Showing posts with label baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baking. Show all posts

Sunday, 4 January 2015

Update - Sour Dough Bread Journey

First bake of 2015 and after doing some research on the www i have adjusted my recipe to make a wetter dough and adjusted the hydration of the recipe so i am now at 80%. This makes a much wetter dough and is very sticky making it harder to manage initial folds, but after diving in and ensure hands are dusted with flour it soon becomes very workable.

i am now playing with amount of folds and times between, this one was one fold 1 hour after initial proof, followed by another fold 30 minutes later

recipe definitely produces a lighter dough, no where near as heavy as my previous dough's, as you can see holes are slightly larger and this is something i want to improve on next

new recipe is listed below and i am still playing around with the basic recipe so keep an eye out for future recipe posts


Recipe

350g strong white flour
10g red malt flour
100g rye flour
300g sour dough starter
10g sea salt
360g warm water

ice for cooking

Method
  1.  i simply weigh out all ingredients and place in to mixing bowl, using a dough hook i mix on slow for approx 10 minutes. (salt is added after 2-3 minutes of initial mixing)
  2. remove hook and cover the mixing bowl with clingfilm, i then put a plastic carrier bag over the bowl, wet a large towel and place this over the bowl. place the bowl in a warm area and proof for approx 45 minutes. 
  3. remove the dough from the bowl and push down dough, i then grab dough at both ends and gently shake up and down whilst pulling lightly on dough, this stretches the dough in length. 
  4. place the dough on to a work surface, fold over each edge of the stretched dough to the middle of what you have and then i proceed to shape the dough to what i need to fit my brotform.
  5. once i have placed the dough in to the mould i place in the fridge for proofing and leave overnight, in the morning i take the dough out of the fridge for 1-2 hours before baking
  6. pre heat oven to 250c, i always place my bread stone in the cold oven and let it heat with the oven, at the same time i also place a metal tray on the shelf below the bread stone
  7. once the oven is at temperature i tip the dough on to the bread stone, i place ice in to the pre-heated oven tray and then close the oven door
  8. bake at 250c for approx 10 minutes, then reduce the temperature to 200c for approx 25-30 minutes
  9. test the base of the bread by tapping on it, if it sounds hollow then its cooked. ENJOY!!!



Saturday, 15 November 2014

Sour Dough Tomato & Parmesan Bread

this mornings effort - see recipe on my original sour dough bread

i added to this

100g sun blush tomatoes cut in small pieces
30g finely grated Parmesan

these were added same time as all other ingredients

lunch with smoked salmon, cream cheese and mixed leaves, simple but delicious



Sunday, 9 November 2014

Sour Dough Journey Continues

so my second attempt at making sour dough and one week later, i have now dived in and bought a couple of brotforms to help with the sticking issues that i had last time.

unbelievably a light dusting of flour in the brotform and proof the dough for 12 hours and out my little loaf slid straight on to the bread baking stone - purchased at the same time as the brotforms

recipe is listed below and i am still playing around with the basic recipe so keep an eye out for future recipe posts

most of my recipes are approx weights as i rarely weigh ingredients whilst cooking, however i do always weigh out when making bread

see pictures below, the sandwich is filled with delicious pulled chicken, keep an eye out for this recipe soon!!

Recipe

460g strong white flour
300g sour dough starter
10g sea salt
230g warm water

ice for cooking

Method
  1.  i simply weigh out all ingredients and place in to mixing bowl, using a dough hook i mix on slow for approx 10 minutes. 
  2. remove hook and cover the mixing bowl with clingfilm, i then put a plastic carrier bag over the bowl, wet a large towel and place this over the bowl. place the bowl in a warm area and proof for approx 45 minutes. 
  3. remove the dough from the bowl and push down dough, i then grab dough at both ends and gently shake up and down whilst pulling lightly on dough, this stretches the dough in length. 
  4. place the dough on to a work surface, fold over each edge of the stretched dough to the middle of what you have and then i proceed to shape the dough to what i need to fit my brotform.
  5. once i have placed the dough in to the mould i place in the fridge for proofing and leave overnight, in the morning i take the dough out of the fridge for 1-2 hours before baking
  6. pre heat oven to 250c, i always place my bread stone in the cold oven and let it heat with the oven, at the same time i also place a metal tray on the shelf below the bread stone
  7. once the oven is at temperature i tip the dough on to the bread stone, i place ice in to the pre-heated oven tray and then close the oven door
  8. bake at 250c for approx 10 minutes, then reduce the temperature to 200c for approx 25-30 minutes
  9. test the base of the bread by tapping on it, if it sounds hollow then its cooked. ENJOY!!!














Saturday, 8 November 2014

Cheese on Toast

So not wanting to waste my first sour dough bread, it got turned in to one of my favourite evening snacks - cheese on toast

So easy, quick and tasty

Weights all approx as I have never weighed ingredients when cooking

2-3 slices of bread
8oz grated cheese, I like to mix mine really strong cheddar with good blue cheese
8oz Branson pickle
Half small jar anchovies
Good dash of Worcester sauce

Toast one side of each slice of bread, on the un-toasted side of bread spread out pickle, top with grated cheese, top with anchovies and then dash of Worcester sauce. Put back under grill and cook until cheese bubbles. 

Pickle can be replaced with piccalilli or any other chutney and trust me try the anchovies really do make it


Sour Dough Bread First Attempt

Well they say the fun with cooking is experimenting, well my first attempt was not a great success, you know that feeling when you just wish you had not bothered.

First time I had used my starter, however this was not the issue. I had read on line about proving by wrapping a tea towel in a colander so I tried this and that was the mistake, came to tipping out the bread on to oven tray and yes you guessed it. Just stuck to the tea towel and would not come out, with oven door wide open and heat escaping there I am stood pulling, pushing and smacking, eventually out it came, completely deflated but by now it's too late so I had to carry on and let it cook.

Result was not bad but not great 

You can see it sticking in the picture below

Things can only get better 


Sour Dough Journey Begins

So I decided to get back into making bread recently, I have never tried sour dough bread but thought it would be as good a time as any to have a go at it myself. So it all begins with creating your own starter, after lots of reading and researching I came up with the following recipe

In a large plastic container weigh out 200g of strong white flour and then stir in 200ml of warm water, keep stirring until well combined. It then needs to be left out somewhere warm so that it can catch airborne yeast. I really did not believe that this was possible and it took 2 days before you really start to see bubbles appearing on the surface.

Each day you need to feed the starter with equal amounts of strong white flour and warm water, I used 100g of each every day for 9 days

After about 5 days I used water that I had soaked crushed red grapes in for over 24 hours, when I added this, the next morning the air bubbles and growth was amazing. I continue to do this every other week 

Many recipes I have seen say about throwing away half the starter when you feed, I have never done this yet and just continue to feed my starter weekly 2-3 days before I need it for a recipe

When not using my starter I leave in the fridge un-fed till I need it, the longest it has sat without being fed is 3 weeks, it soon comes back to life after just one feed.

Keep an eye out for my recipes using sour dough starter