Re: Cleaning bannetons?
I kinda miss throwing it together sometimes too, but I don't miss the bricks I used to turn out more often than I would care to admit... (especially with whole wheat added- it's easy to do well with white)
Weighing the ingredients produces a much more predictable loaf for me. As long as it takes to get my bread together- the soakers, etc, I really hate it when they don't turn out like they're supposed to. And I don't like my husband having to use what I consider inferior bread for his sandwiches! The only thing not nailed down quite yet is the oven temperature, and that's going to be coming along- it's finally nice outside for a few days!
I am not sure you need to use the pot for your bread if you're using your wfo. You should be able to steam the crap out of the oven and turn your loaf out on the peel and put it in naked. You should get very similar results.
Annie's right, I have a brotform, not a bannetton. I keep getting them conflated. I have read where some people clean them out and then dry them carefully in the oven, but I haven't felt the need to do that.
I tried using flour sack towels as couches, spraying them with pam and using flour like Reinhart suggests. It didn't work terribly well all the time. I think some of it was because actual linen has a much flatter weave- if you look at it, the yarns used tend to look sort of flat. The cotton is spun a lot tighter and I think that makes the two cloths behave differently, particularly in the way they release. There's also a big difference in the thread count. Next time I'm going to order some real linen from SF Baking and see.
Originally posted by Wiley
View Post
Weighing the ingredients produces a much more predictable loaf for me. As long as it takes to get my bread together- the soakers, etc, I really hate it when they don't turn out like they're supposed to. And I don't like my husband having to use what I consider inferior bread for his sandwiches! The only thing not nailed down quite yet is the oven temperature, and that's going to be coming along- it's finally nice outside for a few days!
I am not sure you need to use the pot for your bread if you're using your wfo. You should be able to steam the crap out of the oven and turn your loaf out on the peel and put it in naked. You should get very similar results.
Annie's right, I have a brotform, not a bannetton. I keep getting them conflated. I have read where some people clean them out and then dry them carefully in the oven, but I haven't felt the need to do that.
I tried using flour sack towels as couches, spraying them with pam and using flour like Reinhart suggests. It didn't work terribly well all the time. I think some of it was because actual linen has a much flatter weave- if you look at it, the yarns used tend to look sort of flat. The cotton is spun a lot tighter and I think that makes the two cloths behave differently, particularly in the way they release. There's also a big difference in the thread count. Next time I'm going to order some real linen from SF Baking and see.
Comment