Re: not quite right...
Hi lwood!
I am almost ten years into this and I did the same bread almost every week for a year a half. It was only about three years ago I really started doing other breads very much. And, at first I was less consistent but you learn a lot by doing only one bread because there are variations. You sense it isn't ready and you bake it anyway, you are out of BF and go AP, you change hydration a bit. When your loaves are repeatable you learn from these variations. When you change things all the time, you can't find the pattern and it is confusing.
I used BF (14.5% protein) for six years and worked mainly at 68 percent hydration. About two years ago I started going to AP (11.7%) and have worked my hydration and hanling ability up to around 75%. (That would have been scary two years ago!) I am varying the flour I use all the way down to 30% Gold Medal AP (10.5 % protein) and 70% Pastry (8.5%) when I make banh mi to get as delicate a crumb as possible.
While I cannot make the same bread/crumb/crust from any flour I am amazed at the level range of textures and overlaps I can get from different flours.
I have no idea what flours are available in the Phillipines (at least at reasonable costs!). For artisanal loaves higher protein has some big advantages because it is stronger and less fragile so you can handle it rougher. My banh mi are very fragile and have to be handled very carefully. If you really want to use higher protein flour you might be better off using a lower protein flour and adding Vital Wheat Gluten if you can get it. I have never used it because I have good access to various flours but comments from others suggest it works well.
Hang in there! With time and experience it can happen!
Jay
Hi lwood!
I am almost ten years into this and I did the same bread almost every week for a year a half. It was only about three years ago I really started doing other breads very much. And, at first I was less consistent but you learn a lot by doing only one bread because there are variations. You sense it isn't ready and you bake it anyway, you are out of BF and go AP, you change hydration a bit. When your loaves are repeatable you learn from these variations. When you change things all the time, you can't find the pattern and it is confusing.
I used BF (14.5% protein) for six years and worked mainly at 68 percent hydration. About two years ago I started going to AP (11.7%) and have worked my hydration and hanling ability up to around 75%. (That would have been scary two years ago!) I am varying the flour I use all the way down to 30% Gold Medal AP (10.5 % protein) and 70% Pastry (8.5%) when I make banh mi to get as delicate a crumb as possible.
While I cannot make the same bread/crumb/crust from any flour I am amazed at the level range of textures and overlaps I can get from different flours.
I have no idea what flours are available in the Phillipines (at least at reasonable costs!). For artisanal loaves higher protein has some big advantages because it is stronger and less fragile so you can handle it rougher. My banh mi are very fragile and have to be handled very carefully. If you really want to use higher protein flour you might be better off using a lower protein flour and adding Vital Wheat Gluten if you can get it. I have never used it because I have good access to various flours but comments from others suggest it works well.
Hang in there! With time and experience it can happen!
Jay
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