Sunday, April 30, 2017

Perfecting the Sour Cream Rye recipe

My intention was to try the simplified two-step process with the sour cream rye recipe that I made a few weeks ago.  This was also going to be my first weekday sourdough loaf.  Yes, I have a day job.  I set my starter to refresh overnight and prepared the rest of the ingredients in the bread pan with the intention of preparing the sponge the next morning and adding it to the top of the other ingredients.  Then, I would set the delay timer to create a finished product in about 12 hours. 

The next morning, however, I figured, "WTH?  I'll be home from work in time to start the bread machine on a normal cycle and be there to monitor the progress if I need to add water." So, I just prepared the sponge as usual and combined it with the rest of the recipe after it had grown for 8 hours.  In the end, there was enough water in the recipe so that my two-step process would have worked.

What I didn't have enough of, though, was rye flour.  The recipe calls for 2 cups, and I only had about 1½ cups.  I made up for the shortage with white flour.  My whole recipe, then, was

Sour Cream Rye Bread, Take 2
Remove 4 oz. of starter.  Add 4 oz. of white flour and 4 oz. of water.  Set in a warm place for about 6 hours until it doubles in size.  Then, add
Sour Cream
½ Cup
Vegetable Oil
2 Tbl
Sugar
2 Tbl
Salt
1 tsp
Caraway seeds
1 Tbl
Vital gluten
1 Tbl
Rye flour
 Cups
White bread flour
2  Cups
Water as needed
5 oz.

Since I was home for the mixing cycle, I peeked inside.  The dough formed a nice ball


It hadn't picked up every last bit from the corners, but there was still plenty of time left in the mixing cycle.  The dough ball looked good, so in retrospect, I could use this recipe in a two-step processes.

The loaf rose better than I was anticipating for a recipe that has so much rye flour in it.


It had that break-away pompadour look that I am coming to expect from rye bread.  It is also quite heavy.  As before, it tastes great.

Next, white sourdough.

Saturday, April 22, 2017

Simplification

This week, I am going to take one of my successful recipes and try to streamline the process.  So far, my process is:
  1. Refresh the starter by discarding half and adding 4 oz. (¾ cup) of flour and 4 oz. (½ cup) of water.  Put that in a warm place for 6-8 hours.
  2. Prepare the sponge for me new loaf.  Put that in a warm place for 6-8 hours.
  3. Combine the ingredients in my bread machine and press "Start."
Now, one of the first two steps can run overnight, but for the other, I need to be home at the start and end of the 6-8 hour growth phase.  This week's experiment is to try letting the sponge grow on top of the rest of the ingredients in the bread pan.  I'll set the bread machine on the delay timer so that the sponge gets its 6-8 hours of development time. Then, the machine will start mixing automatically.  I hope to come home or wake up to a fresh loaf of bread.

I'm in the mood for a rye bread, but looking back at my last attempt, I think I'd like to be present for the mixing cycle to decide how much "as needed" water is needed.  Instead, I'll use the whole wheat recipe that I've been working on for some time.

My starter is down in the happy yeast room, getting refreshed.  In the meantime, I am going to put the remaining ingredients in the bread pan.

Whole Wheat
Water
5 oz.
Whole wheat flour
2 ¼  cups
White flour
¼ cup
Vital Gluten
1 Tbl
Salt
1 tsp
Butter
1 ½ Tbl
Honey
¼ cup

The flour needs to go in last so that the sponge doesn't mix with the other ingredients until the bread machine starts mixing.  After the sourdough starter was poured on top of that mixture, my bread pan looks like this:

I set the timer to have a finished loaf in 12 hours.  The mix-rise-bake cycle is 3 hours and 40 minutes, so that leaves 8 hours and 20 minutes for the sponge to grow. Time for bed.

I woke up just before the mixing cycle started.  The sponge on top of the rest looked like this:


It's kind of hard to judge the activity with it spread all over.  After the first mixing cycle, the dough ball looked like this:


I was tempted to add a bit of water, but this is an experiment in turning a 3-step process into 2 steps.  Plus, it didn't look too bad.  During the second mixing cycle, it looked healthy, sticking slightly to the sides of the pan as the paddle spun it around.


At the end of that cycle, the dough even looked a little limp.  I'm convinced that it has enough water.


The result looked much like the 3-step loaf.
2-step loaf:


3-step loaf:


So, I'd call this experiment a success.

Friday, April 21, 2017

Perfecting the Whole Wheat Recipe, Take 4

I enjoyed my sour cream rye bread from last week.  Despite its heaviness, it made good sandwiches, and I especially liked it on its own as a piece of toast with butter or olive oil.

Now, I am going back to trying to get a better result from my whole wheat recipe.  I'm thinking that the sourdough sponge might need some fresh white flour to eat during the rising process, so I added ¼ cup of white flour.  The additional flour will need additional water.  I tried increasing from 3 oz. to 4, but that still left a lot of unmixed flour in the corners of the pan.  I added one more ounce, and got this nice looking dough ball.


It is stickier than I would like if I were kneading it by hand, but it should be fine in the bread machine.  It sticks a little bit to the sides of the pan as the paddle is kneading it.

