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comment by demure
demure  ·  1477 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: return of the bread

    189 grams ripe (fed) sourdough starter

330 grams water, lukewarm (1.4 cups)

450 grams unbleached all-purpose flour (3.735 cups)

50 grams whole wheat flour

(whatever that is in cups--it's like 2 heaping tablespoons?)

(idk, i use weight when baking)

6 grams salt (1 teaspoon)

- Weigh your flour; or measure it by gently spooning it into a cup, then sweeping off any excess.

- Combine all the dry ingredients together in a large mixing bowl, mixing so that it's even. Combine water and sourdough starter. Gently stir so the starter and the water become one. Add water-starter mixture to the dry ingredients.

- Mix and stir everything together (by hand or stand mixer, whatever you got) to make a sticky, rough dough (just until well-combined and no clumps of flour remain).

- Leave the dough in the bowl, cover it with a piece of plastic wrap or damp kitchen towel, and let it rise for 1 hour.

- Gently pick up the dough and fold it over on itself several times, cover it again, and let it rise for another hour.

- Repeat once more--fold again and rise for an hour. At the end of the hour, fold and then place in the refrigerator. Let dough rest for at least 8 hours (up to 48).

- When you're ready to make bread, turn the dough out onto a well-floured work surface, and shape it into a rough ball. Leave the dough seam-side up, cover it, and let it rest on a floured surface for 15 minutes.

- Shape the boule and place into a parchment-paper lined Dutch oven. Let the boule come up to room temperature and rise (approx. 3 hours).

- Towards the end of the rise, depending on how fast your oven heats up, preheat the oven to 500 degrees F.

- Dust with flour, and use a sharp knife to make one 1/2" deep slash through the top surface. Cover with the Dutch oven lid and insert into oven.

- Immediately (!) reduce oven temperature to 450 degrees F, bake for 45 minutes.

- Remove the lid and bake for 10-15 minutes more, depending on your oven, until the bread is deeply golden brown (the very edge where you sliced the top may be a bit burned but that's ok! a crunchy crust is more important).

- Remove the bread from the oven and transfer to a rack to cool completely.

Basically a mix between this King Arthur recipe and my old recipe. This recipe's text is adapted from KA.

PS: If your oven has a "convection bake" setting, I recommend it. Keeps the heat even.





user-inactivated  ·  1476 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Very similar to my recipe, main difference is I've been getting away with using only 50 g of starter and letting it proof overnight after the folds. In the morning I shape it, dump it in a proofing basket and put it in the fridge and then bake it in the evening. I've been able to push the amount of whole-wheat flour to 50% by doing some more folds and increasing the amount of water. My current recipe is 50 g starter, 9 g salt, 350 g water, 300 g white flour and 200 g whole-wheat spelt flour.

demure  ·  1477 days ago  ·  link  ·  

old recipe

no-knead sourdough bread recipe

Ingredients

    425 grams all-purpose flour, or bread flour

4 grams kosher salt

180 grams sourdough starter (fed, i.e. doubling every 12 hours or faster)

300 grams lukewarm tap water

Initial dough formation and rise

    Combine flour and salt in a large mixing bowl.

In smaller bowl, combine lukewarm water with sourdough starter. Mix until combined and mixture is liquid-y.

Add water and starter to the large mixing bowl. Mix until combined with a spatula. This is not a kneading step, but do make sure there are not large pockets of dry flour in the dough.

Cover bowl in plastic wrap, place a tea towel on top. Leave to rise overnight, 10-12 hours. I get best results around there, but it will depend on your ambient house temperature and how active your starter is.

Boule forming and second rise

A boule is the rounded shape of a common handmade loaf. What we’re trying to do is to form a taut surface on the top of the boule, so that it rises upwards instead of spreading outwards, and form the rounded shape that will create the final shape of the loaf.

    Dust parchment paper with flour.

Dust a work surface (a clean countertop or a clean wooden cutting board) with flour, dump out the dough and form a boule (this might be a useful demonstration up until about 1:15).

Transfer boule to parchment paper. Let rise, covered with a flour-dusted tea towel for 2 hours or until roughly doubled in size. Don’t worry if it doesn’t double, it should spring in the oven.

Baking

    Preheat the oven to 450° F (if you have an anemic oven, you can set it higher), and preheat your dutch oven. Before transferring the boule, score the top with a (very) sharp knife or razor blade. I typically run one large cut down the middle of the boule, aiming for about a half-inch deep score.

Transfer the boule into the dutch oven using the parchment paper, being careful not to burn yourself on the oven sides (they’re very hot!).

Cover and bake for 25-30 minutes.

Uncover and continue to bake an additional 20-30 minutes until nicely browned.

Set to cool on a wire rack. Don’t cut into the bread until it’s cooled (at least a half hour)!