The Fresh Loaf

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My bread log

caryn's picture
caryn

My bread log

I have once again decided to document my bakes. I think I did not do this correctly a few moments ago, so here is a link to my last entry where I added my latest bake and explain what I did.  https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/57785/multigrain-loaf-la-dmsnyder

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caryn's picture
caryn

Today I baked the walnut and raisin ciabatta from Hamelman’s “Bread”, third edition I followed the recipe exactly as written, scaling down to two loaves, dividing the metric weights by 10 and then halving those numbers ( 5%)). I recommend the formula, a nice twist on standard ciabatta. The crust had a nice bite, but the crumb was not as open as I though it could be, maybe because this formula’s hydration (75%) was not as high as ciabatta typically is. As a consequence, the dough really was easy to handle. I inverted the dough from my rectangular rising container  over a floured board, cut it in half and placed the loaves onto parchment paper. Then I cut the parchment paper in two and moved the loaves back to the board and covered them for the final proof.



caryn's picture
caryn

I think I have made the three times now because I am a big fan of this formula. The final proof took only an hour and not the hour and a half specified in the recipe.

I just made this again (Sept 20, 2023), adding about 110g of white whole wheat in place of some of the bread flour.

I am in the middle of making this again 10/5/23 and this time I substituted more whole wheat flour- 150 grams. I used  275 grams of bread flour.

 
caryn's picture
caryn

The recipe is from Serious Eats: https://www.seriouseats.com/detroit-style-pizza-recipe

I added jalapeño peppers (uncooked) and omitted the pepperoni. I could not find brick cheese, but my Monterey Jack worked fine.

caryn's picture
caryn

I made Hamelman’s Vermont Sourdough. I pretty much followed his formula, scaling it down to 1 kg.  I did not do an overnight proof. Instead, I proofed the shape dough for about 1.5 hours when it appeared to test done.

 

Build

KA AP flour 87g

Water 109g

Culture  24g

Dough

KA AP Flour  436g

W.W flour 28g

Rye flour 30g

Water 298g

Salt 11g

Levain 197g

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

I am just not getting it.  Someday, maybe, I'll hit on it accidently.  

caryn's picture
caryn

Just made matzah! This is from Peter Reinhart’s Whole Grain Breads. I added sesame seeds and za’atar to most of them.

caryn's picture
caryn

I made this formula today as written, just substituting stout for the lager because that is what I had and scaling the recipe to 1K. As usual, I baked it in the Challenger pot. I was amazed that the levain that included a bit of salt rose nicely overnight at 70°. I forgot to curve the loaf as directed in the recipe and probably should have scored more deeply.

Levain

Whole Wheat flour-144g

Water- recipe called for 89g, scaling to a 1K loaf , but I used  85g because my starter was liquid

Salt- 2.58g

18g liquid culture to substitute for the 14g of stiff

Dough

Whole wheat flour- 86g

Bread Flour- 230g

Rye-69g

Barley- 46g Used hulled barley and toasted it in pan

Lager or stout- 207g

Water- 118g

Salt- 7.76g

Levain- 236g

 

caryn's picture
caryn

Today’s bake was from King Arthur: https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/recipes/sourdough-hamburger-buns-recipe

I pretty much made the recipe as written.

caryn's picture
caryn

I am baking this today and have scale the recipe to 1 kg:

I tried a technique new to me for mixing the dough. I left out 10% of the water, did the autolyse, then kneaded in the salt and levain until mostly developed and then gradually added the water that I had originally left out. The dough seemed to be a nice texture after kneeling for a few extra minutes. At first it looked like the water would not incorporate, but it did. The term for this is bassinage. I don’t know if I added the extra water at the correct point, but I watched a baker who runs a bakery and I think I added the water like he did. I need to work on my shaping. I will add a link to the baker’s video the next time I edit this post. Here’s the link: https://youtu.be/7lIDKLDWjDU The shaping demonstration is at 43:05 into the video.

