Tartine Country Rye

Tartine Country Rye Loaf

Right up front I will admit that this bread was a disappointment to me. I prefer hearty rye breads and at most, this had a very subtle rye flavor. I even tried to boost the rye flavor by the addition of caraway seeds that the original recipe did not call for. It is not that this is a bad loaf of bread, just not what I like for a rye bread. My favorite rye bread I have made so far is Artisan Sourdough Rye Breadhttps://ourweeklybread.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=116&action=edit&revision=612 at this link.

The original recipe comes from Chad Robertson’s book “ Tartine Bread”. The only changes I made to the recipe were to cut it in half to make one loaf, to add 2 teaspoons of caraway seeds that were lightly toasted and ground, and to bake starting with a cold dutch oven and oven.

The flours used to make this bread were King Arthur Organic Bread Flour and Hodgsons Mill Organic Stone Ground Whole Rye Flour. Disclaimer: I have no affiliation with with either of those companies.

The Formula

Ingredient Amount Bakers %
Starter17g
Water100g
Bread Flour100g
Dough
Leaven100g
Water400g
Bread Flour415g
Rye Flour85g
Salt10g
Caraway Seeds7g (2t)

The following is the process that I used to make this bread. It works for me but you may have a different process that works for you.

My Process

  1. Weigh out the ingredients for the leaven.
  2. Add the starter to the water and mix to incorporate. Add the flour to the mixture and stir until no dry flour remains.
  3. Cover bowl and let stand on counter overnight, but no more than 12 hours.
  4. Weigh out caraway seeds.
  5. Lightly toast the caraway seeds in a dry skillet until just fragrant.
  6. Let cool before grinding in a spice grinder or with a mortar and pestle.
  7. Weigh out the remaining dough ingredients. Reserve 50g of water.
  8. Mix together the 350g of water and starter and stir with a dough whisk until incorporated.
  9. Mix together the bread flour, rye flour and ground caraway seeds.
  10. Slowly add the flour mixture to the starter mixture stirring with a dough whisk and kneading by hand until no dry flour remains.
  11. Transfer the dough to a dough rising container or clean bowl.
  12. Cover and let stand for 1 hour to 1 hour and 15 minutes.
  13. Add 1/3 the salt and 1/3 the remaining water and fold the dough to incorporate. Repeat twice more with the remaining salt and water. There will be water remaining in the container. Don’t worry, it will absorb during the following stretch and folds. Cover and let rest 30 minutes.
  14. Stretch and fold the dough 4 time on 30 minute intervals.
  15. Let dough complete bulk fermentation. It will increase in volume by about 30% and if it is in a clear dough rising container you will see lots of bubbles through the side. Total time from adding the salt and water will be 4 to 6 hours, depending on ambient temperature.
  16. From this point on treat the dough gently. Use a dough scraper to remove the dough to a work surface.
  17. Use a bench knife to work flour underneath the dough and to form a round of dough. Use the bench knife to flip the dough over. Generously flour the top of the dough with flour. Continue to use the bench knife or your hands to shape the dough into a ball. Cover with a clean linen towel.
  18. Let the dough rest on the work surface for 30 minutes.
  19. Final shape the dough into a boule by your favorite method.
  20. Place the boule of dough seam side up in a floured lined banneton for final proofing and place in a plastic bag to prevent drying.
  21. Let dough proof until a finger poke slowly fills. It is better to be slightly under proofed, than to be over proofed.
  22. Place a 10” round of parchment in the dutch oven.
  23. Gently transfer the dough from the banneton to the dutch oven.
  24. Score the dough with a lame.
  25. Cover and place the dutch oven in a cold oven.
  26. Turn oven on to 450F. Timing starts when oven if preheated.
  27. Bake 20 minutes with the cover on. Remove the cover and bake an additional 20 to 25 minutes.
  28. Remove bread to a cooling rack and let cool 2 hours before slicing.
Finished loaf

Bread came out with a good crust and a soft crumb with lots of holes.

The cut loaf

I doubt I will make this bread again. If you enjoy mild rye breads this could be a good introduction to making your own rye bread.

Baguette Tools

I will begin by saying I have limited experience in making baguettes. So far, I have only made them twice. It might seem I odd that I am recommending items already but changes made between the first and second time improved the result. I am addressing the items in order of their use in the baguette making process.

Floured couch

A couche does a couple of things. First it keeps the formed baguette from spreading out during final proofing. It is used by bring up folds between each baguette and the covering the baguettes with the remainder of the couche to prevent the dough from drying. I also believe it slightly absorbs some of the moisture from the taught outer surface a helps prevent sticking. The one I am using was purchased, but a large linen towel could be used as well. Mine is fairly stiff so it does a good job of supporting each baguette, keeps it from spreading out and resulting in a nice round baguette cross-section. I have had no issues with the dough sticking to the couche. The first time I floured it with a combination of rye and AP flours which resulted in unsightly baguettes after baking. The second I used the same flour as in the dough and it worked fine.

Baguette flipping board

A baguette flipping board is used to transfer risen baguettes from the couche to a peel or pan and to reorient the seam, if necessary. It is critical not to deflate the dough during the transfer. The risen baguettes are so soft and “floppy” for lack of a better description, that transferring by hand would be virtually impossible. I am sure there are bakers that make baguettes all the time that can make hand transfers but I certainly could not. There are many YouTube videos showing how to use a baguette flipping board. I purchased mine but you could make one yourself. I is just a thin piece of wood with a double bevel on each long edge and a hole to hang it up.

