Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
For me, 550F hearth temp is way too hot. I shoot for between 450 and 500. I would never load with a hearth/overall temp over 500F. Your burnt bottoms and under browned tops reflect too high a temp. Next time, try loading at 450F. I think you'll have better results even if you change nothing else.
I have a OXO scale from Target. I think it was $30. It only goes to 5lb. which means for really large batches I have to split up the measuring, but that's not a big deal vs. the significantly larger expense of a 11lb. scale. I have a smaller gram scale for measuring yeast and salt, but I rarely bother using it.
The individual parchment sheets is a good idea. I have sometimes used a whole sheet up to the point of being ready to bake, then I just cut the sheet apart around the proofed loaves to transfer/load.
At some point you may find yourself in want of specialized proofing tools like a linen cloth (couche) for baguette/batard and either bannetons or brotforms for round/oval shapes. I still use parchment for WFO baking. In that case, I dump out or roll the proofed loaves onto pieces of parchment to load.
As you progress, you'll find you start paying a lot more attention to bread. You are likely to arrive on a pretty specific set of criteria for what you like as far as crust, crumb, etc. Ultimately, it comes down to what you like. Of course there are specific criteria upon which each style or type of bread could be judged in the professional realm, but if you're happy, does it matter? At any level, it's useful and interesting to seek out examples of breads that are well made or understood to be prime examples of their particular style to establish a reference for yourself. Seek out great bread and eat great bread!
The best thing about baking, especially when you're a beginner, is that the sense of accomplishment when you produce something edible and even kind of good far outweighs the shortcomings of the loaf. Improving your skills also means you'll improve your critical skills...for better or worse!
As it happens, I just baked a batch of the BBA French (with a couple of adjustments) because I needed some baguette on the fly for a dinner party. My first batch of IDY dough in ages!
baguette 2-12-11 | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
In no way a stellar example, but it gives you something to compare to at least.
Here was my first ever bread from the WFO, also my first sourdough, from my first ever successfully cultivated starter:
first attempt at sourdough in the WFO | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
It sucked on every level, but I was over the moon.
A years' worth of practice later:
cereales and pain campagne from the WFO | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
And then, at long last, starting to look the way I think it should:
rip! | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
This season, if I can tweak the variables to get a boule from the WFO that compares to these I've managed from the indoor oven, I'll be pleased:
Best yet from the indoor oven! | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
As Jay says, bake on!
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Getting better but still not great
Well, I did try another batch, used the BBA IDY French Bread recipe. Doubled up the recipe as I figured that either I would screw up the cooking enough to have more than one attempt or if it came out good I have two teenage boys.
I think I had the hearth too hot this time, though I certainly had the brick mass heat soaked and an even temp.
I went and bought a digital probe thermometer and some more wooden mixing spoons.
I measured by volume as I still don't have a scale - Any suggestions on scales? Are the twenty dollar ones at the local stores that go to 0.1 oz good enough?
Mixed the dough by hand, used a 50/50 mix of bread flour and AP flour. The Bread Flour was some Con Agra bleached that a friend gave me which we will not use anymore after it is used up. The AP is KA which is what we get at our local store.
The starter dough, and the second rise did quite well and seemed to rise as much as the recipe called for. Shaping the loaves for the proofing stage seemed to go well.
When I went to move them to the peel, I had a little trouble as I had more than one each of two sheets and a couple of loaves seemed to "deflate" a little, next time I think I will use individual sheets of parchment paper for each loaf.
I followed Splat's suggestions on the WFO prep, but I think my hearth temp was too high at over 550 F. The first loaf burned the bottom almost immediately and the second one did almost the same. I was pretty bummed at that point but kept tossing em in the WFO. When I pulled them out the crust seemed kind of hard, but then again I don't what it should feel like. The internal temp was right at 205 F according to my new remote probe thermometer.
