Lemon Rosemary Sourdough
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I tried one of my newest gluten free recipes and came up with a very tasty bread. It had a nice crumb, a nice rise and a nice crust. When I travel I always bring my own bread. I was getting ready to travel to a family event. I sliced up one loaf and packed it in my suitcase. To be sure I would have enough bread I also took the loaf I had previously sliced and frozen the week before. When I got to my hotel room I unpacked the still slightly frozen bread, leaving it to thaw in the open air. Meanwhile, I happily ate the fresh slices as I moved through the weekend’s events.
I'd planned to do yet another bake of classic baguettes ala Hitz' formula, but after seeing and reading Pamela's blog entry a week ago, and after comparing Dan's formula with what I've been doing--they are very similar except for the liquid levain--I gave into my temptation and made the DiMuzio formula. The only change I made was to scale the formula to 1000g final dough weight (four 250g small baguettes) which isn't really a change, merely a diminuation. The DiMuzio formula calls for instant yeast, in addition to the liquid levain.
I must confess this loaf is a mistake, but it is also the best sandwich loaf I've made so far. It's fluffy, springy, and moist and 'pillowy' to touch; and it's wholesome - made with 100% white whole wheat. Basically it has everything I've dreamed for in a sandwich loaf.
I confess this came as an accident. When I was scanning Michel Suas' Advanced Bread & Pastry, his [b]Caramelized Hazelnut Squares[/b] (page 248) caught my attention. I sometimes make for my kids Hazelnut Praline Semi-Freddo; nothing pleases my boy more than that Italian ice cream. Suas' formula to me is like incorporating a secrete ingredient in a delicious ice cream into a bread. I was however not sure about having to prepare 2 sponge preferments plus 2 levains just to make this "Squares."
I've decided to blog my baking and look forward to sharing recipes and getting advice from y'all.
For the past 15 years here in Taiwan, I had made far too many doorstops and hockey pucks instead of edible bread, until a couple months ago I decided to invest in a few good books on baking (I got PR's BBA (Peter Reinhart's The Bread Baker's Apprentice), RLB's BB (Rose Levy Beranbaum's Bread Bible), and NS's BLB (Nancy Silverton's Breads from the La Brea Tarpits), and also found this wonderful forum. It's helped immensely -- thank you all!
I call this bread the Super-Soaker because I soaked every type of flour I had for a long time (a day and a half, with about a day in the fridge). the taste was superb, as was the crumb.
By the way, how's my new granite ;)?
Goodness, it's been a while. I've finally raised a sourdough starter, Bud (sorry, I couldn't resist heh heh), and baked my very first loaf of sourdough!
I followed SusanFNP's Norwich Sourdough as closely as possible.
For the blister-inclined:
I started my firm starter last night. This morning I prepared the dough. I did my first autolyse ( I didn't have a clue what that was before TFL). The boules shaped up ok this afternoon. I think they over proofed a little because I had some deflation when I scored the loaves. Using steam was something I wanted to do so I preheated the oven with my cast iron skillet inside along with my stone. In went the boule onto the stone followed by a cup of boiling water into the skillet. I made use of the parchment tip this time (see, I'm not that slow of a learner).