% overall hydration, and 2% salt. All loaves started with 18 grams 80% hydration white flour storage starter.
Thanks, Norm, for this recipe. Boy, are these good! This is the first recipe in a long time that tempted me to stray from straight sourdough!
I think I should have used convection for the last half of baking. And I should probably smush them down more and give them a bit more room on the sides next time.
You can see that I started out with 15 two-ounce rolls and now have only eight left, and they just came out of the oven! Mmmmmmm.
Susan from San Diego