There is a beautiful loaf in the photos section of "The Village Baker", so I tried that today. The bread in the photo must be huge, as it has 20 slash marks on it.
Anyway, my loaf was fermented much of the day from only 50gr of starter flour to 450gr of finish flour. Then I shaped the loaf and let it proof overnight in a linen covered banneton. I did give it almost an hour to warm up before baking it, but you could see that it was more dense than the previous loaf that bake pretty nicely.
It had that big oven spring explosion that I have been trying to work out. It looks like a big wart -- or burl on a redwood tree. A callous, or what a marshmallow looks like when you burn it in a fire. A knot, a bump, a hump. Quasimoto the bread.
I'm leaning toward the underproofed; over sprung theory, but I can't figure out why a loaf proofed overnight would be so underproof.
Oh well, it's fun trying to figure it out. I think the spiral pattern is pretty cool.
Enjoy your weekend!
James
Anyway, my loaf was fermented much of the day from only 50gr of starter flour to 450gr of finish flour. Then I shaped the loaf and let it proof overnight in a linen covered banneton. I did give it almost an hour to warm up before baking it, but you could see that it was more dense than the previous loaf that bake pretty nicely.
It had that big oven spring explosion that I have been trying to work out. It looks like a big wart -- or burl on a redwood tree. A callous, or what a marshmallow looks like when you burn it in a fire. A knot, a bump, a hump. Quasimoto the bread.
I'm leaning toward the underproofed; over sprung theory, but I can't figure out why a loaf proofed overnight would be so underproof.
Oh well, it's fun trying to figure it out. I think the spiral pattern is pretty cool.
Enjoy your weekend!
James
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