



I have a stash of mashed purple sweet potatoes that I made the last time I went to Chinatown to load up on them last year. I keep them in ziplock bags with about 80 g of mashed purple sweet potatoes in each bag. This way I can just defrost a bag and then have enough purple sweet potato to make a loaf of bread at about 18-20% potato. This is what I did for this loaf which is otherwise the same as my last 50% whole wheat sourdough pan loaf with 40% prefermented flour for a quick fermentation. Now with 18% purple sweet potatoes I didn’t get quite the rise as my previous loaf, but that was expected. I also tried allowing the loaf to open up organically without a score by putting the shaped dough into the pan seam side up. Well the seam wasn’t quite centered, I think I still prefer to score than let the dough do it on its own LOL.

For 1 loaf in a 9x4x4” Pullman Pan
Overnight levain build, at 74°F about 10 hours to rise 3x.
In the morning add salt to water and dissolve. Add levain and mix.
Add flours and knead until good gluten development, I will use my Ankarsrum Assistent and mix until a good windowpane is achieved about 12 mins. Add mashed purple sweet potato and mix until well incorporated.
Remove dough from the bowl and do some slap and folds. Next set up aliquot jar.
Bulk fermentation at 82ºF.
End bulk when aliquot jar reaches 40% rise.
Shape the dough into a batard and place in buttered Pullman pan. Optional, sprinkle poppyseeds on the bottom and sides of the pullman pan.
Shape and allow an initial final proof warm until 100% rise in aliquot jar, start oven preheat 425ºF preparing for steam bake.
Allow the dough to rise until within 1 cm of the rim of the pan and then bake immediately or about 130% rise in the aliquot jar.
Once oven reaches 425ºF score top of dough and then brush with water. Optional sprinkle with seeds and then score. Transfer to oven and bake with steam for 25 mins. Vent the oven (remove steaming gear) rotate the pan and drop temperature to 350ºF. Bake for another 30 mins rotating as needed until browned. Remove from the pan and place directly on the rack baking for another 5-10 mins to firm up the crust if desired.
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that looks divine to me, Benny. I'm sure it'll taste great too. -- Rob
Thank you Rob, it should hopefully taste good. I’ll make tuna salad sandwiches for tonight’s dinner I think.
Benny
To make ahead and freeze portions. I do that with a lot of things but hadn’t tried with potatoes.
Your pan loaves are consistently well done .
Thank you Caroline. I started freezing small portions of mashed potatoes and purple sweet potatoes for making bread a while back. It just simplifies the whole process when you have some in the freezer.
Benny
Like always a beautiful sandwich bread! I'm very curious about the color of the crumb.
Thank you sparkfan, I am hopeful that some of the pinkish/purple hue will be present in the crumb. With 50% WW it can blunt it though.
Benny
Benny - Nicely Done! I see purple in the crack of the crust which looks really nice. I sure the addition of sweet potato softened the WW taste a bit and softened the crumb as well.
Tony
Thank you Tony, I’m quite pleased with this bake. The crumb turned out better than I expected.
Benny
The purple sweet potatoes add a nice mild sweetness to this bread along with a wonderful pink/purple hue. I wasn’t expecting the colour to turn out quite so well, I thought that the 50% whole wheat to have dulled it more than it did. Definitely a nice soft yet mildly chewy bite to the bread.
The sandwiches are tuna salad which I made with pickles, celery, pickled onions, dill, kewpie mayo, lemon juice and dill.
Gorgeous! Generally I'm not a big fan of coloured (lean) breads, but this one is definitely the winner! I'm getting jealous!
EDIT: the first crumb shot is definitely the picture of the month!
Thank you sparkfan, I add ingredients with the hopes of enhancing the flavour of the bread I bake for the most part. Purple sweet potatoes really do add a lot to the flavour and texture of the bread as well as the appearance in my opinion which is why I do tend to use a fair amount of it.
Benny
The bread reminds me of the Jimi Hendrix song.
The potato is a good idea for softening up a lean bread and purple makes it truly unique as does the seam up in the pan. It looks like you got a nice even crumb with less compression on the bottom and sides which happens to me sometimes. That may have more to do with nailing the fermentation like you did than up or down.
Its pan-demonium around here and everyone keeps raising the bar
D
I’m happy that this loaf reminds you of a Jimi Hendrix song instead of looking like it is covered in ants like my last one.
Baking pan loaves has been my preference for some time now, I’m glad other bakers are seeing some of the advantages of this as well.
Benny
Baker your going to get comments like mine from the peanut gallery. I need that bumper sticker I saw that says” I brake for hallucinations “ ;)
D