Baguette Pan

The first time I baked baguettes I baked them on a baking stone with a cast iron skillet on a rack below it. After the loaves were placed on the stone boiling water was poured in the cast iron skillet to add steam and the oven door quickly shut. I was not at all happy with crust I achieved. It just seemed like the steam wasn’t getting to the loaves. Baking was done at 475F using a conventional bake setting for the oven. My feeling was that by the time the steam got around the stone it was above the baking bread.

So I decided to look for a perforated baguette pan made of blackened steel. They used to be common years ago. Now everything seems to have some form of non-stick coating which I really did not want. First off, the coatings non-stick properties never seem to last all that long. Secondly, most non-stick coatings are limited to a maximum temperature of 450F or less. Since that was all I could find I selected a black non-stick coated pan from a supplier whose products I have been satisfied with in the past. I will say up front, I am not completely satisfied with this pan. It came straight out of the packaging with non-stick coating missing in numerous spots. Luckily, the spots are all near the top edge of the pan. I guessed they were in areas that the bread would not touch. On its first use, that was the case.

My hope was that the steam rising from the boiling water in the cast iron skillet would go though the perforations in the pan and surround the loaves of bread. The results seemed to indicate it worked just like I hoped. The pan I bought is limited to a max temperature of 450F. I used 445F to stay below that limit. To make up for the drop in temperature I used a convection bake setting on the oven. I hoped the fan would help circulate the steam around the loaves. This first attempt with the pan was an unqualified success.

I am still not sure if I am going to keep this pan or exchange it for a replacement. My concern is the replacement could have missing coating in an area that the bread does touch. I’ve read a lot of reviews for a lot of non-stick baguette pans and a universal complaint of many reviewers are coating issues. Either what I experienced with it missing from new or the coating flaking off during use a sticking to the bread. Oh for the days before non-stick coatings.

Lame

The purpose of slashing dough just before it goes into the oven is to control where the expansion occurs during oven spring and where the crust will crack.

Over the years I have used several sharp implements to slash loaves. One was a lame (pronounced “lahm”) without interchangeable blades, bad idea which I will cover later. Others include filet knives and single edge razor blades. Then I purchased the lame pictured above. It uses interchangeable double edge razor blades and holds them in a curve. Others are available that hold the blade flat. Regardless of how the blade is held, you only use one corner of the blade at a time depending on whether you are right or left handed. For me it is the upper left corner. There is the problem with non removable blades. Even though there are 4 corners only 1 is usable. And I found the cost of a lame with non removable blades to be about 80% of one with removable blades.

There three keys to successfully using a lame. First is to moisten the blade with water just before slashing the loaf. Second is to quickly slash with conviction. A slow slash will drag and wrinkle and pull the dough. Finally is to reposition the blade on the handle as soon as it begins to drag. I find I can only slash 4 or 5 loaves before a corner has lost enough sharpness to start dragging. A package of 5 blades came with my lame. I noticed that the blades had numbers on the corners but it did not dawn on me in the beginning to start out with corner #1 in my slashing position. If I had, I could have worked my way through the 4 corners and known which corners were used. What I do now is work my way thru the 4 corners in order so I know exactly which corners have been used and when it is time to change the blade.

It takes practice to slash a loaf and some loaves are more difficult than others. Loaves with whole grains are more difficult and ruin edges more quickly.

The reason I like the lame shown above is that I feel I have better control of exactly where I am slashing. The handle is large enough to get a good grip without having to apply a lot of pressure. And control is the reason I believe a lame is important for baguettes. When using a baguette pan, the loaves are slashed after being placed in the pan. A baguette is slashed with 5 closely spaced overlapping slashes. They shouldn’t touch or cross. I just can’t imagine trying this with a 6” blade filet knife.

I hope this provides some insight into why I believe the above tools are important to successful baguette making. Could you make do with other items? Of course, it is all about what works for you.

Baguettes au Levain

Baguettes straight from the oven

I have been reluctant to attempt making baguettes. Mainly this is because baguettes need to be eaten within hours of baking or they lose the characteristics that make a baguette special, at least for us Americans. It wasn’t until I discovered I could get French flour that I even considered attempting them. Even then I thought long and hard about whether I even wanted to try. In the end I am so glad I did.

In France, everything to do with baguettes is regulated by the French government. From the ingredients to the fact that a baguette must have five overlapping slashes running the length of the baguette. The only flexibility a baker has is in his process. Most make a straight dough using yeast. Some use a levain like I have chosen to do. Others save some of the dough from the previous day and incorporate it into the current days dough. There are even vending machines that will dispense freshly made baguettes.

My first attempt was not a huge success. They certainly were not worthy of documenting. I discovered French flour behaves differently than domestic flour. I am used routinely to making breads with a hydration level of 75% or more. The base recipe I was following for the baguettes had a hydration level of 62% and the dough was a sticky, gloppy mess that was difficult to handle all the way through the process. To compound things I made them too long and they hung off the parchment and the cookie sheet I use to transfer them to the baking stone. They turned out downright ugly! But oh the flavor. I have never made a bread that tasted so good. The crust wasn’t crispy, the crumb was chewy but did they ever taste good. That made it worth continuing.

Formed baguettes during their final rise in the couche

To solve my main issue I reduced the hydration level to 55%. That’s the lowest hydration level I’ve ever used for a bread dough. In the past I have tried a number of different methods to get steam around the loaf. Most successful for me has always been the dutch oven. Obviously, that wouldn’t work for baguettes. I’ve tried using a cast iron pan underneath the baking stone but never really got a crust I was satisfied with. This was what I did for the first round of baguettes. So I decided to take a chance and bought a perforated baguette pan the would let the steam from the pan below directly surround the loaves by coming up through the perforations in the pan. This was an unqualified success. My second batch of baguettes had a shatteringly crispy thin crust with a soft, tender crumb. The flavor was even better than the first time. If I was only allowed to eat one type of bread for the rest of my life, this would be it. Thankfully, that is not the case and I can continue to experiment with other bread types and document them in this blog.

