I've been fooling around with different whole wheat flours. This week it's Hodgson's Mills whole wheat. I made the wild yeast starter in Whole Grain Breads last night for my bread today- and it was not the same texture at all that I am used to. It was quite wet, for one thing. I couldn't get the same feel in the dough at all. I did add some more flour, but I decided to wait and adjust some more today if needed.
Well, the starter/biga was still quite wet this morning. I added it to the soaker and put it in the mixer, and I had to add a LOT of flour to get the texture anywhere near correct. It's risen ok and is in the wfo now, but I am not sure why it's been so wet.
Has anyone else used this flour? It has bigger particles in it than the KA whole wheat I've been using. Could this affect its ability to absorb moisture? And if it does, is it ok just to add flour until it feels ok? I'd say I added several handfuls to the mixer to get it to the slightly stick stage. Any less than that and I'd have had something more like soup than bread!
I use a scale to measure all my ingredients, so they should all be accurate.
By the way, what kind of scales are you all using? Mine is digital, but I wish it had smaller increments. It only goes by 5g and 1/4 oz. I keep having recipes which call for odd things like 52g. I can't do that! Of course, that 2g seems like about a teaspoon of flour, so maybe it doesn't matter mostly...
Well, the starter/biga was still quite wet this morning. I added it to the soaker and put it in the mixer, and I had to add a LOT of flour to get the texture anywhere near correct. It's risen ok and is in the wfo now, but I am not sure why it's been so wet.
Has anyone else used this flour? It has bigger particles in it than the KA whole wheat I've been using. Could this affect its ability to absorb moisture? And if it does, is it ok just to add flour until it feels ok? I'd say I added several handfuls to the mixer to get it to the slightly stick stage. Any less than that and I'd have had something more like soup than bread!
I use a scale to measure all my ingredients, so they should all be accurate.
By the way, what kind of scales are you all using? Mine is digital, but I wish it had smaller increments. It only goes by 5g and 1/4 oz. I keep having recipes which call for odd things like 52g. I can't do that! Of course, that 2g seems like about a teaspoon of flour, so maybe it doesn't matter mostly...
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