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  • Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

    I have made the Hamelman ciabatta with the 12-16 hour poolish twice in the past week. I feel like I am learning a lot.

    The poolish is 300gr flour, 300gr water and a pinch of yeast for overnight fermentation, and then a 3 hour bulk fermentation of the finished dough. It is 73% hyrdration (thought I was measuring fast and went over on the water).

    You fold the wet dough twice during bulk fermenation to give it some structure to make those big holes.

    I used cold water, and ran a 3 minute mix, 3 minute knead on #2, and then a fast knead on high for 1 minute. The dough never got over 66?.

    I cut each batch into four pieces, and folded two into a dog bone and left two unshaped. I will report if I think the fold helps -- as I have seen recipes with both techniques.

    All a lot of fun. These two batches have been on my FB Stone, and I will move outside into the wood oven when I really feel like I have the dough technique under control.

    James
    Pizza Ovens
    Outdoor Fireplaces

  • #2
    Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

    James,
    I've been playing with this one too. My Hammelman says the recipe is 3 loaves, although the directions seem to lead to four. First time I tried it, I cut the recipe by a third for one loaf. Came out well on a stone (no WFO for me yet!). I tried the full recipe again the other day. Definitely much more challenging to maneuver and fold! These came out a bit flat with smaller crumb, but I had to rush the poolish a bit (12hr instead of 16) and I think this made a big difference. I notice you are going for cooler temps (66). I don't have the book in front of me, but seem to remember him recommending 75. Why cooler? Do you increase the bulk time?

    Pdiff

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    • #3
      Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

      Hey Pdiff,

      I don't think the shorter poolish should have that big of an impact. What else do you think might account for less oven spring or final proof? Room or dough temperature could do it. Still, even in the upper 60's, my yeast doughs still get there. Sourdough is a different set of issues.

      Do you think your yeast is alive and consistent?

      A 12 hour poolish and a cooler room temperature bulk fermentation really should give you the lift you want.

      Let me know what happens.
      James
      Pizza Ovens
      Outdoor Fireplaces

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      • #4
        Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

        Pdiff
        James is correct, the shorter poolish ferment time should not have been the issue. It is not really a starter but more of a natural conditioner and flavor additive IMHO. Was there a possibility that you could have deflated the loaves when transferring them to the oven? I know you said you were in a bit of a hurry and that the dough was a bit more challenging to fold an maneuver so my mind tends to move in the direction of handling.
        Let us know!
        Best
        Dutch
        "Making the simple complicated is commonplace; making the complicated simple, awesomely simple, that's creativity. " Charles Mingus
        "Build at least two brick ovens...one to make all the mistakes on and the other to be just like you dreamed of!" Dutch

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        • #5
          Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

          Dutch, James,

          I think you're on the right track. One of the maxims I offer the participants in my WFO workshops, among others, is this: "If you can find any way to reduce the amount of dough handling and still get satisfactory results, do it." Most of the problems I've seen among the many people who have attended at Mary G's come down to overhandling the dough in a misguided attempt at perfection. Perfection, or something near enough, comes from repetition, practice. Speed of handling is the first principle.

          Jim
          "Made are tools, and born are hands"--William Blake, 1757-1827

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          • #6
            Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

            Thanks for the reply, James. I think you may be right on the poolish times. I ran another batch with similar results. The bread tastes fine, but not quite what I'm aiming for volume wise. The yeast are definitely active - lots of bubbling and the dough at least doubles between folds. I may be having some issues with moving proofed loaves to the peel, however. That may be deflating things before they get going. Any hints there?

            I'll keep at it, though :-) On a positive note, I think I have a connection for some free fire bricks, so the building process (or preparation, anyway) can begin!

            Pdiff

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            • #7
              Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

              Ok. I think you guys are right. Any ideas for improvement on handling? Would it be better to proof on parchment on the peel (remember, I'm still working with a conventional electric oven here, IR on the stone reads 450-500* before loading). That would allow me to skip the pre-loading handling and pop the loaf straight to the stone. Getting adequate steam is a challenge too. Hammelman suggests that can effect spring (as well as color and crust).

              Thanks for any leads,

              Pdiff

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              • #8
                Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

                An interesting aside: While recently on vacation in Umbria, every day a fresh, warm loaf of ciabatta was delivered to the agriturismo place my wife and I were staying at - near Montefalco. The ciabatta had a wonderful cruncy crust and a soft, silky interior with lots of holes. I went to the "panificio" / bakery and asked for their formula and technique. They used a soft wheat (grano tenero), tipo 0, a normal yeast and a beer yeast, water and no salt. They did an over night preferment and baked in a gas oven at about 450*F. What I found to be interesting is the use of a lower protein (~9%), coarser flour vs Hamelman's King Arthur Bread flour (~13%) AND- the use of two different yeasts. (The lack of salt is the tradition in Tuscany and Umbria.) I will try this soon. Does anyone have any thoughts on using all-purpose or even a pastry/all-purpose flour and a good beer yeast- or maybe a sourdough??? Richard

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                • #9
                  Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

                  Nice find Richard -- sounds like a great trip. Sigh.

