Re: Happy Yeast!
Peter's method isn't so much about hydration as maximizing the wet time of the dough. That is REALLY obvious in his whole wheat bread book where he has you making soakers for almost every bread. For some reason the epoxy mixing term doesn't grab me but it makes sense due to the A/B nature. The reason he splits it is twofold. First if you only wet the dough very little other than enzymes are activated (yes bad bacteria are activated but they only have twelve hours or so and can't have too much effect). The enzymes break down the starch into sugar and a few odds and ends that will give flavor. The preferment is just flour and water and yeast and gets a healthy population of yeast for the final dough but also provides extended development of various chemicals for flavor (aldehydes, ketones, alcohols, etc.) As a result the dough is much more complex than a dough made from the same ingredients - the next morning. The sugar in the soaker gives the yeast a burst of food and they can finish the bread quickly and predictably. So you get a lot of bang for the buck (or flavor for the commercial yeast). And you get really good bread.
Higher hydration is not so much about flavor as rustic crumb and texture. It especially pays off in pain l'ancienne. That recipe is worth trying and working on. Don't even try to slash it!
Bake On!
Jay
Peter's method isn't so much about hydration as maximizing the wet time of the dough. That is REALLY obvious in his whole wheat bread book where he has you making soakers for almost every bread. For some reason the epoxy mixing term doesn't grab me but it makes sense due to the A/B nature. The reason he splits it is twofold. First if you only wet the dough very little other than enzymes are activated (yes bad bacteria are activated but they only have twelve hours or so and can't have too much effect). The enzymes break down the starch into sugar and a few odds and ends that will give flavor. The preferment is just flour and water and yeast and gets a healthy population of yeast for the final dough but also provides extended development of various chemicals for flavor (aldehydes, ketones, alcohols, etc.) As a result the dough is much more complex than a dough made from the same ingredients - the next morning. The sugar in the soaker gives the yeast a burst of food and they can finish the bread quickly and predictably. So you get a lot of bang for the buck (or flavor for the commercial yeast). And you get really good bread.
Higher hydration is not so much about flavor as rustic crumb and texture. It especially pays off in pain l'ancienne. That recipe is worth trying and working on. Don't even try to slash it!
Bake On!
Jay
Comment