Re: adventures in sourdough or how to nearly kill your bread without actually doing i
Today's effort:
I put it in the fridge last night already shaped. I think I may prefer doing it in the batch, and shaping in the morning, though. Partly because then I don't have to rearrange the refrigerator! There's a lot of dh's beer in there. Also, I didn't like the skin I got on the loaves- I sprayed them with oil and covered them, but they still skinned up.
I am pleased with the color I got (well, everywhere on top, that is!) and the oven spring. I don't know if you can see it, but the, um, "overcaramelised" loaf has a distinct imprint from the oven floor- and evidently only ONE brick was nuclear hot. I don't understand this at all. I do have a little too much color on a couple of the other loaves, but they're not bad at all.
I don't know what they look like inside yet.
I've been making a sort of no-knead recipe with a lot of starter. I think I like it better than the one I do in the mixer, but then, I like my bread a bit on the holey side. The mixer kneaded recipe turns out a more even crumb.
Still working on oven management. I think I didn't allow enough time after swabbing the floor for it to even out. Maybe someone at home will surprise me with an IR thermometer for Christmas and I won't have to guess! T'would be nice. I might be able to identify the nuclear brick, too.
The question of the day is: how do you decide how to load the oven? I'm still not able to do what I would think is an efficient job of it. Maybe I need to practice with my finished loaves and the peel in the cooled off oven? I don't seem to be able to get them aimed right! I never have trouble jerking pizza off the peel in the right spot, but loaves are another matter.
Today's effort:
I put it in the fridge last night already shaped. I think I may prefer doing it in the batch, and shaping in the morning, though. Partly because then I don't have to rearrange the refrigerator! There's a lot of dh's beer in there. Also, I didn't like the skin I got on the loaves- I sprayed them with oil and covered them, but they still skinned up.
I am pleased with the color I got (well, everywhere on top, that is!) and the oven spring. I don't know if you can see it, but the, um, "overcaramelised" loaf has a distinct imprint from the oven floor- and evidently only ONE brick was nuclear hot. I don't understand this at all. I do have a little too much color on a couple of the other loaves, but they're not bad at all.
I don't know what they look like inside yet.
I've been making a sort of no-knead recipe with a lot of starter. I think I like it better than the one I do in the mixer, but then, I like my bread a bit on the holey side. The mixer kneaded recipe turns out a more even crumb.
Still working on oven management. I think I didn't allow enough time after swabbing the floor for it to even out. Maybe someone at home will surprise me with an IR thermometer for Christmas and I won't have to guess! T'would be nice. I might be able to identify the nuclear brick, too.
The question of the day is: how do you decide how to load the oven? I'm still not able to do what I would think is an efficient job of it. Maybe I need to practice with my finished loaves and the peel in the cooled off oven? I don't seem to be able to get them aimed right! I never have trouble jerking pizza off the peel in the right spot, but loaves are another matter.
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