                  Lots of good info here. The Italians definitely use a lower gluten flour than most U.S. bakeries -- there is a thread in the forum on the differences between using KA general purpose flour and KA bread flour for Ciabatta. I've been using KA general purpose and often I use the Caputo flour, which is nice and light. I wouldn't describe Tipo 0 as course, but rather that Tipo 00 is very fine. I've seen a lot of Ciabatta made using Tipo 00 as well.

                  There is a difference between Pane Toscano, which does not have salt, and Ciabatta, which does. Do you remember eating a denser, drier crusty bread -- without any holes? It's what you get in just about every restaurant, and it makes up about 85% of the bread in the stores. You might call it an acquired taste, but everyone we know (other than people born in Tuscany) just flat out don't like it. The locals get really defensive. :-)

                  You would find yourself walking into a bakery and asking if they had any bread with salt! C'e qualcosa con sale? Qualcosa?

                  Definitely give it a shot with lighter flour and see if it tastes like your memory. I think it is pretty difficult finding brewers yeast for bread here -- it's all you can find in Italy. I'm not sure how much of an impact yeast has -- but I asked Peter Reinhart once, and he thought it was pretty far down the list of things that have the great effect on your bread.

                  Let us know how it goes.
                  James
                  Pizza Ovens
                  Outdoor Fireplaces

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                  • #10
                    Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

                    James, Thank you for the perspective on flours. I have the Caputo tipo 000 from FornoBravo which I'll use with KA general purpose and see. Based on what your feedback from Reinhart was, I'll stick with a single yeast. In Tuscany and Umbria, many bakeries have a Ciabatta style bread that is made without salt. Pane Toscano is a different, denser bread; it is the norm throughout those regions. We got use to eating bread without salt; the fresh warm Ciabatta we got was heavenly- the textures far outshone the bread not having salt. Richard

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                    • #11
                      Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

                      Just found this forum and it looks like a great place.

                      I just made the best bread I've ever had with an odd, but easy, technique. I made a very wet dough, 80% hydration:15 oz KA bread flour, 12 oz water, 1/4 instant tsp yeast, 1/34 tsp kosher salt, and 1 tbl olive oil.

                      I used room temperature water, dumped in the yeast and let it sit for a minute, then put in the oil and mixed in the flour/salt by hand. I covered it and let it sit on the counter until it about doubled and then put it in the refrigerator. I left it there for about 36 hours without touching it once.

                      I took it out and let it warm up for a couple of hours and then dumped the whole wet mass onto a piece of floured parchment paper, being carefull to not degass it. I roughly pushed it into the ciabatta shape, floured the top a bit, covered it and let it rise for about 3 hours. I then baked the thing on a stone (still on the parchment paper... it's too wet to do anything else) at about 450 degrees until it reached 205 degrees internal and let it cool.

                      It was great! Crisp but chewy crust, soft open crumb with nice big holes, and a wonderful sourdough aroma from the 3 days of fermentation. Next time I think I'll try a week.

                      No kneading, no folding, no nothing. I think I've found ciabatta nirvana.

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                      • #12
                        Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

                        Ok, I'll put my my second effort at ciabatta here, the first recipe I have tried out of Hamelmann's book...

                        The only thing I didn't do was the folding - the dough was so very wet and just sat there for so long without rising at all, I couldn't face removing the few small bubbles that had formed. Probably a mistake.

                        After shaping it just sat there for three hours getting flatter and floppier, until I got fed up and shoved it in the oven anyway. I put it in the oven right on the baking tray, thinking that this would reduce handling... good idea? I don't know.

                        Actually none of my bread rose properly before baking yesterday. Maybe we should turn up the heating for bake days? That and put everybody in chains who leaves the outside kitchen door open!!

                        All things cosdidered it turned out better than I expected, but that's not saying much! It does taste nice, still lots of room for improvement though.
                        "Building a Brick oven is the most fun anyone can have by themselves." (Terry Pratchett... slightly amended)

                        http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/p...pics-2610.html
                        http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f9/p...nues-2991.html

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                        • #13
                          Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

                          I'm sorry your bread didn't rise properly. I know how you feel! I'm trying again with sourdough today. I spiked my dough with a little IDY, and I'm going to put in in the fridge overnight. We'll see what I have in the morning...

                          I've been feeding my sourdough everyday for nearly a week- throwing away half and building it up. Hopefully that has increased activity.

                          I keep our house between 65 and 68 degrees, so I'm wondering if maybe that's a problem for my bread.
                          Elizabeth

                          http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/e...html#post41545

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                          • #14
                            Re: Ciabatta Italian Hearth Bread

                            I just received Forno Bravo's email (dated 1/29) with a recipe for Ciabatta. As I bake by weight rather than volume, does anyone know the weights for the recipe? I'd really appreciate it.....

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                            • #15
                              Re: Hamelman's Poolish Ciabatta

                              Hey people, look at this picture!

                              One Ciabatta was made in my conventional oven a few days ago, the other came out of the WFO this afternoon... and they looked identical before baking. Now guess which is which...

                              This has to be THE picture to show any doubting spouses/friends/neighbours who think you're mad to build your oven.
                              "Building a Brick oven is the most fun anyone can have by themselves." (Terry Pratchett... slightly amended)

                              http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/p...pics-2610.html
                              http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f9/p...nues-2991.html

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