After bringing the loaves inside, I didn't wait to cut the best looking and least burnt loaf that has just a bit of surface black on the bottom. It definitely tasted good. There were some uniform air pockets and again I am not sure what it should look like.
So now we have a week of rain, and the WFO is sidelined until the good weather returns, but I am going to get a stone and maybe a scale today from our local kitchen supply which is an old school family run crammed shelf place in the old section of downtown, so I can continue indoors.
Thanks again for the help guys, it is getting better. All the loaves were eaten this time, though some took more trimming than others. Overll score this time, C-
Eric3 Photos
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
Het Splat, I just checked out some videos on the No-Knead and I already have a whole bunch of Lodge cast iron, got a leg of lamb cooking in the WFO right now in my cast iron dutch oven. So I will definately give that idea a try!Originally posted by splatgirl View Post...the technique of baking the loaf in a cast iron pot produces amazing results. Google "no-knead bread" and give that a go or two. It's a great learning experience, dough and technique-wise and will teach you things about bread that can be applied to any recipe. Unfortunately, you're basically limited to the boule shape using a pot as a cooking vessel, but it's totally, totally worth it.
If you don't already have a cast-iron LeCreuset-type pot with a lid, consider going the combo cooker route:
https://secure.lodgemfg.com/storefro...idProduct=4044...
Right now my WFO is at under 900 including the walls, it was well above 950 and the exterior of the dome is about 115 F. I am just getting readey to proof what I think will be four or five loaves of french bread from the BBA recipe (I doubled it). After shaping the loaves and starting the proofing I will remove the lamb from the oven and start preping it for bread!
Used the IDY, and the stuff definately rose, much more than our SD and now I am getting kind of anxious!! But I will take my time.
I will let you guys know how it turns out! Stay tuned!!! Lamb and Frenc Bread are sounding pretty good right about now (but I am going to cook some rice in case I "brick" or burn the bread!!)
Eric
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
You'll need a stone. Also, the technique of baking the loaf in a cast iron pot produces amazing results. Google "no-knead bread" and give that a go or two. It's a great learning experience, dough and technique-wise and will teach you things about bread that can be applied to any recipe. Unfortunately, you're basically limited to the boule shape using a pot as a cooking vessel, but it's totally, totally worth it.
If you don't already have a cast-iron LeCreuset-type pot with a lid, consider going the combo cooker route:
These let you put your shaped dough into the shallow part and cover with the deep part, which I've found is much easier than trying to wrangle and slash dough down in a deep pot. Plus the Lodge stuff is quite a bit cheaper than most enameled cast iron and you get two pieces for the price of one with the combo cookers.
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
I definately was NOT firing it to those temps and I certainly had burnt bottoms!, I do genrerally fire my WFO for at least three hours at a time but I will crank up the heat next time.Originally posted by splatgirl View Post...you must must must get to white dome, pizza temps and then, ideally, spread your fire out over the whole hearth and let it die down for a couple of hours before you rake out for bread. If I *just* fire to pizza temp (in my 36" pompeii, that's 1.5-2 hours depending on how big a fire I make), rake out immediately and let it come down to baking temp, I'll have burnt bottoms every time, no matter what the thermometer says. A longer firing and heat cycle works produces a much nicer result for me.
Funny thing is that I purchased both Scott's book and the BBA at the same time but just started reading the BBA. I think I will try the non-SD French Bread mix.Originally posted by splatgirl View Post...As Jay says, Bread Bakers Apprentice (or any of the other Reinhardt titles) is a good book for beginners.
I need to go hit the store this morning and my new term IDY is on top of the list! I assume the Fleischmann's "Rapid Rise" is the item from my local supermarket?Originally posted by splatgirl View Post...IDY, aka instant dry yeast is also known as bread machine yeast, which you can find in the supermarket in the little envelopes to start with. Active dry yeast is fine and will work, the difference being ADY wants to be dissolved in water before meeting dry ingredients vs. IDY that can go right in with the dry stuff. Most serious bread baking texts and recipes are written for IDY, so if you're going to go all in with this, you may as well standardize that variable as soon as possible.