The flour used was Francine Bio T55 Farine an organic all purpose flour. The salt used in this recipe was Gros Sel de Guerande. Both items were purchased from Yummy Bazaar www.yummybazaar.com.

Some item that I consider necessary to make successful baguettes at home include a linen couche, a baguette flipping board, a lame and a baguette pan. I have shown the ones I use in the photo below. In my next post I will cover why I think they are important.

Flipping board, lame, baguette pan and couche underneath

The Formula

Ingredient AmountBakers %
Levain
Starter17 g14%
Water110 g88%
T55 Flour125 g100%
Dough
Levain242 g81%
Water125 g42%
T55 Flour300 g100%
Sea Salt5 g1.7%
Yeast1 g (1/4 t)0.3%

My Process

  1. Day 1 evening, weigh levain ingredients.
  2. Mix the starter into the water and stir to dissolve.
  3. Add the flour and stir until incorporated.
  4. Cover bowl and let stand on the counter for 12 hours.
  5. Day 2 morning, weigh all dough ingredients.
  6. In a mixing bowl, add the levain to the water and stir to dissolve.
  7. Add the salt and yeast to the flour making sure to keep them separate, stir to incorporate.
  8. Slowly add the flour mixture to the water/levain mixture using a dough whisk. Continue until all the dry flour mixture is incorporated into the dough.
  9. Transfer the dough to a dough rising container and cover. Let rest 10 minutes.
  10. Stretch and fold the dough the dough 4 or 5 times on 10 minute intervals until a smooth dough is achieved, covering in between.
  11. Let the dough rise for an hour to and hour and fifteen minutes (I let it go an hour and a half and it was slightly over proofed).
  12. Punch down the dough, form a rough ball, lightly flour the dough, and divide into 3 equal pieces. Use a scale!
  13. Shape each dough piece into a log.
  14. Cover with damp towel and let rest 15 minutes.
  15. Shape baguettes. I strongly recommend watching the video on Breadtopia http://www.breadtopia.com to learn how to do this. There is a technique to this and I had to watch numerous times to semi-master it. I still need more practice.
  16. Transfer formed dough to a well floured linen couche or linen towel. Let rise 1 hour or until doubled in size.
  17. Preheat oven to 445F convection. Place a cast iron skillet directly beneath where the baguettes will bake. The baguette pan I bought is non-stick and has a maximum temperature of 450F. The recipe for baguettes calls for baking at 475F, too high for the pan. Our oven uses a temperature offset of 25F when set to “auto convection” so I actually set to 470F auto convection to get to the 440F setting.
  18. Use a baguette flipping board to transfer the formed dough to baguette baking pan.
  19. After all 3 loaves are transferred to the pan, slash the loaves. Remember, 5 overlapping slashes.
  20. Place pan in the oven. Add 1/2 cup boiling water to the cast iron pan and quickly close the oven door. Be careful! Steam can cause serious burns.
  21. After 8 minutes remove the cast iron pan from the oven. Total baking time 15 to 17 minutes.
  22. Remove baguettes from the oven to a cooling rack. Let cool 45 minutes before eating.

As soon as these were cool enough we sliced the first one and ate with a cave-ripened Brie from Wegmans. We also ate plain, with butter, and with strawberry jam. All were awesome!

The crumb, sliced plain and with Brie

For dinner, we cut one baguette in half, split it and had with a grilled Gianelli Italian Sausage, peppers and onions. Also delicious. The sandwich was devoured and savored in lieu of taking a picture.

The third baguette was used the next morning for French toast. Again, very, very good. Just shows the versatility of the seemingly simple baguette.

I will continue to work baguettes into my weekly bread making. I also want to try using the French flour in some of the other breads I bake. It has the best flavor and aroma of any flour I have used to date.

Disclaimer: I have no affiliation of any kind with Breadtopia, Yummy Bazaar, Wegmans or Gianelli Sausage.

Musings

I have been trying something new with my starter. The morning I make bread dough I refresh the starter, let it sit on the counter a few hours, then place it in the fridge. This is typically on Fridays. The following Tuesday evening I remove it from the fridge and let it sit out on the counter overnight. Wednesday and Thursday mornings I refresh the starter. Thursday night I make my leaven. Then, depending on how much I used, I will either refresh to make up what I removed or let it sit on the counter and refresh on Friday morning and repeat.

I have been pulling some of my bread baking books off the shelf and re-reading them. This week it has been The Village Baker by Joe Ortiz. This was published in 1997. I had forgotten much of the material in the book including some of the recipes I wanted to try. I had not remembered the stories of Joe driving all over southern France buying rye breads or siegel in French. I never realized rye breads were so popular in France. I can’t imagine an 8 kg loaf of rye bread. That would make a lot of rueben sandwiches!

I also hadn’t realized that all the bakeries in France used the same formula for baguettes. 100kg flour (t55 all purpose), 60kg water, 2kg salt, 1 kg yeast or an amount of each in the same ratio. The big difference is each bakeries process on how they treat the ingredients. Some make a straight dough, some make a sponge with a portion of the flour, yeast and salt and make a pre-ferment, others may use some of the dough from the previous days batch and so on. The other big variable is the flour. I read recently of a small farm organically raising wheat and milling flour. They started small and could only supply one bakery. That bakery started winning the prize for the best baguette in France which they did for several years in a row. The farm grew and started supplying a couple more bakeries and they too started winning prizes. Salt and water are also variables. Some argue only flake sea salt from Normandy should be used. Just goes to show how serious the French are about their bread.

