Hello everyone,
So I baked my very first batch of WFO this past weekend. I used my standard sourdough recipe with a VERY active starter. It's around 60% hydration and a combination of white and rye flours. After bulk fermentation I shaped it into boules and let it proof while the oven was coming down. I slashed a standard cross in the top. 2kg of bread went into the 530 degree (steam filled) oven. So far so good.
Then, the bread completely exploded. The oven spring was like a primal force of nature, and the bread almost turned inside out. I ended up with 4 delicious loaves, but they look...exploded! I won't be baking again until the weekend, but to anyone with more WFO experience: how the heck do I control the spring? Do you find yourselves slashing deeper than you normally would? I've made this bread hundreds of times in my conventional oven, and it's never sprung like that. I'm not complaining about the spring, just the fact that the loaf almost tore itself apart!
Stan
So I baked my very first batch of WFO this past weekend. I used my standard sourdough recipe with a VERY active starter. It's around 60% hydration and a combination of white and rye flours. After bulk fermentation I shaped it into boules and let it proof while the oven was coming down. I slashed a standard cross in the top. 2kg of bread went into the 530 degree (steam filled) oven. So far so good.
Then, the bread completely exploded. The oven spring was like a primal force of nature, and the bread almost turned inside out. I ended up with 4 delicious loaves, but they look...exploded! I won't be baking again until the weekend, but to anyone with more WFO experience: how the heck do I control the spring? Do you find yourselves slashing deeper than you normally would? I've made this bread hundreds of times in my conventional oven, and it's never sprung like that. I'm not complaining about the spring, just the fact that the loaf almost tore itself apart!
Stan
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