Thanks guys, I REALLY appreciate the pointers (this is one of the GREAT aspects of the internet!) I now have a direction, an awakening (bread is not just open the packages, mix the igredients and Viola!) and though humbled, I am not discouraged or disheartened!Originally posted by texassourdough View PostHi Eric!
...I use Fleichman's. Buy it by the pound. Use it mainly for pizza. Keep it in the freezer for years.
Straight dough is best for learning - just flour, water salt with baker's percentages 100, 62 to 66 or so for water, and 2 for salt in the final dough. The bread will be better if you do a preferment or a presoak of the flour. I will give you some recipes when I am awake.
More soon!
Jay
What is now killing me is our weather is turning to rain again as we have so spoiled for the last three weeks here in Northern California (it was 82 on SuperBowl Sunday) and I have not finished my WFOs enclosure, but when done my I will be able to bake/cook in the rain with planned overhang and lighting!
One more question; If I move my bread honing skills indoors (electric convection oven) do I just use a plain baking sheet, one of the double layer baking sheets or should I use a stone?
Again, Thanks!
Eric.
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
you must must must get to white dome, pizza temps and then, ideally, spread your fire out over the whole hearth and let it die down for a couple of hours before you rake out for bread. If I *just* fire to pizza temp (in my 36" pompeii, that's 1.5-2 hours depending on how big a fire I make), rake out immediately and let it come down to baking temp, I'll have burnt bottoms every time, no matter what the thermometer says. A longer firing and heat cycle works produces a much nicer result for me.
What's your favorite kind of bread? Start with that. Pick a recipe and give it a go. Repeat as necessary
As Jay says, Bread Bakers Apprentice (or any of the other Reinhardt titles) is a good book for beginners.
IDY, aka instant dry yeast is also known as bread machine yeast, which you can find in the supermarket in the little envelopes to start with. Active dry yeast is fine and will work, the difference being ADY wants to be dissolved in water before meeting dry ingredients vs. IDY that can go right in with the dry stuff. Most serious bread baking texts and recipes are written for IDY, so if you're going to go all in with this, you may as well standardize that variable as soon as possible.
At some point you may find it worthwhile to purchase in a larger package. I also buy mine 1lb. at a time (I use SAF), freezing half the package until I'm through the first half. I mostly do sourdough, so I'm on about a 1/2lb. a year schedule with yeast.
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
Hi Eric!
You really need to take it way past pizza. If you have Scott he will say fire for 3 to 4 hours. If you have a Pompeii two is probably enough - maybe even one and a half for a light load, but if you don't put heat into the refractory you can't get heat back and without heat you can't bake. Putting a big load of dough in the oven (and/or spraying) can easily knock the temp of the surface of the hearth to 300 range. It is the heat you put in the refractory in the extended burn that gives you the heat to get back to the baking range of 450 or so. (and the temp should bounce back to at least 485 or so after you take the bread out and close the door - to prep for the second batch if you were going to do one).
I use Fleichman's. Buy it by the pound. Use it mainly for pizza. Keep it in the freezer for years.
Straight dough is best for learning - just flour, water salt with baker's percentages 100, 62 to 66 or so for water, and 2 for salt in the final dough. The bread will be better if you do a preferment or a presoak of the flour. I will give you some recipes when I am awake.
More soon!
Jay
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
Jay,
Thanks for the tips. Just a few more questions before I give it another try as I think the weather here is going to turn to rain again, I know, I know! most people don't realize that it does rain in California and the temps are supposed to get down into the 30s! (I might even need to put on long pants again!)
- What temp should I take the WFO up to before removing the coals/fire? I had not been taking it up to pizza temps 850 - 950 F (interior dome temps)
- Any IDY (I finally figured that one out, I think) recipes that you would recomend?
- Any IDY breads to stay away from until I start getting some of the easier recipes down?
Eric.