This Weeks Bread

Miche aka Traditional French Sourdough

Finished loaf

I have wanted to make this bread since I started baking naturally leavened bread. It is based on the bread baked by Poilâne Bakery in Paris. Of course mine won’t be the same since I am not using the same flour, water, salt or starter.

The version I am doing is from a recipe on Breadtopia (no affiliation) but again the same comment from above about ingredients applies.

This covers two weeks of making the same recipe with tweaks between the two attempts. The first week I followed the recipe as written. The main tweak the second week was to add more water to both the leaven and the dough the second week. Next was to reduce the bulk fermentation time from 24 hours to 22 hours and final proof was 4 hours vs 5 hours. Finally for mixing and kneading the dough I used the Kitchenaid mixer with dough hook the second week. All photos are from week 2 unless otherwise noted.

For flour I am using King Arthur Organic Bread Flour, King Arthur Organic Whole Wheat Flour, Hodgson Mills Organic Whole Rye Flour and Bobs Red Mill Organic Spelt Flour (I have no affiliation with any of those companies).

The process for the dough is slightly different than most of the other sourdoughs I have made. On day 1 a leaven is made. In this case it is made with a higher percentage of starter than I typically use, all the whole wheat flour and water. It is mixed and then sits on the counter covered for 12 hours.

Just mixed leaven
Leaven after 12 hours

Day 2 the dough is made. The dough is mixed with some of the bread flour held back. The dough is then kneaded by hand for 10 minutes adding some of the held back flour if the dough becomes sticky. At the end of kneading the dough should be smooth and tacky but not sticky. The difference is difficult to describe but obvious when achieved. This is a stiff dough. It was a fair amount of work for me with my compromised breathing. I could have used the mixer and dough hook but I wanted to feel the dough develop by hand to know what should feel like. When I make this again I most likely will use the mixer. The major difference with this dough is after it is kneaded, it is placed in an oiled bowl, covered, and placed in the refrigerator for 24 hours. There is no further work on the dough until the next day.

Just mixed dough
Dough after 22 hours in fridge

On day 3 the dough is removed from the refrigerator, shaped into a boule and placed in a 10” banneton to proof for approximately 5 hours.

Dough after proofing

The Formula

IngredientAmountBakers %
Leaven
Water200 g85%
Starter120 g51%
Whole wheat flour236 g100%
Dough
Water274 g54%
Leaven556 g110%
Bread flour250 g50%
Spelt flour170 g33%
Rye flour85 g17%
Total flour505 g100%
Sea salt13 g6%

Note: the salt percentage looks high but is based on the total flour in both the leaven and the dough.

My Process

  1. Weigh ingredients for leaven in a medium sized mixing bowl.
  2. Mix ingredients thoroughly.
  3. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let stand on counter 12 hours.
  4. Weigh ingredients for dough.
  5. Mix the leaven into the water in a large mixing bowl.
  6. Add the rye and spelt flours to the mixing bowl and thoroughly incorporate.
  7. Add the salt to the mixing bowl and incorporate.
  8. Slowly add the bread flour and incorporate by hand. Do not add all of the bread flour yet. The dough will become very stiff.
  9. Remove the dough from the from the bowl to a surface floured with some of the reserved bread flour. Knead dough by hand for 10 minutes adding more of the reserved bread flour when the dough becomes sticky. The final dough should feel tacky but not sticky. The best way I can describe the difference is that sticky dough will stick to and remain on your fingers, tacky dough will feel tacky but not stick to your fingers.
  10. Oil a large bowl with olive oil, place the dough in the bowl and cover with plastic wrap.
  11. Place bowl in the refrigerator for 24 hours.
  12. The next day remove the dough from the fridge. Pre-shape into a boule.
  13. Let rest covered on counter for 30 minutes.
  14. Final shape into boule and place dough seam side up in a floured 10” banneton. Place banneton in a plastic bag. Note, proofed dough will fill or be slightly above the top of the banneton.
  15. Let dough proof 5 hours.
  16. 1 hour before proofing is complete, pre-heat the oven to 485F. 15 minutes before proofing is complete place a roasting pan in the oven.
  17. When proofing is complete, invert dough on to a parchment covered peel.
  18. Slash dough with lame.
  19. Remove roasting pan from oven. Transfer the dough on the parchment to the baking stone. Spritz the dough with water from a spray bottle and cover with the roasting pan immediately.
  20. Bake 25 minutes with the dough covered.
  21. Remove cover and bake an additional 20 minutes uncovered with the oven set to 450F.
  22. Remove bread from oven to a cooling rack. Let cool completely.

The first time I made this the dough reached the tacky stage and I still had 1/2 to 3/4 cup of the bread flour left. Week one the dough was over proofed after 5 hours and there was no oven spring. The flavor was excellent, probably the best tasting loaf I’ve ever made. There is a complexity to the flavor that just can’t be achieved using just white wheat flour. The crumb was tight and soft when first sliced. The next day the bread already seemed dry. That made the decision to make the bread again the next week, with some changes.

Week 1 loaf, almost no oven spring, the picture does not show just how flat this loaf was

The changes in the formula were to increase the water in the leaven by 10 grams from 200 grams to 210 grams and to increase the water in the dough by 16 grams from 274 grams to 290 grams. This time I only had about a tablespoon of flour left when the dough reached the tacky point.

The changes to my process were in steps 5-9 to use the mixer with a dough hook, in step 11 to reduce the time from 24 hours to 22 hours and in step 15 from 5 hours from the time the dough went into the banneton to 4 hours from the time the dough came out of the fridge.

This time I got nice oven spring. The crumb was nice and soft with a more uniform tight texture and slightly more chew from better gluten development. I left the original formula and process because if someone uses different flours than I did, the original formula and proceeded would be the logical starting point.

