Sunday, January 18, 2009

Sourdough Bread

I have baked our own bread for a number of years now. I started with a fool proof whole grain yeast bread, unsuccessfully dabbled a bit with sourdough until about 2 years ago, when I came across a sourdough starter recipe, that worked right from the get go.

I now have two starter batches in the fridge, just in case I forget to set a new one aside when baking. It's a big pain to set up a new starter and you want to avoid that at all cost. I was told that some old restaurants, who have their own, old sourdough starter, actually advise their staff that in an event of fire one of the things to save is the sourdough starter. Anyway, I will post my starter recipe here another time.

Here is the recipe for my sourdough bread:

Pre Dough
  • 500ml of sourdough starter
  • 500g whole wheat flour
  • 1000ml warm water
Mix all ingredients well in a wooden or plastic bowl with a wooden or plastic spoon. do not use metal. Metal and sourdough do not mix. I don't know the chemistry behind this, but the dough won't rise in a metal bowl, so don't try. Cover bowl with lid or saran wrap and let stand overnight in a warm spot (38C would be perfect), but normal room temp works as well.

The next morning, take about 500ml of the starter dough and fill into mason jar, close lid lightly and store in fridge for your next batch.

Sour Dough Bread
  • sourdough starter dough (minus 500ml)
  • 500g whole wheat flour
  • 500g of mixed grains, seeds and or nuts
  • 1 Tblsp salt
  • warm water to make a mushy dough (if you use loaf pans) or a non-sticky dough if you make loafs
Mix all ingredients well (again, don't use metal). Let stand until late afternoon. Dough should have risen and almost doubled in size. Either fill in loaf pans (3) or form 3 loafs. Preheat convection oven to 175C (200C/400F for traditional electric oven). Bake loafs for 1 hour. Let cool on wire rack.
Note: all amounts are approximate. I don't usually weigh the ingredients, not do I measure the water.

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