50-50 Emmer Rolls

I used the same formula as for my 50-50 Emmer bread -
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I used the same formula as for my 50-50 Emmer bread -
I’ve been wanting to try baking this style of bread for some time, but just couldn’t get my nerve up to trying it. Despite its name, it seems that it is really an Asian style of bread. I’m guessing that the Danish part of it is that it is somewhat like a danish as in the pastry. Also, this isn’t something I could try during the heat of the summer and this week we are finally having some normal autumn weather.
La Parigina. Neapolitan stuffed pizza.
What is special about Parmigina? Pizza dough on the bottom puff pastry on top.
Everything is on point. I just need to fill the canolii. I even got the kitchen back in order. Thank the Lord, for dishwashers!
I’ve been ordering berries from Barton Springs Mill for several years and have enjoyed every single product I’ve ordered from them. The flavor profiles they provide have been pretty accurate from my perspective, which is very helpful. Some nine or ten months ago, their Quanah wheat caught my eye. It is described as a hard red winter wheat and its flavor profile – buttery, creamy, malty – is right up my alley. A bag was duly ordered and, regrettably, it has been in storage ever since, waiting for me to bake my way through all the berries ahead of it in queue.
Recently I've posted about bakes using 50% spelt and 50% einkorn:
https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/72911/50-einkorn-take-2
https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/72889/50-spelt
Today's loaf used the third "ancient" grain - emmer. I've never used it before.
I made a new version of my pretzel rolls to bring to my Cousin’s for Rosh Hashanah dinner along with some of my standard ones. Everyone seemed to really like the new ones so I guess I must have done something right :).
This version had some fresh ground rye along with some dark cocoa powder along with the Guinness which really gave the final dough a nice malty flavor.
I used pretzel salt, black sesame seeds and everything bagel topping for the toppings. As usual these were made with a lye bath
Phase 1 - the bulk fermentation
Phase 2 - the pre-shape
Phase 3 - the final shaping
This seems to a problem with almost every recipe that I try (see picture).
For these loaves I tried:
https://www.theperfectloaf.com/best-sourdough-recipe/
I followed precisely as written.
There was very little change to the dough appearance/behavior after an overnight cold ferment. It was pretty solid. When I went to move it from banneton to dutch oven I could feel it deflate more (not that there was a lot to begin with).
Flours:
I was watching random suggested videos on YouTube recently, and Lisa from Farmhouse on Boone popped up making sourdough puff pastry (recipe here).
This loaf is a slightly changed version of the bread in my previous 50% einkorn post
https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/72901/50-einkorn
Here's what I changed: