how do you make sourdough?

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I'm not going to pretend I'm some legend baker of perfect sourdough, let's get that straight.

I'm new to sourdough. Ordinary bread: yes, I think the sheer numbers of loaves I've started, risen, punched, risen, baked, (eaten), I get to claim that I know something about that. 

But sourdough is cool. SO cool. 

You make a paste of flour and water (starter recipe here) and after a few days the wild yeast has arrived at the party, you add some flour, water and a bit of salt and you have a risen loaf of bread. No yeast. No oil or butter. No milk powder.

Now that's some honest bread. 

 

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We've been experimenting with free form over loaves baked in tins. I'm fantasizing about getting a proofing basket or two to create a proper sourdough shape.

 

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And over in the corner is Henry Bean running a private and enthusiastic demonstration of how to bake sourdough. 

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"And then you eat it!"

No you don't dude. I haven't finished with the photos. Put the bread down. 

Here's the recipe I used, Arabella Forge's instructions from Frugavore.

 

SOURDOUGH

*note: takes approx 24 hrs rising time. 

Ingredients:

1 cup sourdough starter

8 cups flour (I've only ever used 7)

filtered water

sea salt

 

Method:

Mix the starter with 3 cups of the flour and just enough filtered water to form a smooth paste like the consistency of the starter (about 1.5 cups water max.)

Cover and leave at room temperature for 12 hours. The whole thing will bubble like a huge bowl of starter.

I do this bit in the morning and the next bit in the evening. (And bake the next morning.)

I know this sounds crazily involved but each step only take a few minutes and it's not like we're sitting around waiting for the bread, you know? It just does it's thing, we do our thing, we eventually bake it. But I digress.

So in the evening I add sea salt (a big dash) and 4 cups of flour to the bubbling mix. Mix well. Add water if too dry and more flour if you need it. 

Work into a round ball and knead for about 10 minutes. (In the spirit of full disclosure, I do not do this bit by hand anymore. I have a mixmaster with dough hooks. Which I'm very grateful for!)

The dough should feel soft and springy and returns to form if poked. If it feel hard and unyielding it may not have been kneaded long enough or the starter may not have been sufficiently active. 

Place the ball in a tin or on a tray and leave it somewhere draft-free to double in size over about 12 hours. Arabella suggests leaving it in the (cold) oven and then turning the oven on the next morning to 180 degrees celcius and giving it an hour. If you put it into a hot oven it only needs 45 minutes. 

It's cooked when it sounds hollow when tapped, and leave it to cool for 10 mins before slicing. 

I loved Frugavore by the way, I highly recommend it. Without Arabella I might not have tried this. 

Hope this inspires you to have a go too.

Everyone needs some wild yeast in their lives.

xxx

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P.S. I love this bread because it looks like ridiculous white cartoon bread. I used to call that super soft white bread 'balloon bread'. 'Cept it's not, it's rocking, flavoursome sourdough. Thank you, Arabella. 

 

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