Hey All,
Wishing you all a very happy 2011. Here's my first loaf of the year. It was for my friend Sarah's birthday on January 2nd... I've been baking pretty much the same bread for the past few months save for few high percentage rye breads which I will write about when I have some more time and energy... This bread is one of my best recipies of late... Here's the recipe and process:
Total Recipe:
750g Total Flour
540g Total Water (approx 72% hydration)
16g Kosher Salt
40g Storage Sourdough Starter @ 80% Hydration
1346g Total Dough Yield
**Storage Sourdough Starter at 80% to 100% hydration fed within a few days and kept in fridge.
Equipment:
Digital Scale
Oven with convection
Oven thermometer
Instant read thermometer
Large mixing bowl
Rubber spatula
Plastic scraper
Large plastic bag
Linen lined 8" to 10" banneton/brotform/colander lined with tea towel (non terry cloth)
2 baking stones
Wooden peel, or some way to get the loaf into the oven directly onto stone
Cheap loaf pan filled with lava rocks
Bowl of water to wet your hands/scraper/spatula
Rye Sour:
76g Rye Flour (Arrowhead Organic)
76g Water
20g Storage Sourdough Starter (I am keeping mine at about 80% hydration these days)
172g Total
Levain:
38g WW Flour (Whole Foods 365)
38g AP Flour (Whole Foods 365 and/or Hecker's)
76g Water
20g Storage Sourdough Starter (I am keeping mine at about 80% hydration these days)
172g Total
Final Dough:
598g AP Flour (Whole Foods 365 and/or Hecker's)
388g Water
16g Kosher Salt
172g Rye Sour
172g Levain
1346g Total Dough Yield
Process:
12/1/11
12:30am - Weigh out ingredients using a digital scale, mix starters in separate bowls, cover and let rest on counter at room temp... Go to bed.
10:30am - Weigh out final ingredients using a digital scale. In a large mixing bowl, add ingredients in the following order: water, starters, flour, salt. Mix with rubber spatula into a rough shaggy dough, then with wet hands squish out any dry clumps, scrape down bowl sides with wet plastic scraper, place bowl in plastic bag, close and let rest.
11:30am - Using a wet dough scraper, scrape the dough from the sides of the bowl, then with wet hands stretch and fold the dough 4 times. Pick up the dough mass from the center, lift and let the front part flop under, and release. Turn the bowl 180 degrees and repeat. Each time, you can squish the dough down with lightly wet hands. cover and let rest.
12:00pm - Turn dough using method above, return to bowl to plastic bag, close and rest.
12:30pm - Prepare proofing basket by generously flouring the linen/cloth. Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface/board, shape into large boule/round, and place into proofing basket seam side up. Lightly flour the dough, cover with cloth towel, place into entire basket into plastic bag, close and place in top shelf of refrigerator.
10:00pm - Take dough out of fridge and place on kitchen counter. If using an 8" basket, dough should be domed over top of basket. Do the poke test to see if the intentation springs back slowly, but a small impression still remains. Prepare oven by arranging one baking stone on the lowest level, and the other on the highest level. Place bottom baking stone with the length going front to back. Prepare lava rock loaf pan, fill 3/4 way with water. Place steam pan on bottom rack to the side of the baking stone. Place oven thermometer on bottom stone and turn on oven to 500F with convection. Make sure your kitchen is well ventilated, open the windows and run fans. This is especially important if you are using a gas oven.
10:45pm - Remove oven thermometer with tongs/oven mitts so you don't burn yourself. Turn off convection. Lightly flour wooden peel, gently loosen dough from basket and turn onto peel. Slash as desired and place into oven directly onto bottom stone. Close oven door. Bake 10 minutes at 500F with steam pan.
11:00pm - Remove steam pan, turn oven down to 450F and bake for another 40-45 minutes.
11:40pm-ish: Check weight of loaf and internal temp of loaf. If weight is approx 15% less than the pre-bake dough weight, and internal temp has reached 210F, then loaf is pretty much done. You can turn the oven off and put the loaf back into the oven for another 10 minutes.
11:50pm-ish: Take loaf out of oven and let cool overnight on a wire rack... Go to sleep...
Loaf profile
Close-up of crackly bottom crust
Bad crumbshot picture from friend's iPhone camera...
Enjoy!
Tim
Submitted to Yeastspotting on 1/4/2011