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
Hi Eric!
I realized I needed to be explicit on the steaming and forgot to edit it when I had connectivity problems this morning. It is revised. And it is only for a WFO. While you can use garden sprayer (dedicated to WATER ONLY for the oven) on a conventional oven there are IMO better ways like cast iron skillets with lava rocks (which can be used in a WFO also). (but you still want to spray a WFO before and after loading to make sure the humidity is high in the oven). I am after a very specific look and finish on my bread and I haven't been able get it in a WFO without heavy dough loading. I even make load 85% hydration ciabatta in my bread batches to get a bit more steam in the oven. It is not often I want 15 pounds of bread so I mainly bake indoors. There are a number of people on this forum who try to bake one or two loaves and that invites lots of crust problems IMO. If you work in 5 to 8 pound loads you will do much better than in smaller batches.
Chicken grease shouldn't be a problem if the oven is heat loaded but you probably need to fire for two hours or more - periodically - to burn it out of the hearth. I am personally not crazy about the idea of having lots of grease on the hearth for the grease will soak down and permeate the cooler parts of your hearth and undoubtedly eventually turn rancid.
First, burn well past clearing to insure the oven is heat loaded. Clear it (just get most of the stuff out). Close it up and let it heat soak - this creates a more uniform temp through the refractory and loads the refractory so it can send heat back to the oven to bake the bread. Ideally it should heat soak an hour or so. Ideally, at that point the temp on the hearth should be about 600 F and it should be pretty uniform. Here is where you can slow down or speed up a bit depending on how your dough is progressing. If you want to speed up, you can start cleaning the oven a bit early and this time sweep it well. Usually you don't mop until the last minute, but if you want to speed things up more, mop early. The temp will probably drop to 580 or so while cleaning - more if you mop. Close it back up or leave it open depending on how fast it needs to cool off to your loading temp. Get your bread ready... I like to load at 565 but 550 is fine. When the temp is 5-10 degrees hotter, mop the oven well. NOTE: the mop should not be sopping wet. Just damp. This removes excess ash, humidifies the oven some and drops the temp. If the temp is right, spray the oven with your dedicated CLEAN WATER garden sprayer (note this sprayer should be bought from a hardware store and NEVER used with anything but water. It should ideally have a metal wand). Load the bread. Close the door leaving a crack. Spray some more - not on the loaves and not on the refractory but in the air. With a fine mist it will evaporate rapidly and shouldn't cause erosion of the refractory.
Seal, and check back after about 25 to 30 minutes. Rotate loaves as necessary/appropriate. Bake until at least 205 internal temp (and I usually shoot for 210 and higher).
Hang in there. My goal is not to discourage you but to foster realistic expectations. If you follow the path above you should be able to make very nice loaves in 5 pound batches. But use IDY so you can reasonably predict when the bread will be ready to bake until you are consistent. You only have about a 30 minute window for optimal loaves (and I can easily argue 15 but...30 isn't a disaster. An hour can be!)Peter Reinharts recipes in BBA and recent books are a good start and just like pizza dough, the overnight process greatly adds flavor.
Let me know how your next batch works.
Jay
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
Originally posted by texassourdough View Post...you can learn a lot about crust and steam/humidity in a conventional oven too. I don't like this answer but spray for at least 30 seconds before loading. Close the door to a crack and steam for another 30 or so. Seal it and leave it for at least 30 minutes...
Could you elaborate more on the steam process?- Is your method for steaming for an inside regular oven or the WFO? ? Or both?
- Why don't you like this method?
- Is it a substitution for the 15 lbs of dough, which I wouldn't have a problem with if I can get the bread correct!
NO, no sugar and no oil in the recipe.Do you have any sugar or oil in your bread? Straight lean dough with no additives shouldn't burn on the bottom unless the oven is really hot.
I do cook chicken in the oven directly on the hearth which has lots of grease spewing out, but I usually have that in a different area and cleaned (I think) with the fire/coals stack. Could the chicken grease be a problem?