It looks like my shaping was not too bad. I also want to note that I proofed for 1 1/2 hours at 78°F. Will get to taste for dinner.

 

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

Wow, it looks great.   I am currently bulk fermenting another B & T country sourdough.

I held back 10% of the water from the final dough mix, and needing just a bit more to incorporate the flour.  The dough feels pretty strong so far (3rd fold coming soon) but is still very sticky (maybe because of the 100% rye starter) and a bit of rye flour in the mix).  It seems pretty similar to last one I made that did work OK. 

.  

Benito's picture
Benito

That’s a pretty loave Caryn, you must be pleased.

Benny

caryn's picture
caryn

Thank you!

Yes, I was. I’m always a bit startled that naturally risen sourdough breads can work! I look forward to tasting it tonight. I also love that I am always learning something new like the bassinage technique.

caryn's picture
caryn

I made the same formula last week (pain au levain with whole wheat flour) and proofed one loaf overnight in the wine cooler (45 to 55 °F) and the other for an hour and a half at 76°. They pretty much both worked, but the nicer shaped one was the one proofed over night. They both had some maybe too large holes, but each tasted good with a nice moist and chewy texture. The one on the left was the one proofed the same day, the right one was proofed overnight. The crumb looked pretty much the same for each bread.



caryn's picture
caryn

I am behind posting a couple of breads that I have recently made. In the case of the semolina bread, it may be that I have not been so quick to post a bread that was a bit of a failure, at least in appearance. However, documenting breads that don’t have the best outcomes may actually be the most instructive. I had three problems with this bread:

1. I didn’t bother to test the proofing soon enough, and it may have over-proofed.

2. The dough was rather moist and I didn’t bother to line the banneton with linen as I often do, and as a result the dough stuck to the banneton when I was inverting it before transferring it the the baking pot.

3. When putting the lid on the baking pan, I slipped and hit the dough with the hot lid, causing the already compromised shape to be even more so!

In spite of all this, the bread still had very good flavor and texture.

I scaled the recipe for a 1K loaf.



caryn's picture
caryn

I followed Hamelman’s Harvest Bread as he wrote it, adding the small amount of instant yeast that he called for. I made 1/20 of his metric formula, using  2 grams of instant yeast ((.12kg/20)/3)).

The taste and texture were good, but again I slipped putting the lid on the pot, plus I need to work on my shaping!

caryn's picture
caryn

I just made Hamelman’s “Sourdough Seed Bread.”, p. 186 3rd edition. I made the levain overnight, and then I refrigerated it until noon, then let it sit at  76° for about an hour. This way I was able to allow the final dough to proof overnight in the banneton for the proper amount of time. I put it in the refrigerator 3 hours, then the wine cooler at 42-44° for the remaining time for a total of 15 hours. I wasn’t trying to be super fussy about the temperature; it was just that the cooler was first being used to cool wine at the beginning. I thought it better to have it proof mostly in the cooler where it would be a bit warmer than the refrigerator.

I highly recommend this formula. I think it may be a new favorite. The texture and taste were terrific!



caryn's picture
caryn

Mostly because I really like this bread, I made it again last Friday. I fed my starter twice over 2 days, refrigerating in between and then I used it to make the levain for this recipe. The only reason for feeding it twice was that I had not fed it for a while and I wanted to make sure that it would work. The only change I made to the recipe is allowing the dough to sit out for an hour before the bake while the oven was heating. I preheated the pot at 475°F and then immediately turned it down to 460°when I put the bread in the oven. I left it covered for 20 minutes and uncovered for about 15 minutes.

I am considering this a “dry” run as I am planning on serving this as part of a lunch gathering in a few days, so I will repeat this process in a couple of days. I am hoping the result will be as good!

