If there is one thing I have succeeded in my life, it has been in bread baking. I have worked in various bakeries and I am actively thinking about opening my own bakery. I have shared various posts about how I use my bread in cooking, but I have never shared my bread baking process! So please see how I make sourdough bread, and for some tricks and tips, and how you can use them in your own baking journey if you want to begin to bake. But first, some bread-related terms and what they mean. This will help you tremendously on your baking journey.
Sourdough bread is about slowing down. There is no stock method you can use, you need to "feel" the dough literally and figuratively. I do not use any equipment other than my hands. They say that sourdough bread baker's hands are covered with their sourdough starters' yeasts and bacteria. If you start a new one or use someone else's, it will start to change and become like your own. A baker, in my eyes, is his/her starter, and their hands are so important.
But now, please enjoy the post, as there are various images to show you my process and what "key" things I look out for. It is winter here, so the process is very slow. Sourdough bread cannot be rushed, and the same information about "normal bread baking" does not apply to sourdough.
Key Terms
I follow a very slow process, and this is in part due to what bakers call "Autolyze". This is basically a process in which you mix the flour and water, and leave the dough for an hour or up to 5-6 hours. In autolyze, the flour and water completely mix without you needing to knead or mix the dough in a machine. All the proteins form and according to some studies, the starches become more accessible to the bacteria and yeast in your started culture.
"Bulk Fermentation" is the time when the dough ferments before you divide it to "cold ferment" it. There are various ways in which you can divide the time when you bulk and when you cold ferment. I personally cold ferment the dough and then I divide the dough. This is due to the dough having a high percentage of water.
This leads to the last key term, "Baker's Percentages". Bakers seldom use recipes as such. We use percentages and hence there is no secrecy about different recipes. This also helps when you increase the amounts of bread you bake. Basically, everything in a bread "recipe" is written in percentages of the ratio to the flour. The total amount of flour is always 100%. Depending on (i) what you want to achieve, and (ii) your skill level, the water % is normally anything between 59% (Pizza dough) to 95% (Ciabatta). My sourdough normally contains 83-85% water. How you read the percentages is simple: take the weight of the flour, and multiply it with the percentage of the other ingredients.
Enough theory! On to the bread-making process. I will place the time as heading so you can see the time it takes to make the bread.
Recipe
As stated, the recipe is written in percentages. Here is my "Recipe":
The flour is 100%, but I divide the 100% into the following:
40% Whole wheat
40% Bread flour
10% Rye flour
10% Barley flour
The rest of the recipe:
83-85% Water
25% Starter
2.3% Salt
(As an example, if you have 1000 grams of flour, the recipe reads: 830 grams of water, 250 grams starter, and 23 grams salt.)
Friday 7 PM
I feed my "mother" with a mixture of bread flour and wheat bran. I find that my mother is most "active" when I feed it with this. As noted in the heading, I fed my mother the Friday night at 7 PM.
Saturday 9 AM
The next morning, the mother in my very dirty container has risen nicely.
I use the spoon to see that it raised almost half, or it almost doubled.
I then proceed to mix the mother and more flour to create my actual starter for baking. I use 1 part mother, 2 parts flour, and 2 parts water. I find that this ratio works best. It takes roughly 6 hours to be ready.
(Here is my 25% starter mix, containing new flour and water and the mother. This ferments for roughly six hours.)
Simultaneously, I mix the flour and water to autolyze for six hours. As noted, there are some studies indicating that this process helps your yeast and bacteria access the starches in the flour better.
Saturday 3 PM
It has been roughly 6 hours. The starter is ready. Mix this into the dough that has also been "autolyzing" for 6 hours.
(This is the starter after 6 hours.)
(Mix the starter in, preferably with your hand.)
I wait around 30-45 minutes to add the salt. I think it has been disproven that salt kills yeast, but I have never really stopped waiting the 30 minutes before I add the salt.
(Mix the salt into the dough. I add some extra water to help the salt dissolve.)