You need coals all over the floor so the whole floor is hot and relatively uniform. Measure the hearth the dome should be 30 to 50 F warmer. One of the real tricks for bread is every oven is a bit different and you have to learn YOUR oven. My temps are useful only as a beginning point/reference. Your oven may hold more heat or release it back to the oven faster. That would mean you need to start at a lower temp.
I have not been doing that with the coals, I will try that next time.
So would 550 F on the hearth be a good starting point?
And is that after I swab the hearth? I have been using a damp towel on a rake to swab after removing the coals.
Thanks again for the help and suggestions, I am sure I will have more questions, comments and questions and probably a few more questions!
Eric.
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
Hi Eric!
Thanks for your response. I know how bad a failure can feel in front of "company" and you earned an "honest" critique. Glad you understood how to take it. You can make decent crust with less than 15 pounds but great crust in my experience can't be gotten easily with 5 pounds. Others on the listserve are much happier than me with their small batches. I don't know if they have lower standards or better methods. NOTE: you can learn a lot about crust and steam/humidity in a conventional oven too. I don't like this answer but spray the inside of the WFO for at least 30 seconds before loading. Load the loaves quickly. Close the door to a crack and steam for another 30 or so. Seal it and leave it for at least 30 minutes.
Do you have any sugar or oil in your bread? Straight lean dough with no additives shouldn't burn on the bottom unless the oven is really hot.
You need coals all over the floor so the whole floor is hot and relatively uniform. Measure the hearth the dome should be 30 to 50 F warmer. One of the real tricks for bread is every oven is a bit different and you have to learn YOUR oven. My temps are useful only as a beginning point/reference. Your oven may hold more heat or release it back to the oven faster. That would mean you need to start at a lower temp.
That you need to learn your oven is another reason you need consistency. If you aren't consistent you can't use the results to adjust so you go crazy. Best to make only one or two breads, over and over until they are reliable. Then when you change something you can learn from the results. IDY yeasted boules or ciabatta are a great way to learn.
Hang in there!
JayLast edited by texassourdough; 02-12-2011, 10:03 AM.
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
It also amazes me how easy the pizzas were to learn and how brutal the SD bread thing has so far been.
When I was building (not that I am finished) this thing last summer, I did not bother reading the cooking section as I was focused on the construction aspect.
Cooking bread seemed so easy while pizzas seemed like they were going to have the learning curve. Oh well! Live and learn, and if burnt sourdough bread is my biggest problem in life?!!!!
So I think I will continue with my pizzas (the kids LOVE em) chicken, lamb, roasts, tomato's and keep chugging away with the sourdough probably taking a little more notes and giving it more attention.
Eric.
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
Jay,
First of all, let me say "Thanks" for the reply and do not even begin to think that you are going to hurt my feelings. Remember I am the first one to say my SD bread has so far been a Fail! The reason that I posted was to try to figure out what I did wrong.
I need to cook 15 lbs of dough at a time to get good SD crusts! WOW!Originally posted by texassourdough View PostHi Eric!...
3) having enough humidity (steam) to give a proper crust (which in my experience requires about 15 pounds of dough in a 1 meter oven so you could figure 18). There are "workarounds" for not having enough dough but the results are IMO reliably inferior.
We are having a difficult time with the recommended proofing Temps mostly, I think it is 70 to 75 degree (F) range which sounds easy but our house is not in that temp range usually. It changes during the day and night as it is a big open plan house. Any suggestions or tips?First issue: Proofing. You need enough experience that you can reliably have the bread ready to bake at a predictable time. This takes experience, practice, and anal dedication to details like starter and levain activity and temperature control.
