Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Sourdough
13 Answers
Since my April post on this topic, I have embarked upon home baking sourdough loaves.
After two failures with starters, I now have a good one going which is now well over 1 month old.
I have made several passable and very tasty loaves from this over the last month, but the most recent one went wrong somewhere, but I don't know where.
Is there anyone with sourdough baking experience who can tell me why it would end up with enormous cavities, looking like this :-
https:/ /ibb.co /VvPhJY z
After two failures with starters, I now have a good one going which is now well over 1 month old.
I have made several passable and very tasty loaves from this over the last month, but the most recent one went wrong somewhere, but I don't know where.
Is there anyone with sourdough baking experience who can tell me why it would end up with enormous cavities, looking like this :-
https:/
Answers
Slicing and buttering is tricky, Canary..... but filling the holes with seasalt Irish butter is delicious... :-)
19:10 Sun 27th Sep 2020
Not kneading the dough long enough which results in a weak gluten mesh
Too much flour use in final shaping.
Not giving enough time to the first rise ( the bulk fermentation) or Underproofing.
Not scoring or slashing the bread or not deep enough slashes
The oven is not hot enough when you first put the bread inside
High hydration level in your dough
Using too much yeast or leavening agents
Dough temperature is too high
Not enough tension in your dough when shaping
Use heavier flour or whole flour
Too much flour use in final shaping.
Not giving enough time to the first rise ( the bulk fermentation) or Underproofing.
Not scoring or slashing the bread or not deep enough slashes
The oven is not hot enough when you first put the bread inside
High hydration level in your dough
Using too much yeast or leavening agents
Dough temperature is too high
Not enough tension in your dough when shaping
Use heavier flour or whole flour
Woof; you don't add yeast in the sense that I think Martin meant. You grow a culture and then use that to start your bread. You don't add too many teaspoonfuls of yeast, you take it as it comes. I'm not sure that you could control the yeast level. My sourdough efforts have not been very successful, so I'm no expert. I think it probably comes from experience. The more you do it, the better you become. Anyway, some people might like holes.
great blog post here. https:/ /breadt opia.co m/chall enging- sourdou gh-star ter-con vention /
Breadtopia and King Arthur are my two favourite bread websites.
Breadtopia and King Arthur are my two favourite bread websites.