 

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

If only I could get that kind of result.  I made a loaf of Pain au Levain w/ whole wheat today, with more gentle handling than usual (3 sets of coil folds only) and possibly better shaping.  It felt pretty good, but we'll see tomorrow early when it goes into the oven. 

caryn's picture
caryn

Louis- Lately I have been following Hamelman’s directions fairly accurately and sticking with the one or two folds that he suggests. I usually do two because I think it it only help and not hinder. I have another seed bread in the oven now. I will have to see how this one goes. I think I made it close to how I did the last time, but with sourdoughs, unless you are running a bakery with a lot of controls, the results can be variable!

Also, since I don’t always bake once a week, I take out about 8 grams of starter from the refrigerator a couple of days before I make the levain for the bread and feed it 16 grams of water and 16 grams of flour (including some rye or whole wheat). I let it work at 82°F for about 8 hours- It usually just doubles in that time. Then I might repeat that a second day if it has been a while since I have used the starter from the refrigerator. Then I make the levain and let it work at 70° as suggested by Hamelman for 12 to 14 hours. I then put it in the refrigerator, since I don’t want to start making the bread dough right away. I usually then take it out of the refrigerator at noon and let it sit again at 70°F before I start making the dough at about 1 PM or so. When I bake this way, I don’t do many tests- I just follow this and it seems to work.

Bread just came out of the oven!

caryn's picture
caryn

I decided to bake this bread again, though now I realize that I should have reviewed my previous notes on this loaf. For some reason I had decided to bake this in my large Pullman loaf, not realizing that it was obviously not the right pan. I am not sure why but this time the loaf did not proof enough overnight, and so the result was a very diminutive loaf which I just decided to call it a “cocktail” loaf. Renaming quasi-failures is a way to obfuscate the results! I certainly would not call it a success, but it still tasted really good, so that was somewhat redeeming! 

caryn's picture
caryn

Take three! This is the third time making this formula, and I think it is the best result so far. I think it is also the best 100% whole wheat bread that I have tried to date. The flavor and consistency were really good. I think I will continue to use this formula when I want an all whole wheat bread and maybe try some variations with some add-ins. I baked it in my Challenger pan, lowering  the starting temperature to 460°F. Otherwise, I pretty much followed the recipe using KA whole wheat flour.

The shape was not as I would have liked, however. It spread out while baking. I would like to figure out how to get more of an upward rise with this formula.



caryn's picture
caryn

I baked this bread the same day that I made the dough. As usual I scaled the recipe to 1K. The recipe is from King Arthur: https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/pro/formulas/night-moves-anadama

I may try using all bread flour next time instead of half and half because I ended up adding about 64g of additional AP flour.

caryn's picture
caryn
  1. I made Hamelman’s Sourdough Rye With Walnuts yesterday, following his method as written. I made 1/20 of the metric amounts, using 3 grams of instant yeast. I think it worked really well, and it will be repeated! I couldn’t decide whether to toast the walnuts for it, so I toasted them lightly because they had come from the freezer. This bread is made with half whole grain rye (I ground rye berries for it because I had some.) and half bread flour (King Arthur BF). 

caryn's picture
caryn

This is my first bread from The Rye Baker. I made it mostly because I had all of the ingredients for it! As I often do, I scaled the recipe to 1K and made one big loaf. The bulk fermentation took longer for me, but maybe because I did it mostly at 72° when I realized it would have been better to bulk ferment at a higher temperature. The proofing time on my peel was just a little more than 30 minutes. I will, of course, wait a while to cut it.

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

That looks really good, with nice volume.  I am looking forward to slicing day to see the crumb.  Probably very rich as well with egg and  molasses.  

caryn's picture
caryn

Thank you. I was a little concerned that my new rye starter might not be completely developed, but because this recipe uses instant yeast as well as the starter, I decided it was not a big risk. It looks like rising was not an issue. I also baked it my Challenger pot. I love how bread bakes in it. It is a bit of an extravagance, but I love how well it works. I slid my bread from the peel right onto the pan bottom. It worked easily.

