CanukJim said in another thread (http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/11/p...ml#post13719): "Call it a sourdough, a levain, a barm, wild yeast or what have you, they all refer to propogating a culture of the resident airbourne yeast in a particular area. The are about a zillion ways of going about beginning one of these, but there's really no mystery to it. Just create a receptive environment of water and flour, and the yeast and other good bugs will take up residence. It takes a while to do this, but once you've got it, you've got it. The flavour of wild yeast bread beats commercial yeast hollow."
So there are a zillion ways... but only two have ever worked for me! In the far-distant past I bought one, but for the past couple of decades I've started them with grapes. No matter what the books say about starting a culture with rye, or seeds, or anything else... the only thing that works for me is to drop a couple of unwashed grapes into a moist slurry of flour and water. All else seems to turn into a rank-smelling goo.
What has worked the best for you? Can one really tell the difference between wild yeast cultures started in various ways?
So there are a zillion ways... but only two have ever worked for me! In the far-distant past I bought one, but for the past couple of decades I've started them with grapes. No matter what the books say about starting a culture with rye, or seeds, or anything else... the only thing that works for me is to drop a couple of unwashed grapes into a moist slurry of flour and water. All else seems to turn into a rank-smelling goo.
What has worked the best for you? Can one really tell the difference between wild yeast cultures started in various ways?
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