Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

First loaves of bread

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #76
    Re: First loaves of bread

    Hi David. I agree with Jay on the firing of the oven. It never got hot enough if it didn't clear.

    Don't worry about putting sourdough on hold- although you do want to feed the beasties every now and then. Getting a feel for other breads will help you a lot when you are ready to start up again. Sourdough will always be less predictable than IDY, though. With a lot of help, though, I've learned how to deal with the seasonal vagaries of sourdough. Mostly.

    If you want to try a nifty breakfasty loaf, try a white regular dough (like you'd bake in a pan) and add in cracked sugar cubes which you have coated in cinnamon. About 1/2 c per 9x5 loaf will do it. I knead them in after mixing. You get these cool pockets of sweet cinnamony goodness...
    Elizabeth

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

    Comment


    • #77
      Re: First loaves of bread

      Sorry to ask , I'm a total newbie on this: Jay and Elizabeth, you mention the word "clear". What are you clearing? And what is loading? I don't want to commandeer Davids thread on his bread so I'll start a new one on my wfo loaves I baked yesterday with pics and hopefully you all can help me out too. It turned out pretty good but David and Jay seem to say the oven is sprayed with water AFTER the loaves are put in? I assumed you sprayed seconds before but with a fine mist. It looks (as David says), like I need to get the dome white hot (burn the carbon off) so the spray wont deposit black particles.
      Thank, Dino
      Last edited by Dino_Pizza; 09-21-2009, 02:59 PM. Reason: spulling airer
      "Life is a banquet and most poor sons-of-bitches are starving to death." -Auntie Mame

      View My Picasa Web Album UPDATED oct
      http://picasaweb.google.com/Dino747?feat=directlink


      My Oven Costs Spreadsheet
      http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?k...BF19875Rnp84Uw


      My Oven Thread
      http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/d...arts-5883.html

      Comment


      • #78
        Re: First loaves of bread

        You know I am sick of all these baking books/blogs with one impossible picture after another of exquisitely crafted loaves (Reinhart, Glazer, Bertinet, TexasSourdough et al.) One day, I will publish the world's ugliest but most useful baking book: every recipe will be accompanied by at least four disaster photos with captions explaining what went wrong. Believe me, I will have no shortage of illustrations.
        -David

        Comment


        • #79
          Re: First loaves of bread

          ROFL!
          Jay


          You know I am sick of all these baking books/blogs with one impossible picture after another of exquisitely crafted loaves (Reinhart, Glazer, Bertinet, TexasSourdough et al.) One day, I will publish the world's ugliest but most useful baking book: every recipe will be accompanied by at least four disaster photos with captions explaining what went wrong. Believe me, I will have no shortage of illustrations.
          __________________
          -David

          Comment


          • #80
            Re: First loaves of bread

            Hi Dino!

            Clearing relates to getting the oven up to "working" temperature. When you fire up your oven the inner walls will turn black from soot and tars from the wood. The black will burn off and the interior of the oven will be clean ("clear") when the dome reaches 750 degrees F. That's not quite as hot as you would like to have it for pizza but its close enough for government work (besides it will keep heating anyway if you have a fire in the oven). Most of our ovens seem to take about 45 min to an hour to clear. There will be no soot in the oven. Just clean brick/refractory. At that point you can reasonably begin removing embers and ashes and setting the oven up for pizza (which will include cooling off the hearth a bit for it should be too hot after the coals have been sitting on it.

            To do bread, you want to drive more heat into the oven so you have more heat that the oven can give back during the baking. That was the "loading' I referred to - keep a big fire going another half hour to hour so you have packed more heat into the refractory. When you take the fire out though the oven will be too hot (on the surface) and cooler on the "outside" of the refractory, so you let it equalize until the hearth reaches around 550. At that point it is ready to put the bread in.

            As I indicated I mop to both get ash off and to slightly humidify the oven. I usually don't spray the oven before loading bread but it is a function of how much bread I am doing. I like to make about 4-5 pounds of ciabatta (really wet) and I load that first to start humidifying the oven. Then my boules and other loaves. Then about a 10 second mist that hopefully doesn't land on the bread. I want it to vaporize. Then close the door.

            I personally do not like the crust when one makes a couple of loaves in a big oven. I have tried spraying a lot to get the humidity high enough but it just doesn't work for me. The approach above gives me crust and look I like.

            There is a "preferred" temperature profile during a bake. I don't know what it is exactly, but by the time I "mop" the hearth the oven will have lost quite a bit of heat (in the form of hot air, and the hearth is probably down to 525. By the time I get twelve to 15 pounds of bread in the hearth surface is probably down around 350 or cooler. By the time I spray the interior the interior air is probably not much hotter than 250. What happens then is that the bread is releasing steam rapidly and the oven slowly heats up to probably 450 - 475 with the heat to do so coming from the interior of the refractory. When I finiish my bread I usually get a temp in that range. If I let the oven sit for a half hour it will bounce on up to about 500 to 510 and it is ready for another batch.

            The reason for heat loading the oven is so it can bounce back in temp. If you only heated the oven to 550 and immediately took out the fire and put in the bread there would be no heat stored up and the temp would drop to 350 or so when you loaded and you wouldn't get the WFO bread look and quality. It wouldn't caramelize right becasus there would not be enough stored heat to bounce the temp back up into the baking range.

