So, almost all of the breads in the FB bread book take two days to prep and are cooked at rather high temperatures...as opposed to "general" bread recipes, which are intended for conventional ovens and therefore are intended to be cooked at much lower temperatures and frequently don't take two days to prep.
Multiple questions:
Is there a direct relationship between two-day breads and WFO-temperature breads? In other words, is there such a thing as a one-day bread that is cooked at WFO-temperatures (around 500)? If so, where can I find some recipes like that? I'm just not interested in spending several days prepping dough yet. When I get better, then I'll be interested, but for now, I'm looking for faster ways to experiment.
What makes a recipe a high or low temp recipe? Why do cheapo normal recipes cook properly in a normal oven at 300-350 while official WFO breads cook properly at 500? I mean, what's the difference? Do they have different amount of flour, yeast, salt, something like that? Something must be different between them.
I'm confused.
Thanks.
Multiple questions:
Is there a direct relationship between two-day breads and WFO-temperature breads? In other words, is there such a thing as a one-day bread that is cooked at WFO-temperatures (around 500)? If so, where can I find some recipes like that? I'm just not interested in spending several days prepping dough yet. When I get better, then I'll be interested, but for now, I'm looking for faster ways to experiment.
What makes a recipe a high or low temp recipe? Why do cheapo normal recipes cook properly in a normal oven at 300-350 while official WFO breads cook properly at 500? I mean, what's the difference? Do they have different amount of flour, yeast, salt, something like that? Something must be different between them.
I'm confused.
Thanks.
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