And now I follow the method of stretch and fold. There are various videos online that show you how you can do it. Basically, you take your hand and grab a piece of the dough, stretch it and fold it over itself. You do this for a couple of hours, spread with hour intervals until the dough has "risen" enough. And this is where personal experience comes in handy. Simply stating that it needs to "double in size" does not always work with sourdough. You will "feel" when the dough is airy. If you want to judge it by sight, it should not completely double in size, it should be about two-thirds of the way. It should ferment the last third in the fridge.
Saturday 4 PM "Bulk Ferment"
Some of the visual keys are the bubbles in the dough.
Saturday 11 PM "Bulk Ferment" Ending
At roughly 11 pm I put the dough into the fridge. I did not divide it. Normally, and most sourdough recipes, will have you divide the individual loaves now. I cold ferment before I divide the loaves.
Sunday 6 AM
At roughly 6 AM, I took the dough out of the fridge. It needs to sit at room temp for roughly an hour to an hour and a half.
Sunday 7 AM Divide the Loaves
Now, I divide the loaves and shape them. There are various ways you can shape them. Every baker has their own way. Shaping helps your loaves to get structure. It also helps the loaves to bake in the shape you want them.
Sunday 7:30 AM Put on the Oven
The oven and the cast iron pots take roughly an hour to warm up. This is also what the stage bakers call "proofing". The bread is ready to bake, but they have a last stage of resting. You can put them in the fridge again for a cold-proof and bake them only the next day. You will then have a 48 hour ferment then. I have done this, and the breads only get better!
In any case, now you will bake the breads with the lid closed for 20 minutes at the highest your oven can go. My oven will only go to 260 C. Uncover the loaves and bake them for a last 20 minutes at 180 C.
Baking sourdough bread can be intimidating. My first loaves were disasters. It is in practicing that you get better. So please try this method, or ask me any questions in the comments! I will gladly help. There is so much information on Sourdough bread, it can sometimes be daunting to start. But you need to start, that is most important! And nothing beats the smell of freshly baked bread in the morning.
Hi @papilloncharity! Here is how I made the bread you got on Sunday, and the post I told you about I would make! I hope that you find the process interesting.
Boet it was a pleasure to meet you personally at last and I expected to meet an elderly, portly for lack of a better word, gentleman.
Then this handsome youngster appeared, walked directly up to me and said. Hi @papilloncharity. I asked him where's Phil and then he explained to me that the phil in @fermentedphil actually means fermentedphilosophy, but that there was not enough space for the full philisophy part, and he ended up with phil 🤣
Maybe it was his Rep count of (69) that subconciously influenced me that he was closer to 70 years old instead of looking like a 17 year old.
But let me tell you that this youngster is a master baker and that bread tastes like cake. With Icing on 🙂
I forgot to tell you that I even battle to roast an egg and you lost me totally halfway through this post, but I read the entire post hoping that it would sink into my soul somewhere. In case of an emergency you know 🤣
Stretch to me means exercising and folding means to fold a shirt and now you tell me that one can stretch and fold that putty like stuff that you call dough 🤣
Lady @lizelle if you taste the results from this recipe, I bet that you would be the happiest being on earth. The loaves are delicious and you will get hooked.
!PIZZA goes down well with !BEER
I am glad that I surprised you like that! I saw your confusion when I walked up to you, knowing how you look via your picture on here.
And I am so glad you liked the bread! And yes, all the terminology etc. can be confusing haha. I have been in the baking space now for 5 odd years and I still learn every day.
It was really nice to have met you both and sharing stories and experiences like that were really awesome. I feel honored you shared stories of your experience in life with such a youngster as me. If we did not have other arrangements, we would likely have talked for longer. Meaningful conversations in our modern era are very scarce.
The next round of breads are on me! Until our next meeting.
How amazing are the twists in life my friend and we also enjoyed the meeting, as you might be young, but you have an old soul.
As you know, we run a few charity projects and a while ago we fed the poor in the Sir Lowry's pass village. Then I had the idea to get a large baking oven, so that they could bake fresh bread for the community, as they only get stale donated bread.
Maybe something that you might want to participate in as a volunteer in the future.
Cheers for now.
Thank you! Sometimes I feel the old body trying to get out of bed as well.
Yes totally, I would love to help out. I have loads of free time (or at least I want to believe so), so just give me a shout and I will see if I can help out. It would be an honor to help.
Hahaha, "the old body"
Thank you and I will give you a shout when I have enough to buy the oven.
!BEER
I guess you'd be looking at an industrial oven? Or just a normal kitchen oven?
View or trade
BEER
.BEER
Hey @fermentedphil, here is a little bit of from @papilloncharity for you. Enjoy it!Did you know that you can use BEER at dCity game to **buy dCity NFT cards** to rule the world.
$PIZZA@fermentedphil! I sent you a slice of on behalf of @papilloncharity.
Learn more about $PIZZA Token at hive.pizza (4/10)
They just look divine.
but here is the funny part. I know you said that the longer you ferment... the better for GF people.
but the first three flours made me giggle.
Guess what GF people can't eat? hehehe
wheat
rye
barley
ROFLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL
so hmmmm i think i'm in trouble on this one phil! LOLOLOL
I know! I will write something up about the studies on GF and sourdough. It depends on how long you ferment the flour. So if you ferment it for longer than 72 hours, the gluten content reduces radically. But these studies are very controversial at the moment haha. So take it with a word of caution or with a pinch of salt.
really great way
Thank you so much! Do you also bake sourdough bread?
yes you are friends
It's looks like Insects..😅
Is that a good or bad thing 😅
Love my sourdough bread and I am 100 % sure I’d love yours too. These loaves look divine!!
Oh, thank you so much! Every starter is unique, it would be interesting to compare the breads side to side.
What food is this I'm so hungry to see it
This is homemade bread 😀
I thought it was a meat ! my bad haha
No problem! That brown bits have a meaty taste haha.
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Oh boy... I want try this 🍷👌👌👌 it looks cool.
I text it up... one day I try also make it.
Thank you so much, my friend! Yes, please try this.
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To support your work, I also upvoted your post!
Will report back if I get it right eventually, so thank you for this blog!Soooo, I'm currently trying to get my sourdough starter going properly, but will study this blog tomorrow as I'm determined to get it right. I was drowning it at first as @fionsafavourites told me, so added more flour and it's now looking more promising! It smells good and is bubbling, but not quite enough!
I really hope the blog post helps! There was so much to cover, so I still left out a lot. The more flour you add to the starter, the more "food" it has, but with too little water, it will take much longer to ferment. I mostly try for a 50/50 or 1:1 ratio of water and flour. But please do report back and don't be shy to ask any questions.
This is awesome. I love sourdough bread.
Awesome stuff. I love banking but don't really do sourdough too often. Feel in the mood after reading this to give it a go again!
Glad I could inspire you! Sourdough is something totally different from the normal stuff.
Yeah, I love the stuff. I have made it before but to be honest the thing I found the hardest was keeping my starter alive for long periods at a time as I kept forgetting!
Funny thing, sometimes they are so strong! I forgot mine for 2 or 3 months, because it did not want to rise and it survived. And another time I wasn't home for 1 month, and it also survived. But yes, it is hard work to keep it alive!
It is rewarding hard work but yes, possibly a little too much for me. I make a mean regular loaf which I am quite pleased with so it will remain an occasional pleasure I think. Defo do it soon though. Yours has put me right in the mood!
Glad I could put you in the mood to bake one again! Sometimes, and only sometimes, it is worth the effort. I question my own eagerness to spend so much time with the bread. Have a good one! Thanks for stopping by.
Daymn, looks amazing! I have thought about doing sourdough bread, but never gotten around to it :D
Thank you so much my friend! If you are left unsatisfied with normal bread, and even store-bought sourdough (if you do not have a nice bakery close by) you will never look back! Good bread changes your life.
great and creative creation