Finished loaf with oven spring, week 2
Week 1 crumb and texture

This has become one of my favorite breads and will show up frequently in my bread making rotation. I think when I next make this I may try an herbed version.

This Weeks Bread

Sourdough with Leaven

This coming week I am on a restricted diet for an upcoming medical procedure so I am not allowed any whole grain breads. So I am making a white sourdough using Chad Robertson’s method for Tartine Bread.

The process starts with making a leaven the night before mixing the dough and letting it sit out on the counter overnight. His goal is to keep the acid level low in the leaven and the bread, a non-sour sourdough. To achieve that he uses a small amount of starter, 1 tablespoon, to 200 grams each of water and flour for a recipe that makes 2 loaves of bread. Then only half the leaven is used in the final dough.

I have adapted his process to suit my schedule. I like to bake between 8:30 and 9:00 in the morning. I found that if I mix my dough on the morning before that it finished bulk fermentation by late afternoon. I would then form and shape the loaves and put the in the fridge until the next morning. I found that 16 to 18 hours in the fridge the bread was more sour than I like. I needed to keep the time in the fridge between 10 and 12 hours to keep the dough from getting too sour. That means into the fridge between 8:30 and 9:00 pm or later.

So what does that mean for my process? That means I need to mix my dough in the early afternoon. If my leaven sat from 9:00pm until early afternoon the next day it would be too sour and possibly losing its leavening power. So I make the leaven with half the water and flour at 9:00pm and then refresh it at 9:00am with the same amount of flour and water as the night before. By early afternoon it risen beautifully with out forming too much acid. Normally I use my 50-50 mix of all purpose flour and white whole wheat flour but because of my temporary dietary restriction I used bread flour only which worked fine.

Bulk fermentation took 6 hours with the kitchen at 74F. From there the dough was pre-shaped, rested on the work surface for 30 minutes, then final shaped, into a lined banneton and into the fridge for 12 hours.

Dough pre-shaped into ball

After proofing in the fridge overnight the dough went into a cold parchment lined dutch oven, was slashed, covered and placed in a cold oven. The oven was turned on to 450F. Timing was started when the oven reached the set temperature and the bread baked for 20 minutes with the cover on and 20 minutes with the cover off.

Fresh out of the oven

The flour used for this loaf was King Arthur Organic Bread Flour. I have no affiliation with them.

The Formula

Ingredient Amount Bakers %
Leaven 9:00pm
Starter10g
Water50g50%
Bread Flour50g50%
Leaven 9:00am
Water50g50%
Bread Flour50g50%
Dough
Leaven100g20%
Water375g75%
Bread Flour500g100%
Sea Salt10g2%

My Process

  1. 9:00pm, weigh ingredients for the leaven using 50% each of the water and flour.
  2. Mix starter into the water then mix flour into the water. Combine to a smooth mixture.
  3. Cover bowl and let rest on counter overnight.
  4. 9:00am, mix remaining water into the leaven, then mix the remaining flour into the leaven.
  5. Cover bowl and let rest on counter until early afternoon.
  6. 12:30pm, weigh out ingredients for the dough.
  7. Combine the leaven and 350g of the water in a mixing bowl. Mix to incorporate.
  8. Add the flour to the water mixture a couple of large spoonfuls at a time using a dough whisk to incorporate. Eventually you need to use your hands. Continue to add and mix until all the dry flour is incorporated into the dough.
  9. Transfer the dough to a container for bulk fermentation and cover.
  10. Let rest on the counter for 40 minutes.
  11. Add the remaining 25g of water and half the salt on top of the dough. Perform several stretch and folds to incorporate. Add the remaining salt to the top of the dough and again stretch and fold to incorporate. Don’t worry if all the salt and water are fully incorporated, as the dough is worked more and bulk ferments it will fully incorporate.
  12. 1:50pm, bulk fermentation begins.
  13. Stretch and fold the dough at 30 minute intervals until a good windowpane test is achieved. This time took 5 times. Let dough continue to bulk ferment in covered container.
  14. Dough will increase in volume by about 30% during bulk fermentation. From this point on handle the dough gently to preserve as many of the gas bubbles as possible.
  15. 7:50pm, volume has increased and dough is soft. Remove dough from container to un-floured work surface.
  16. Using a floured bench scraper shape the dough blob into a rough ball. Flour the top of the dough and using the bench scraper flip the dough on the work surface. Shape the dough into a tighter ball. Then flip the dough over to a very lightly floured area of the work surface. Using your hands rotate and draw the dough ball across the work surface to further tighten the ball.
  17. Flour the dough and cover with a towel. Let the dough rest for 30 minutes.
  18. Final shape the dough to the desired shape, this time was a boule and place seam side up in a well floured linen lined banneton.
  19. 8:40pm, place banneton in a plastic grocery bag and into the fridge to proof overnight.
  20. 8:25am, line dutch oven with 10” parchment circle, remove dough from fridge and invert into the dutch oven gently. Slash dough with lame.
  21. 8:30am, cover dutch oven and place in a cold oven. Set temperature to 450F and turn oven on.
  22. Wait for over to reach set temperature, then set timer for 20 minutes.
  23. Remove cover from the dutch oven at the end of the set time. Set timer for an additional 20 minutes.
  24. Check the bread for doneness at the end of the time. If necessary, rotate and bake for an additional 1 to 2 minutes.
  25. Remove from oven and remove bread to a cooling rack. Let bread cool for at least 1 hour before slicing.

So there you have my timeline and process that I followed for this loaf of bread.

Cooled loaf

My only issue with this loaf of bread was that bottom crust over browned and is very difficult to slice through. The rest of the crust was great as are the flavor and texture.

