Sour Dough Tomato Holy Ciabatta
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- maojn's Blog
Merry Christmas fresh loafers! This has been my go to recipe for sandwich bread for some time now. It freezes well sliced and each loaf keeps me for 2 - 3 weeks in sandwich bread. The recipe is a version of Peter Reinhart's recipe for soft sandwich bread and rolls from Artisan Bread's Every Day. I use a natural yeast, a sweet levain at 100% hydration. The current levain is at least three years old.
Happy Holidays to everyone. As usual, we celebrated the holidays with family and friends and cooked and baked and baked some more :).
Bought a stand mixer last week so I could start making fancy, pretentious hipster bread. This is my second loaf; the first one was devoured before photos could be taken.
It's a basic white loaf, elevated by some techniques I absorbed up by watching videos online and picking the brain of a pro baker friend of mine. The crust is crispy, the interior springy, open-crumbed and delicious, with just enough caraway flavor to add some zing. I really like this recipe, so I wrote it down--I wanna make it again, you betcha!
I bake infrequently now, but continue to maintain a sweet levain @ 100% hydration. Today was pulla for breakfast in the morning. Second bake, rising is P. Reinhart's soft sandwich bread. It is an bread, enriched by butter, milk and eggs. I modified Mr. Reinhart's recipe to use my sweet levain, which is a sweet version of a sourdough starter. I don't care for the sour taste in my breads.
Beautiful flavour and a nice crumb. A successful Christmas bake! Merry Christmas!!!
yesterday was my first attempt for the tartine style bread - I like how the holes turned and open with apparent gluten. The preshaping / shaping was difficult and couldn’t build much tension: Elements to practice next time! But the taste is the best I had so far sweet crumb and crust.
Recipe
300gr bread flour
100gr spelt flour
60g stiff sourdough starter (50% hydration)
280g water
8g salt
autolyse for two hours ( only flour and water )
Here we are, nearly at years end, and the time to reflect on the past, present and future. Lucy doesn’t do any of that of course, being small minded and down right stupid but the rest of should not use her as a guide in anything we do except maybe bread baking once a week.
We should be thoughtful and truthful with ourselves in all things, especially this time of year as we reflect on the past year, experience the current Holiday Season and project ourselves into the future of next year.
Back when I first started this blog, I was trying out the San Francisco starter from sourdo.com. I was never able to get a flavor I loved from it. Almost six years down the line, I've learned a ton about sourdough in the interim. I was also growing bored with the rye strain I've been baking with for the last few years -- so I'm trying again with it. I've been building the starter for the last week, finally it was active enough to use.
I used to be a very active member on this board.
Use to be...
Life has a way of mucking with your plans.
So an update.
Since 2011. I have added 3 grandchildren. Moved twice, bought a house in the stix. Stated, ran and closed a small business. Nearly lost my wife to an illness (she is fully recovered) Built a wood shop. Raised a bunch of chickens gained some weight. Lost a lot of weight.
And stopped baking!
Earlier this week (I'm 80% sure it was Tuesday), for some reason, I mixed up two full size (~1.5kg) batches of dough. The FWSY country brown, and the Tartine brioche. Last night I started a Westphalian pumpernickel from The Rye Baker.
The brown: