I was quite inspired by James' breads as described in the "Steam Explosion" thread, so had a go at it myself.
I have made a couple of other attemps previously, but they did not turn out very well.
This time (fluke maybe) it turned out quite good.
The recipe was a modification of the basic recipe that James used, but modified for use with a wild yeast starter (the Austrian yeast from Sourdo.com)
recipe details were as follows:
425 grms of (pretty bog standard) bread flour.
250 mls of water
10 grs of salt.
1 cup (~150 grs) of active starter.
All the ingredients were kneaded with a bread machine for about 15 minutes and then left to rise/ferment in a 'coolish' environment (its winter time here) for about 12-13 hours.
An enamelled Dutch Oven was preheated in the oven at 220C and the dough was carefully transferred to the Dutch Oven and then cooked for about 15 minutes with the lid on and then another 10-15 minutes with the lid off.
It basically uses the cooking technique from the "No Knead" recipe, and it worked out very well. The bread did not last long...
I have made a couple of other attemps previously, but they did not turn out very well.
This time (fluke maybe) it turned out quite good.
The recipe was a modification of the basic recipe that James used, but modified for use with a wild yeast starter (the Austrian yeast from Sourdo.com)
recipe details were as follows:
425 grms of (pretty bog standard) bread flour.
250 mls of water
10 grs of salt.
1 cup (~150 grs) of active starter.
All the ingredients were kneaded with a bread machine for about 15 minutes and then left to rise/ferment in a 'coolish' environment (its winter time here) for about 12-13 hours.
An enamelled Dutch Oven was preheated in the oven at 220C and the dough was carefully transferred to the Dutch Oven and then cooked for about 15 minutes with the lid on and then another 10-15 minutes with the lid off.
It basically uses the cooking technique from the "No Knead" recipe, and it worked out very well. The bread did not last long...
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