Sliced loaf

We had this bread the night it was baked with butter and used it to sop up tomato sauce from our plates with dinner. We had it toasted with butter and a fried egg with a runny yolk on top for breakfast the next morning. In both cases it enhanced the meal.

Starter Update

Last week was way too hot to even think about turning on the oven so I didn’t make any bread.

I mentioned in my last post that my starter had gotten very weak and I think there are multiple factors contributing but mostly I believe it was my fault.

I was simply throwing out too much starter when I refreshed the starter each day. Part of that was intentional, I was try to maintain low acidity in the starter. The unintentional part was that over time, dried starter built up in the container above the level of the starter. I had been several months since I cleaned the container so there was a lot of build up. When I refresh my starter I discard starter until the weight of the container plus starter falls into my target range of 170 to 180 grams. The empty clean container weighs 139 grams so I should be keeping 41 to 51 grams of starter each refresh. However this time I had a buildup of 20 to 25 grams so in effect I had reduced the starter saved by 50%.

With the container now cleaned and a target weight of 180 to 190 grams after discard my starter is back to doubling in volume in 5 hours.

The starter is still more liquid when I refresh’s it than it was in the winter. I think that is due to the higher kitchen temperature resulting in faster fermentation. I should probably be refreshing the starter twice each day. Since I only bake one or two loaves of bread a week that seems somewhat wasteful. So I will keep going the way I am as long as it works.

Our Weekly Bread

Rustic Italian Loaf with Semolina

It has been a while since I have posted. We went away for a few days for a mini vacation and I’ve had a tough time getting back to baking and blogging.

On top of that I am experiencing changes in the way my starter is acting. Since the weather has gotten warm my starter has become weak and listless. When I went to make this loaf of bread, there was no sign of activity 5 hours after refreshing it and it certainly didn’t float. I proceeded anyway figuring I could compensate with longer bulk fermentation. That worked but bulk fermentation took a total of 19 hours with 8 hours and 45 minutes in the fridge.

Dough after 18 hours fermentation

The long fermentation gave the bread a distinct sourdough flavor, almost like a San Francisco sourdough, not unpleasant but not what I wanted for an Italian Bread.

The flours used for this bread were King Arthur Organic Bread Flour and Caputo Semolina.

The Formula

IngredientAmountBakers %
Sponge
Starter20 g11%
Water131 g75%
Bread Flour125 g70%
Semolina50 g30%
Dough
Sponge346 g106%
Starter75 g23%
Water234 g72%
Bread Flour225 g70%
Semolina 100 g30%
Salt9 g1.8%

My Process

  1. Weigh all ingredients for sponge.
  2. Add the starter to the water in a bowl and mix thoroughly. Add the flours to and mix to incorporate the flours into the counter.
  3. Cover and let rest on the counter for at least 5 hours. Then place covered bowl in the fridge until the next morning.
  4. The next morning weigh all ingredients for the dough.
  5. Add the starter to the water in a mixing bowl and mix thoroughly. Break up the sponge into pieces and incorporate into the water with a dough whisk.
  6. After the sponge is incorporated begin adding the flour mixture, a handful at a time. Incorporate each flour addition with a dough whisk before making another. Use hands to make sure all the dry flour is incorporated into the dough.
  7. Cover mixing bowl and let rest on counter for 20 to 30 minutes.
  8. Add about 1/2 the salt on top of the dough. Fold dough a couple of times. Add the remaining salt on top of the dough and fold several more times to incorporate the salt.
  9. Transfer the dough to a clean container for bulk fermentation. Cover and let rest on counter for 60 minutes.
  10. Stretch and fold dough on 60 minute intervals a total of 4 or 5 times or until a good windowpane test is achieved.
  11. From here on this was an abnormal process due to the low activity of the starter.
  12. Let the dough rest covered on the counter until bed time then place the covered dough in the fridge to continue bulk fermentation.
  13. Remove the dough from the fridge when getting up the next morning. Let rest on the counter for 2 hours.
  14. Remove the dough from the fermentation container to an unfloured work surface.
  15. Use a floured bench scraper to shape the dough into a ball.
  16. Flour the top of the ball and cover and let rest on work surface for 30 minutes.
  17. Invert the dough ball onto a floured work surface a shape dough into its final shape. This time it was a small batard.
  18. Place the dough seam side up in a lined and floured banneton to proof. Cover banneton.
  19. Place baking stone in oven and preheat oven to 500 F.
  20. After 60 minutes check dough to see if it is proofed. If not continue checking on 15 minute intervals. The impression of a finger press in the dough should slowly fill. It is better be slightly underproofed that overproofed.
  21. When dough is proofed, place roasting pan in oven to preheat. Invert dough on to a parchment lined peel.
  22. Score dough as desired.
  23. Remove preheated roasting pan from oven. Transfer dough on parchment to baking stone and cover with inverted roasting pan. Close oven and reduce temp to 475 F.
  24. Bake covered for 20 minutes. Remove cover and reduce oven temp to 450 F. Bake another 20 minutes.
  25. Remove bread from oven to a cooling rack.
  26. Let bread cool at least 2 hours before slicing.

This turned out to be a very good bread, just not what I was aiming for.

Finished loaf
The crumb

This experience has shown me that baking naturally leavened breads are very forgiving. I used a starter that I knew shouldn’t have enough strength to leaven bread and it came though for me, given enough time and patience on my part. For the better part of a day and a half I was ready to dump out the dough. It wasn’t until the next morning when I saw the bubbles in the dough that I thought it might work. Was it a perfect loaf of bread? No, but it tasted good and in the end that’s what I want.

This Weeks Bread

Sourdough Flour Tortillas

This weeks bread falls into two categories, this weeks bread and uses for discard starter.

Lately I have felt that commercially made flour tortillas are almost tasteless. They worked to hold fillings but contributed nothing to taste and flavor.