            That was long but hope it helps!
            Jay
            Last edited by texassourdough; 09-21-2009, 01:00 PM.

            Comment


            • #81
              Re: First loaves of bread

              You the man Jay! That's great info I can really use. It makes sense to spray after the loaves are in since you want that many pounds of dough to go in it. It will take a few minutes to lay them in and arrange. I never thought about the moisture you'll get from multiple loaves in the oven at the same. Also, I didn't realize I need to go to pizza temps then "load" the wfo. Again, thanks for explaining.

              I'm going keep at this same recipe and tweak the firing until I get sourdough boules worthy of Davids "exquisitely crafted loaves" category .

              Thank -Dino
              "Life is a banquet and most poor sons-of-bitches are starving to death." -Auntie Mame

              View My Picasa Web Album UPDATED oct
              http://picasaweb.google.com/Dino747?feat=directlink


              My Oven Costs Spreadsheet
              http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?k...BF19875Rnp84Uw


              My Oven Thread
              http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/d...arts-5883.html

              Comment


              • #82
                Re: First loaves of bread

                On another bread site there have been some hilarious baguette photos uploaded. I may have some pretty pictures of bread but I have made my share of misshapen, weird, and strange frisbees, snakes, clubs, blobs, and, of course the accidental calzone and other charred delights!

                Thanks!
                Jay

                Comment


                • #83
                  Re: First loaves of bread

                  Excuse the bread beginners question, But if i may,,,, When I bake a cheesecake in my home oven I always put in a bowl of water to keep it from cracking, seems to work well for me... Would it be adviseable to put say a small metal can full of water in the oven when baking bread hoping it will steam ?
                  Mark

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Re: First loaves of bread

                    Hi Mark!

                    Sure! You could do that. Probably best to put it in 3-5 minutes before loading so it is boiling when you load. You want it to boil away by the ten minute point of baking. Probably a cup of cold water would be about right. Set it to the side, away from where you will put the bread. It might be good to pull the pan after 10 minutes of baking so the oven can dry out (if there is water left) (and until you figure out how much water to put in the oven.

                    In conventional ovens steaming is a highly discussed art. When I bake on stones inside I use two methods. I put a handful of ice in an aluminum pie pan about five minutes before loading. After loading I pour appx. 3/4 cup boiling water in a cast iron skillet full of lava rocks to provide "super steam" for the first ten minutes or so.

                    BTW... I would use a cast iron skillet for the steam in my WFO. Just put cold water in it and load it in the oven cold. (don't pour cold water in a hot skillet - it can crack)(voice of experience). It should boil in about 2-3 minutes.

                    Try it!
                    Jay

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Re: First loaves of bread

                      thanks jay,, I will pick up a little cast iron skillet to leave out by the oven,,

                      Mark

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Re: First loaves of bread

                        BTW Mark...

                        I haven't used a cast iron skillet in my oven for steam but I use them all the time for appetizers and stuff so having one convenient is a good thing. Only problem will be making sure it doesn't rust.

                        Sunday night as an app I did a pound of shrimp. 1/2 cup olive oil, 1/2 cup of butter, two cloves of garllic sliced, bay leaf, salt, pepper, cayenne (dash), a dash or Worcestershire sauce, about 1 T of rosemary (or thyme is good too, or both). Marinate the shrimp in this for about 1/2 hour (don't worry if the butter is solid). When ready to cook move the marinade to the skillet. Put in oven to cook the garlic - will be hot in about two minutes. Add shrimp and white wine - say a cup. Stir, put back in oven. Cover with an aluminum pizza pan (make great lids - I use them all the time down at the oven). Cook about three minutes. Pull the skillet. Stir and check for doneness. Probably go another minute. Pull just before done and let sit for five to ten minutes. Pretty good!

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Re: First loaves of bread

                          sounds like a great recipe,, will definitely give it a shot,, Love garlic.. And I will make sure to properly season my skillet before i use it

                          Mark

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Re: First loaves of bread

                            Originally posted by egalecki View Post
                            If you want to try a nifty breakfasty loaf, try a white regular dough (like you'd bake in a pan) and add in cracked sugar cubes which you have coated in cinnamon. About 1/2 c per 9x5 loaf will do it. I knead them in after mixing. You get these cool pockets of sweet cinnamony goodness...
                            Elizabeth,

                            Thanks for this tip. I tried it this evening and the only problem was we couldn't wait till morning to try it. "The best bread I've ever had" according to my 4 year old.
                            -David

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Re: First loaves of bread

                              It is really really good. Your 4 year old has great taste!
                              Elizabeth

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

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Re: First loaves of bread

                                Originally posted by Gromit View Post
                                You know I am sick of all these baking books/blogs with one impossible picture after another of exquisitely crafted loaves (Reinhart, Glazer, Bertinet, TexasSourdough et al.) One day, I will publish the world's ugliest but most useful baking book: every recipe will be accompanied by at least four disaster photos with captions explaining what went wrong. Believe me, I will have no shortage of illustrations.
                                That was too funny!!! You could call it "exquisitely crappy loaves"...when I first came to Mississippi from NY a sign in front of the local hotel read "Welcome Crappie Fishermen!"...I am thinking OK they're crappie fisherman but it's pretty rude to tell everyone they're crappie by putting it on the sign"...about 6 months later I found out that crappie is the type of fish and they pronounce it "croppie"
                                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

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X