The Fresh Loaf

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Honey Buckwheat Porridge Sourdough 

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

Honey Buckwheat Porridge Sourdough 

 

I have a bucket of buckwheat groats that’s been sitting around for a bit. Time to use some up. 

 

Recipe

Makes 3 loaves 

 

Porridge 

150 g buckwheat groats

400 g water

50 g honey

50 g butter

 

Dough

700 g strong bakers unbleached flour

200 g freshly milled whole grain Red Fife flour (200 g Red Fife berries)

100 g freshly milled whole grain Einkorn flour (100 g Einkorn berries)

675 g water

23 g salt

30 g yogurt

250 g levain (procedure in recipe)

Extra wholegrain flour of your choice and unbleached flour for feeding the levain

 

The night before:

1. Mill the grains and place in a tub. Add the unbleached flour to the tub as well. Cover and set aside.

2.Take 10 g of refrigerated starter and feed it 20 g of water and 20 g of wholegrain flour. Let that rise at cool room temperature for the night. 

 

Dough Making day:

1. Early in the morning, feed the levain 100 g of filtered water and 50 g of strong baker’s flour and 50 g wholegrain flour. Let rise until doubled (about 5 hours).

2. About two hours before the levain is ready, put 675 g of water in a stand mixer’s bowl and add the flours from the tub.  Mix on the lowest speed until all the flour has been hydrated. This takes a couple of minutes. Autolyse for a couple of hours at room temperature. 

3. Toast the groats until golden. Place the groats in a pot with water. Bring to a boil, lower heat and cook until tender. This quick so watch the pot. Drain if there is extra water. Measure out 450 g of porridge. Add the butter and the honey and mix well. Set aside. 

4. Once the autolyse is done and the levain has doubled, add the salt, the yogurt, the porridge, and the levain to the bowl. Mix on the lowest speed for a minute to integrate everything, then mix on the next speed for 9 minutes.

5. Remove the dough from the mixing bowl and place in a lightly oiled covered tub. Let rest 45 minutes in a warm spot (oven with light on). 

6. Do 2 sets of coil folds at 45 minute intervals and then 2 more sets at 30 minutes intervals. Let rise about 30%. This dough was moving fast. I preshaped just a few minutes after the last fold. 

7. Tip the dough out on a bare counter, sprinkle the top with flour and divide into portions of ~840g. Round out the portions into rounds with a dough scraper and let rest 30 minutes on the counter. 

8. Do a final shape by flipping the rounds over on a lightly floured counter. Gently stretch the dough out into a circle. Pull and fold the third of the dough closest to you over the middle. Pull the right side and fold over the middle and do the same to the left. Fold the top end to the center patting out any cavities. Finally stretch the two top corners and cross over each other in the middle. Roll the bottom of the dough away from you until the seam is underneath the dough. Cup your hands around the dough and pull towards you, doing this on all sides of the dough to round it off. Finally spin the dough to make a nice tight boule.

9. Sprinkle a  mix of rice flour and all purpose flour in the bannetons. Place the dough seam side down in the bannetons. Let rest for a few minutes on the counter and then put to bed in a cold (38F) fridge overnight. 

 

Baking Day

1. The next morning, about 11 hours later, heat the oven to 475F with the Dutch ovens inside for 45 minutes to an hour. Turn out the dough seam side up onto a cornmeal sprinkled counter. Place rounds of parchment paper in the bottom of the pots, and carefully but quickly place the dough seam side up inside. 

2. Cover the pots and bake the loaves at 450 F for 25 minutes, remove the lids, and bake for another 22 minutes at 425 F. Internal temperature should be 205 F or more.

Comments

Benito's picture
Benito

There’s that photo you always use 😉, your secret it out Danni.  Again, beautiful loaves.  One of these days I need to try me some buckwheat.

Benny

trailrunner's picture
trailrunner

I love porridge breads! Always so moist and flavorful. I have been meaning to thank you for the idea of yogurt/ honey/butter or oil in breads. I ran with it and use the trinity in everything now 😂😳. I substitute buttermilk sometimes for the yogurt and olive oil for the butter and use the three of them in equal amounts 25-  30g each per loaf and subtract from my water that amount. Has worked perfectly every time. I think of you every time I do it and say a thank you! c

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

such a small amount makes such a difference! 

trailrunner's picture
trailrunner

A real game changer as far as texture and crumb and flavor. No looking back. :) 

 

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

I’m sure pleased with this!

trailrunner's picture
trailrunner

perfect!!!!!

 

Benito's picture
Benito

I agree with Caroline, perfect.

HeiHei29er's picture
HeiHei29er

Do you think your shaping technique would still work if the final step was to gently roll the boule out a little bit for an oval banneton?

Danni3ll3's picture
Danni3ll3

I don’t see why not. Instead of pulling towards you all the way around to make it round, pull on two opposite sides only. Keep the seam under the batard. You can probably still do the spin to tighten it up as well. 

HeiHei29er's picture
HeiHei29er

Hmmm…. Might be time for an experiment. 😁

Thanks!