Another change is that I've increased the vital gluten to 1 tablespoon.  Now, my recipe looks like this:

Whole Wheat
Preparation
The night before, discard all but 4 oz. of the starter from the fridge.  Add 4 oz. of water and 4 oz. of white flour.  Set in a warm place overnight.
Sponge
Take 4 oz. of the fed starter.  Add 4 oz. of white flour and 4 oz. of water.  Set in a warm place for 6 hours.
Place the remaining starter (unfed) in the fridge for next time.
Water
5 oz.
Whole wheat flour
2 ¼  cups
White flour
¼ cup
Vital Gluten
1 Tbl
Salt
1 tsp

Butter
1 ½ Tbl
Honey
¼ cup

The loaf still came out a little short
It's not much taller than Take 3 or Take2
It also had this weird light colored shell in the crust.


Still, it tastes really good.  I think I finished tinkering with this recipe.  It may never rise as high as the commercial yeast version, but it makes a tasty loaf of bread that is good for sandwiches or for toast.  I'm going to stick with it.

Next, I'm going to try to simplify the process so that it needs less interaction with the baker (me).

Sunday, April 9, 2017

Sour Cream and Sourdough

I'm taking a break from getting my whole wheat recipe right.  Today's effort is a recipe from the book.


I'm making the Sour Cream Rye recipe.  I'm using my new refresh technique of feeding the starter the night before and using the freshly fed starter in my sponge the next morning.  The recipe is


Sour Cream Rye Bread
Remove 4 oz. of starter.  Add 4 oz. of white flour and 4 oz. of water.  Set in a warm place for about 6 hours until it doubles in size.  Then, add
Sour Cream
½ Cup
Vegetable Oil
2 Tbl
Sugar
2 Tbl
Salt
1 tsp
Caraway seeds
1 Tbl
Vital gluten
1 Tbl
Rye flour
2 Cups
White bread flour
 Cup
Water as needed

Now that I've written it out, I'm thinking that I might have used just 2 tsp of sugar instead of 2 Tbl.  Well, it's baking as I write.  That could be an issue.

This recipe is quite different from the other rye bread recipe that I made in February.  That one had twice as much white flour as rye.  This one has more rye than white.  I'm expecting this loaf to be on the dense side.

Regarding the "water as needed," it needed a lot.  Before adding any water, my mix looked like this:
There's lots of crumbly clumps in there.  I added ¼ cup of water immediately, and started the cycle over.  After a repeat of the initial mix cycle with the extra water, the dough ball still seemed a little stiff


so, I added another ounce of water.  Now, the dough ball is a little on the sticky side which should help it rise.  It still seems coarse, which is probably due to the high rye-to-white ratio.


The loaf rose better than I was expecting, but it is still quite heavy.  The result was quite tasty and a couple of slices make a substantial breakfast.  It's almost like pumpernickel.  I would be good with corned beef.  Here it is next to my new standard of height, a can of liquid bread
.
It's still got that pompadour hair style when viewed from the other side


Overall, I'd say this is a success.  A few weeks later, I tried tweaking this recipe a little.

Saturday, April 1, 2017

Perfecting the Whole Wheat Recipe - Take 3

Last week's attempts to get the whole wheat recipe right were short of 100% successful.  I made a brick on SaturdaySunday's attempt was better, and in fact, edible, but still denser that I would like.  Today's attempt is only a slight tweak from last Sunday.

First, I fed my sourdough starter overnight.  That gave me an active starter that had never been refrigerated to make my sponge.  The only other change is that I am going to add 2 teaspoons of vital gluten to help the loaf rise.  I thought of adding a little more white flour to the final mix, but I want to just tweak this recipe a little at a time until I get it right.  The amount of vital gluten is a guess.  Some of my rye recipes use as much as 1 tablespoon  Some recipes use 2 teaspoons.  The box of vital gluten says to use 4 teaspoons, but they might be biased. 😀 I thought of trying just 1 to start, but I'd really like to have a success, today.  Two it is!

The whole procedure is

Whole Wheat
Preparation
The night before, discard all but 4 oz. of the starter from the fridge.  Add 4 oz. of water and 4 oz. of white flour.  Set in a warm place overnight.
Sponge
Take 4 oz. of the fed starter.  Add 4 oz. of white flour and 4 oz. of water.  Set in a warm place for 6 hours.
Place the remaining starter (unfed) in the fridge for next time.
Water
3 oz.
Whole wheat flour
2 ¼  cups
White flour
None
Vital Gluten
2 tsp
Salt
1 tsp
Butter
1 ½ Tbl
Honey
¼ cup

The starting point for my sponge:


That looks like a lot more than last week, but the bowl is smaller.  After six hours it grew to this:
The dough ball in the machine looked healthy.
Alas, the loaf of bread is still a little vertically challenged.  Here it is compared to last week's half-eaten loaf.  It's about the same size.
It tastes good and isn't a brick, but I'm still on a quest to make it taller and less dense.  Next week, I am going to try saving some of the white flour for the final mix.

Next, I am taking a break from the whole wheat quest and making a sourdough rye that uses a half cup of sour cream.