I thought this would be straight forward after our learning experience making corn tortillas (see https://ourweeklybread.com/?s=Corn+tortillas). I was wrong. There is no gluten in masa dough. There is a lot of gluten in the flour tortilla dough and it fought us most of the way through. Our learning experience was much longer trying to make flour tortillas than the corn tortillas. At least the first 10 tortillas were less than satisfactory. From then on they slowly improved and the last dozen or so weren’t too bad.

The problem we were having was that the tortillas were shrinking back at least 1” in diameter after pressing and peeling them off the plastic. That also made them thicker. Initially we also had the griddle too hot and they were burning before they cooked through. Turning down the flame solved the second issue. It took much longer to solve the first issue.

The recipe I used as a guideline called for a 30 minute rest after mixing the dough and 5 minutes rest after forming balls of dough. I would say those are minimums. 30 minutes after forming dough balls would not be too much. This helped with the first issue, but didn’t solve it completely.

Dough balls resting

I then tried lightly oil the plastic I was using for pressing the tortillas. That didn’t help at all. I then tried flouring the dough balls before pressing and that helped some. Towards the end we found that tossing the dough balls in flour and shaking off the excess right after weighing and rolling work fine. But that still didn’t completely solve issue one.

Finally, I notice I could actually see the dough shrinking back while it was still in the tortilla press. After that I started letting shrink back and then pressing again until the dough didn’t shrink back. This usually took 4 pressings and happened in the minute and a half cook time of the previous tortilla. We got much more consistent tortillas after that but that may not be the total solution to issue one. Too much gluten development may be the real issue.

After pressing

I may have made a mistake in mixing the dough. I intentionally let the dough knead in the mixer before I added the vegetable oil and salt, both of which are gluten inhibitors. I might have gotten a more relaxed dough from the beginning if I had just put everything in the mixing bowl at once. That is what I will do if we decide to make these again. I say if, because I’m not sure the work involved is worth the results. These tortillas do tasted better than any commercial flour tortilla I’ve had and taste good just eaten plain.

The way we were doing these was I was pressing the dough balls and passing the pressed tortilla still in the plastic to my wife Debbie who would get it out of the plastic and on to the cast iron griddle. The biggest issue was getting the tortilla from the plastic and on to the griddle without stretching it and distorting the shape as you can see in the photo below. It didn’t matter who tried to get them from the plastic, we both deformed them.

The tortillas were round coming out of the press

The Formula

Ingredient Amount Bakers %
Starter Discard125 g20%
Water, warm tap320 g50%
Vegetable oil56 g8.8%
Baking powder2 g (1/2 t)0.3%
AP Flour637 g100%

The following is the process I would follow if I were to make these again.

My Process

  1. Weigh out all ingredients.
  2. Add water and starter discard to the bowl of a standing mixer and mix until starter discard is incorporated into the water. Switch to dough hook.
  3. Add the oil and 2 cups of flour and mix on low speed. Add the baking powder and continue to mix. Continue adding flour 1/2 cup at a time letting each addition incorporate before making the next addition until a total of 4 cups have been added. Dough should be pulling away from the side of the bowl but not the bottom.
  4. Stop the mixer and check the dough. It should be soft but not sticky. If it is sticky, resume mixing on speed 2 and add 1 tablespoon of flour and and allow to incorporate before checking again. Repeat adding and incorporating until dough is no longer sticky but remains soft.
  5. Remove bowl from mixer and cover.
  6. Let dough rest a minimum of 30 minutes. 45 minutes to an hour is probably better.
  7. Weigh out 40* gram pieces of dough and roll into balls. Roll each dough ball in some of the left over flour. Place on work surface and cover with a damp linen towel to prevent drying.
  8. Let dough balls rest for at least 20 minutes, longer does not hurt.
  9. Use a rolling pin or tortilla press to form 7 to 8” diameter tortillas. If using tortilla press, press between sheets of plastic or parchment.
  10. Transfer to a hot griddle. Adjust heat so tortillas cook in 1 minute per side. It took us several tortillas to get the temperature of the griddle right. With our range and griddle we ended up at medium-low, but we were on a high output gas burner.
  11. Stack tortillas and keep cover to prevent drying. Makes about 30 tortillas.

-*- 40 grams made a 7-8” tortilla, 30 grams made a 5-6” tortilla.

I had hoped to make some 10” tortillas for wraps by using a rolling pin to roll them out. After all the issues we were having pressing them I quickly gave up on that idea.

At some point I probably try to make these again. The flavor is worth it, but I’m not sure the effort is.

Our Weekly Bread

Smoked Gouda and Jalapeño Loaf

This is a repeat of my last weekly bread post. If you remember I had the loaf stick to the inside of the dutch oven and take a couple of hours to get it out of the pot destroying some of the crust. While we were trying to get it out, I said to my wife it would be nice if we could get precut parchment rounds to fit the dutch oven. Later, I went on Amazon (I have no affiliation with them) and found you can get precut parchment rounds in all kinds of diameters. So I order a package of 10” rounds.

The loaf

Jumping ahead, these worked perfectly and there were no issues with sticking. And because it wasn’t a half sheet pan sized sheet surrounding the upper part of the loaf, the browning was much more uniform.

Because of the way my timing works out, I have modified my process. I like to minimize the amount of acid development in my bread. This loaf is based on Chad Robertson’s Tartine Country Bread. My kitchen is much cooler than his in California. In earlier loaves of this bread, I found that my longer fermentation and proofing times were generating more lactic acid than I really liked. That meant I needed to mix the dough in the afternoon, rather than the morning. I wanted the overnight proof in the refrigerator to be more than 10 hours but less than 12 hours. If I did that, the leaven would ferment too long and become overly sour and over fermented and past its prime for leavening.