caryn's picture
caryn
caryn's picture
caryn
caryn's picture
caryn

Well, sometimes you learn a lot from your mistakes. I was looking to find rye meal for a bread recipe in The Rye Baker and could only find rye berries and rye flakes. I looked at the rye flakes and they looked to me what could be similar to rye meal, so without much hesitation, I substituted them for the rye meal in the recipe, hedging my bet a bit and added half rye flakes and half dark rye flour for the amount in the recipe. (Right now I don’t have the recipe’s name because I returned the book to the library in anticipation to buying it soon. It was a French rye.) The dough looked very dense, and after the amount of time for bulk fermentation specified in the recipe, the dough showed no signs of rising at all! I had been especially interested in this formula because it was to be totally leavened by rye starter and I wanted to see how well it would work.  I then decided I had better find out more about the rye flakes that I had added to the mix- a little a-backwards, do you think?! I found out that the rye flakes are a bit like rolled oats, cooked, I think, and pressed. So, in effect, I had added an ingredient that would behave much differently than rye flour. At this point, I would have to dump the whole batch of dough or do something to try to save it. So I then mixed some instant yeast (4g) in a small amount of water, added about 50g of AP flour and let the dough rise for another hour, put it in a pan for maybe another hour and baked it in the pan on a stone for the specified amount of time. The result was a heavy dense bread that actually was flavorful! No, I would not advise doing this again, but at least this bread will serve as something to eat with soup! I waited until the next day to test it.

 

 

 

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

are just not going to rise much, and won't usually maintain their shape without a bead pan.  The do make very tasty bricks, great as a base for lox or wiping down soup/stew bowls.

I don't thnk yo ge much rise or shape-holding without some wheat flour (even whole wheat has more gluten than rye).  

caryn's picture
caryn

Actually the recipe was not 100% rye. It was not supposed to have any instant yeast, just rye starter. I think the formula was for 50% rye and the rest AP flour. I added the yeast thinking that the rye meal would be too thick a paste to be able to rise properly. All that said, I will retry the recipe using the described ingredients and see how well it ferments and proofs.

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

My hunch is rye flakes are the kind of thing that can be used as a soaker or scald, for flavor and texture; rye meal probably the same - treat them like some non-gluten multigrain in a wheat bread.  

I wonder what rye flakes would be like for a hot breakfast cereal, like rolled oats. 

caryn's picture
caryn

Provençal rye is the bread that I had tried in my previous post. As I explained, it “failed” because I used rye flakes in place of some of the rye meal or flour specified. It actually tasted quite good and has been nice toasted with butter 😀. So, not one to give up, I am remaking the recipe now. The main reason that I selected the recipe in the first place was to see how a rye bread would behave with only an overnight rye starter sponge and no other added yeast. First of all, this time the bulk fermentation worked well, doubling at 72° for about an hour and a half. I did add about 3 extra tablespoons of AP flour to the mix before fermentation because it had seemed overly sticky. I proofed it for about 45 minutes after shaping it on parchment paper and am baking it as directed. I will update this after it comes out of the oven.

caryn's picture
caryn
caryn's picture
caryn

I just made this bread and though the sponge and dough were sluggish to rise, the outcome was good. The sponge has only 2% (baker’s %) rye culture and after 15 hours it only rose by about a third, instead of doubling, so I waited about an additional hour before proceeding with the recipe. The next step was a fermentation for 45 to 60 minutes in which again doubling was supposed to occur.  I think I waited an extra hour or so and again, it rose but maybe only about a third again. In both cases I put them in my proofer at 72°F. Maybe next time I will up the temperature. After shaping as directed and placing the loaves in the specified sized pans, I think I waited about an hour and a half in the hopes that the dough would reach the rims of the pans. Again, they were about an inch below the rims. Assuming that the doughs might collapse if I didn’t bake them after that much time, I baked them as directed. This was yesterday. Today I cut into them and they tasted really good. I presented some of this experience to a forum in which a number of Fresh Loafers had some insightful advice: https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/71333/hearty-seeded-rye-rye-baker

caryn's picture
caryn
Another Girl's picture
Another Girl

Hi Caryn. I was following your forum thread because I've had the occasional issue with Ginsburg's recipes over the years – but Ginger-Plum sounds so good and the loaves you baked look mouth-watering with that pretty craggy crust. I've been waiting for your crumb shot and "tasting notes" (to borrow a phrase). I might have to give this one a try, with the changes you suggest. Thanks for posting this bake and sharing your learnings.