My oven is not completely insulated yet as I am not done with the upper enclosure, but it does have about a two inch thick layer of vermiculite concrete with a layer of stucco over that to keep it working during the winter until I get back interested in it enough to start the construction again.Second issue: Oven Temp. You need to fire the oven until it is well loaded. At least an hour and a half and preferably 2 hours or more in my experience. Clearing is not enough for the outer refractory will still be pulling heat from the oven chamber. Then clear the oven and close it up and let it heat soak (temperature equalize). Then clean it good and mop it out at about 600 F and get the temp to the desired point - for YOUR oven and YOUR loading. I load my oven at about 560 on the hearth. I spray a little water before and after loading but I rely on the bread for most of my steam. Close the door for at least 45 minutes (in my case) before checking the bread but that is a function of loaf size and other things.
My oven temps vary depending on where I take the reading, the dome gets the hottest and the floor the coolest except where the fire was/is. Where should I be taking the readings? With Pizza it seems to be the upper area of the dome's interior. And I am using an infrared gun to read the temps.
No cheese in this recipe or in the oven at the time, but the bottom of that loaf was definitely charred. And yes my readings are in Fahrenheit.There are a variety of confusing and contradictory elements in your description of the results/baking conditions.
Your say the bottom of one loaf was burned. That would normally be too hot ahearth but you say "oven temp was 400 to 550 (I assume F). As a result I am forced to suspect the char was burned cheese.
The cheese was in our very first attempt (my wife's idea) which turned out perfect. It was a different recipe on a different day that used dry yeast, not sourdough.
What is strange to me is that on one hand it sounds like the oven hearth was not hot enough, definitely under 600 F before the swab down, but it also seems like it was too hot as that first loaf (of the second attempt) charred the bottom.
That I believe and we need practice.You say the bread hadn't risen. Then it wasn't ready to bake! Period! However, it is also worth noting that cheese contains protease which breaks down gluten and diminishes bread's ability to rise. Using milk products in sourdoughs invites problems and you need to be able to make it indoors before you do it outdoors. Experimenting with recipes needs to be done indoors and with no schedule. Back to point one. You have to be able to have the bread at its peak at a predictable time.
Your second loaf seems to suggest the oven temp was not too hot but that proofing was an issue. However, your reference to temps from 400 to 550 gives me no confidence in your oven temp. While bread can be reasonably baked at hearth temps down to 450 or so, sourdough in my experience really wants higher temps. I have no idea what temp would be best for your cheese loaf. But you also need to insulate your oven before you put any serious effort into bread. It needs to hold temp and not leak the heat outside!
It does hold the heat fairly well, I just don't have anything to compare it to.
Welcome to the WFOs Make Sourdough Bakers Humble Club. It is quite simply not easy to make great sourdough in a WFO! It takes attention to detail and a lot of practice to get reliable results.
Good Luck!
Jay
Thanks again and we are not giving up just yet, though I may try some other yeast based recipes now and then as confidence builders!
Eric.
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Re: Sourdough Bread FAILURE!!
We love us some Jay
Been there, done that. I had the added bonus of trying to establish my sourdough culture from scratch, in addition to learning the whole sourdough deal and the ins and outs of WFO bread baking.
Just learning to manage and read a sourdough starter is an undertaking, nevermind getting it to do what you want, when you want.
I agree most emphatically with Jay that it is much, much easier to learn in the indoor oven and then move on to WFO. And if you're a rank beginner with artisan breads, get good at yeasted doughs first. Bread has a bajillion variables that you need to get right to have it come out great. Sourdough has double that many.
With regard to baking bread in the WFO, I've found that a "standard" 1.5 or 2 hour firing, just up to full temp white dome, and then cool down doesn't produce as nice a loaf as when I've kept an active fire and held pizza temp for few hours--or several--I haven't found the lower limit, but I know that 2 hours is too short. I almost always end up with overdone bottom crusts with a short heat cycle, whereas if I'm baking bread after a pizza party or other longer firing, they come out perfect.
Be patient, keep trying, and be as systematic about it as you can be at first. Bread baking is the kind of hobby that always offers you opportunities for learning and improving. That's what keeps it interesting!
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