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How to Make Sour Dough Bread


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How to Make Easy Sourdough Bread
Sourdough
simply uses wild yeast in place of commercial yeast to leaven the bread.
It relies on the wild yeasts that are in the air all around us and
cultures those yeasts in a warm, wet environment created with water,
flour, and sometimes other components.
When creating a sourdough starter, we always felt like
we were on an expedition trying to trap invisible yeastie beasties with
our flour and water concoctions. Because we couldn’t see the beasties, we
were never sure what we had captured. While usually successful, we never
felt like we were in control. Maybe that is the way sourdough bread
should feel, a symbiosis with nature.
But there is an easier way: use commercial yeast in the
starter. I know, that’s heresy to the sourdough bread zealot but we only
care about the bread. Using commercial yeast is easier, it’s the alcohol
from the long cool fermentation that creates the sourdough-like flavor,
and the wild yeasts will eventually take over the starter anyway.
Because it's easy, it’s no big deal if you abandon your starter after a
few weeks; you can readily start another when you’re back in the mood or
have the time.
Using this recipe for sourdough bread, a small amount of
yeast is used in the starter. As the starter is used and refreshed with
new feedings of flour and water, wild yeasts are introduced and
cultivated.
Here is the recipe:
For the starter:
1 cup warm water (about 110 degrees)
1/4 teaspoon yeast
1 cup high gluten unbleached flour.
Mix the starter in a glass or steel bowl, cover with
plastic wrap, and set it aside at room temperature until it is doubled and
bubbly, maybe 4 to 6 hours.
For the sponge:
A sponge is a pre-ferment, a wet mixture of flour and yeast that acts
as an incubation chamber to grow yeast at the desired rate. It is added
to the dough.
1 cup of the starter
3/4 cup warm water
2 cups flour
Mix the one cup starter with the flour and water, cover,
and set aside to ferment until it has tripled in volume. At room
temperature, it will take four to eight hours. You can put it in a cool
place--about fifty degrees--and let it perk all night. (In the winter,
your garage may be just right.) You can also put it in the refrigerator
overnight. At temperatures of forty degrees, the yeast will be inactive
but the friendly bacteria will still be working and enhance the sour
flavor of the bread. If you retard the growth with lower temperatures
(“retard” is the correct term for slowing the growth of the yeast), simply
bring the sponge to room temperature and let it expand to three times its
original volume before proceeding.
For the dough:
All of the sponge
11/2 cups flour (more or less)
2 teaspoons salt
Mix the salt with the flour. Knead the combination into
the sponge by hand until you have a smooth, elastic, slightly sticky
dough, adding more flour as needed. Put the dough in an oiled bowl and
let it rise again until doubled, about an hour.
Bakers note: Notice that the salt is not added
until the last stage. Salt in the sponge would inhibit yeast growth.
Form
the loaves:
Though you can make this bread in pans, it works best as a large
freestanding round or oval loaf or two smaller loaves. Place a clean
cotton cloth in a bowl or basket in which to hold the loaf. Lightly dust
the interior of the bowl with flour. Place each formed loaf upside down
in a bowl on top of the dusted flour. Cover the loaves with plastic and
let them rise again until doubled. This rising will probably take less
than an hour.
Bakers note: You want a light dusting of
flour on the cloth to be transferred to the bread, not a heavy caking.
Softly sifting flour from a strainer is the easiest way to achieve an even
coating. A stainless steel strainer is available in
The Student Commissary.
If you choose to bake the bread in pans, omit this
step. Instead, let the dough rise in a greased bowl covered with plastic
until doubled. Form the loaves for pans, place the loaves in greased
pans, and let rise until well-expanded and puffy. Bake at 350 degrees
until done, about 30 minutes.
To bake crusty bread:
To form the thick, chewy crust that is typical of artisan breads,
follow these instructions: Place a large, shallow, metal pan in the oven
on the lowest shelf. You will pour hot water in this pan to create steam
in the oven. (High heat is hard on pans so don't use one of your better
pans and don’t use a glass or ceramic pan which might shatter.) An old
sheet pan is ideal. Fill a spray bottle with water. You will use this to
spray water into the oven to create even more steam.
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. When the oven
is hot and the bread is fully risen and is soft and puffy--being very
careful not to burn yourself with the rising steam and with a mitted
hand—turn your head away and pour two or three cups of very hot water in
the pan in the oven. Quickly close the oven door to capture the steam.
With spray bottle in hand, open the door and quickly spray the oven walls
to create more steam and close the door. The oven is now ready for the
loaves.
Work quickly to get the bread in the oven before
the steam subsides. Gently invert the loaf or loaves onto a slightly
greased non-insulated baking sheet on which a little cornmeal has been
dusted. With your sharpest knife, quickly make two or three slashes
1/4-inch deep across the top of each loaf. This will vent the steam in
the bread and allow the bread to expand properly. Immediately, put the
bread in the steamy oven. After a few moments, open the door and spray
the walls again to recharge the steam. Do this twice more during the
first fifteen minutes of baking. This steamy environment will create the
chewy crust prized in artisan breads.
Let the bread bake at 425 degrees for fifteen
minutes in the hot steamy oven then reduce the temperature to 375 degrees
and bake for a total of 35 to 40 minutes. Check on the bread ten minutes
before the baking should be complete. If the top is browning too quickly,
tent the loaf with aluminum foil for the remainder of the baking to keep
it from burning. The bread is done when the crust turns a dark golden
brown and the internal temperature reaches 210 degrees. It is important
that the bread is well-baked to drive moisture from the loaf. If the
bread is under baked, the excess moisture will migrate to the crust and
you will no longer have the dry chewy crust of a great artisan loaf.
This sourdough bread is to die for. The prolonged
rising gives the yeast plenty of time to convert the starch to sugars and
the friendly bacteria a chance to impart their nut-like flavors.
Storing your crusty bread:
Unused crusty bread should be stored in a paper bag at room temperature.
If the bread is stored in a plastic bag, the crust will become soft.
If this sounds like
too much trouble,
get a sourdough bread mix at The Prepared Pantry. It is easy to
make. It has a chewy crust and that authentic sourdough flavor. You can
even make it in your bread machine. Enter “sour4u” at checkout to get 30%
off.
Dennis Weaver
is the author of
How to Bake, a 250 page baking book available free online. The
Prepared Pantry sells
over 50 bread machine mixes, ingredients, and kitchen supplies.
Copyright The
Prepared Pantry and Dennis Weaver, 2008. Used with permission.
Life and Times of Sigmund
Freud Kitty (Told in his own words)
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