–AG

caryn's picture
caryn

AG- Let me know how yours turns out when you make it. It is certainly an unusual bread, tasty and I assume very healthy too.

caryn's picture
caryn

Since my last bread bake was a dense loaf, I wanted to make something lighter, so I baked Hamelman’s Pain Au Levain with Whole Wheat Flour. I scaled it as usual to make a 1 K loaf and added 126g of chopped toasted walnuts. I will cut it in a few hours and try it for lunch.

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

Wow, that looks nice.  

caryn's picture
caryn

Thank you. The reason for the good rise is probably because it is only 25% whole grain (whole wheat and rye). 

caryn's picture
caryn
  1. I just made two loaves of this bread. I added 93g of dried cherries to one of these 1K loaves. I included the 125g of toasted walnuts for each of them. I baked the one with cherries after an overnight proof in my wine cooler at about 41°F for about 13 hours,  and the other I baked after a 1.5 hour proof at 76°F. Both had nice ovenspring. 
caryn's picture
caryn

And here’s the pic of the slices. I proofed this bread dough overnight.

Benito's picture
Benito

Lovely crumb Caryn, looks like the fermentation is spot on.

Benny 

caryn's picture
caryn

Yes, I think this bread worked nicely. The thing is, I didn’t try to be overly fuzzy when making it. I followed the timing in the recipe and didn’t try to second-guess whether it had fermented or proofed to the right point. My starter must have been active enough to just work. 

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

Just lovely, great work.  I am sure they were both delicious.

caryn's picture
caryn

Yesterday I decided to bake some bread using some extra starter I had in the refrigerator. I followed this recipe for waste, not want not bread:

https://www.culinaryexploration.eu/blog/waste-not-want-not I substituted honey for the barley malt syrup because I didn’t have any and baked the loaf in a 9 x 5“ pan. It is a basic bread with 15% whole rye and 15% spelt. I also had no spect so used whole wheat instead. It should make nice toast and sandwich read.  I had forgotten to take a picture until I had already packaged it for the freezer!

caryn's picture
caryn

I made another bread yesterday that I baked this morning. I took the recipe from The Foodgeek for Sourdough Walnut Cranberry bread (https://foodgeek.dk/en/wprm_print/41075 ) and substituted dried apples for the dried cranberries. I thought the substitution worked really well. I also scaled it to make a 1K loaf which is the size I like to bake in the Challenger pan. I preheated the oven to 475°, put the loaf in the pan and immediately turned down the oven to 450°. I bkeed for 20 minutes with the lid on and about 20 minutes with the lid off, reducing the temperature to 440° as soon as I took the lid off.

 

Crumb:

caryn's picture
caryn

Today I made Naan to go with tonight’s soup dinner. I had made the soup a couple of days ago and thought naan would go well with it. I followed the recipe (https://www.onceuponachef.com/recipes/homemade-naan.html) closely except that I substituted whole wheat flour for half of the flour. They worked well, but I am not sure naan should be so soft. It tasted good, but it didn’t have much of a bite. Maybe that is how naan is supposed to be.

I highly recommend the soup. Roasted Cauliflower and Potato Soup (https://www.eatingwell.com/recipe/256519/roasted-cauliflower-potato-curry-soup/). I made some changes to the recipe, omitting the white potatoes and tomato sauce, using 2 large sweet potatoes which was probably more than called for, and adding about 2 cups of chick peas at the end to make it a main dish soup. 

caryn's picture
caryn

I made my usual rolls for Thanksgiving- one of my favorites: Pumpkin Seed Rolls from Milk Street. They have not failed me yet!

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