I'm new to baking and although I have just begun grinding my own Organic wheat. For the last couple of months I've been experimenting with making starters & bread without using yeast. Let's just say it's been tempermental!
I'm hoping to find some help in getting a decent loaf out of the oven!
With grinding my own flour it's a tad difficult for me to figure out how to determine what is "Bread flour" "Unbleached White flour" and "Unbleached All Purpose Flour" which so many of my recipes call for in them. I'm assuming that those all come from Hard White Wheat Berries (which I have on order with a coop as I type.)
What I would like is a nice, soft, nutricious Sourdough using any or a combination of Wheat, Rye, Amaranth and or Spelt. A sourdough batter that rises without adding yeast would be nice too! :) (I do have one starter that has begun rising, although the loaf still came out like a brick!)
Any recipes and/or suggestions would be wonderful!
kindly,
Candice AKA WantabeBaker
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Replies
Take your time browsing the Beginner's Forum, there are very helpful tutorials. Our Sourdough Recipe Section has lots of scrumptious recipes, all tried and tested. Feel free to ask if you hit a 'brick', though I'm sure we'll be hearing good news from you soon.
This bit is from Shirley Corriher's Cookwise...
1. Strong flour is from the hard spring wheats.
2. To tell the protein content of flour....a little over 2 cups of bread flour will absorb 1 cup of water, producing a sticky dough ball when processed for about 30 seconds. Perform the same test with cake flour (low protein level), and you will find that it takes over 2 1/2 cups to form a similar sticky dough ball.
Happy exploring and baking!
TP
TP
sounds like you are keen grinding your own - i don't know alot about that but if you look in a book - 'the bread builders' by Daniel Wing & Alan Scott there is a reference to home milling on page 40, so maybe you can find them in a forum or website to ask some questions
a good book i've used is 'local breads' by Daniel Leader - the instructions for creating leaven are simple and work well + lots of recipes which, all i've tried, have worked well
enjoy
cheers
ben
Ben, could you pls add a word or two about Dan Leader's book in our Book Recommendation thread? Appreciate that.
Cheers
TP
Hydration is higher for home milled wheat because it soaks up more of the water. I have done 80% hydration without any problems. I forget the name for this next technique but adding water to your ground flour and let it sit longer than you normally would before adding your starter. Most flours take 20 to 30 minutes of sitting I have been letting my fresh ground sit for 4 hours before adding the starter.
Different flour types: You really are ending up with a product that isn't something you can buy in the store and it works differently than what you can buy. Learn to use it by seeing how it develops. I think the biggest help for me was to quit timing the steps in my bread making. You have to let the dough rise and sometimes it takes a lot more time than what a cookbook says.
Here are a couple of pictures of a whole wheat sourdough loaf. The crumb was light and soft.
[img]http://djardine.mooo.com/albums/BBQ/P7200855.JPG[/img]
The cumb shot.
[img]http://djardine.mooo.com/albums/BBQ/P7210856.JPG[/img]