So I decided to build the leaven in two stages. The night before mixing the the dough I used half each of the flour mix (50% AP flour + 50% white whole wheat flour) and the water plus a small amount of 100% hydration starter and mixed it in a small bowl that then sat covered on the counter overnight. 12 hours later I added the second half of the flour mix and the water. In his book Chad Robertson suggests throwing out half the leaven and adding flour and water to prevent the leaven from getting too sour but that seemed wasteful to me.

The first time I made this loaf I added the cheese and jalapeño at the same time as the salt and remaining water. Getting all of that incorporated at the same time was a challenge and I felt limited the gluten development. This time I added the cheese and jalapeños at the first stretch and fold 30 minutes after adding the salt and remaining water. There is a lot of cheese and jalapeños to incorporate and it will seem like it won’t go in but it will eventually. I stretch the dough as far as I can in its fermentation container and cover the surface with cheese and jalapeños, and fold the dough over itself. Then I flip the dough over and repeat the process. It usually takes 4 or 5 incorporations to get most of the cheese and jalapeños in the dough. By then the dough is to stiff to keep going but don’t worry if there is still cheese and jalapeños loose in the container, that will work in during subsequent stretch and folds. I did a total of 5 stretch and folds on 30 minute intervals.

This loaf will not rise as high as the loaf without additions due to the added weight of the cheese and jalapeños.

I used the cold start baking method for this loaf. It has become my preferred method when I am only baking one loaf. I think I get better oven spring than when I conventionally bake.

The Formula

Ingredient AmountBakers %
The Leaven
Starter4 g4%
Water100 g100%
50-50 Flour Mix100 g100%
The Dough
Leaven100 g20%
Water375 g75%
Total Flour500 g100%
Bread Flour450 g90%
White Whole Wheat Flour50 g10%
Fine sea salt10 g2%
Shredded Smoked Gouda Cheese100 g20%
Diced Jalapeño, raw70 g14%

I have decided to add my actual times that key steps in the process. In his book, Chad Robertson notes a bulk fermentation time of 4 hours at a dough temperature of 78 F. I actually remembered to check my dough temperature with an instant read thermometer during bulk fermentation and it was 74 F. My bulk fermentation time ended up 6 hours and 45 minutes.

My Process

  1. Day 1, 9:00 pm. The leaven, Mix 4 grams starter into 50 grams water in a small bowl. Add 50 grams flour mix and stir in thoroughly. Cover bowl and let sit on counter overnight.
  2. Day 2, 9:00 am. Add 50 grams water and 50 grams flour mix to the leaven and stir to combine. Cover and let sit on counter.
  3. 12:45 pm. Get out tools and equipment needed. Grate and weigh cheese, dice jalapeños and weigh, place on several layers of paper towels to absorb excess moisture.
  4. 1:15 pm. Weigh out dough ingredients. Add 100g leaven to 350g water and stir to combine in mixing bowl. Add flour slowly to water/leaven mixture, stirring each adding in with a dough whisk before making next flour addition. Continue adding and mixing until no dry flour remains in mixing bowl. Transfer dough to bulk fermentation container and cover.
  5. Let dough dough rest at least 40 minutes (Autolyse).
  6. 2:20 pm. Add salt and remaining 25g water to dough stretching and folding to incorporate. Don’t worry if water remains in container, it will absorb and salt with be further incorporated in subsequent stretch and folds. Cover container.
  7. 2:30pm. Beginning of bulk fermentation. Let dough rest 30 minutes covered.
  8. 3:00pm. Stretch dough out as much as possible in the container. Cover 2/3 of dough with cheese and jalapeños. Fold the uncovered portion of the dough half way across the covered portion of dough. Take the remaining portion of covered dough and fold over the other dough. There now should be 5 layers, dough-cheese/jalapeños-dough-cheese/jalapeños-dough. Flip the dough over and repeat the the process. Continue until most all the cheese and jalapeños are incorporated.
  9. Stretch and fold at least 4 times more on 30 minute intervals. Because of the cheese and jalapeños it is difficult to pull a good windowpane test to know when there is enough gluten development.
  10. 9:15pm. From here on be careful to not deflate the dough too much. Scrape dough onto to unfloured work surface. Use bench scraper to form dough into a rough round. Generously flour the top of the dough. Use the bench scraper to flip the dough over on the work surface so floured side is down. Work the dough into a tight ball. Flip over on work surface.
  11. Let dough rest 20 minutes. Dough will flatten somewhat to a bulging disk.
  12. Final shape dough into a tight ball.
  13. Place dough seam side up in a linen lined and floured banneton. Flour the seam side of the dough lightly with rye or rice flour.
  14. Place in plastic bag and place in the refrigerator overnight to proof.
  15. Day 3, 8:30am. Line a dutch oven with a 10” round of parchment. Remove dough from the refrigerator. Remove banneton from the plastic bag. Place your 4 fingers over the dough from both sides and invert the banneton over the dutch oven. Move your fingers down to release the dough and it gently drops into the center of the dutch oven. Easier to do than describe. Score loaf with lame. Cover dutch oven.
  16. Place the dutch oven in a cold oven. Turn oven on to 450 F.
  17. When oven has reached 450 F set a timer for 20 minutes.
  18. When time is complete, remove cover from the dutch oven.
  19. Bake for an additional 20 minutes uncovered. Remove from oven.
  20. Place bread on cooling rack and resist slicing for at least 1 hour.

This has become one of our favorite breads. It was first made when I discovered we were out of my grapevine smoked cheddar cheese and were trying to figure out what to substitute. It is good plain with butter. It’s great in the morning toasted with butter and even better if you add some raspberry and jalapeño jam.