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WE ARE SO BACK

11mon 24d ago by lemmy.world/u/sneekee_snek_17 in sourdough

First time in a long time I've made the tartine country loaf and actually followed the recipe. God, it's so good. The way the dough feels, the sheen on the crust, the smell is incredible, just an absolutely fantastic recipe

(I will admit they look pretty underproofed, this recipe usually doesn't have that vigorous of oven spring or a big ear, but I was impatient)

My shaping was also mediocre at best

Loaf 1: 15 hour cold proof

Loaf 2: 16ish hours

awesome! care to show is the insides?

Bad news, actually, the insides are ugly

Sure looks like the kinds of breads you get with a new starter, don't you think?

Hasn't happened enough to say with certainty, but if I had to guess, I'd say you're probably right

looks don't count nearly as much as taste - and this sure looks tasty!

at least you get big bubbles, even though they are quite irregular. i never manage to get such big bubbles

Beautiful breads! Have you changed your flour with the move to the new place?

Not really, I've used the store brand all purpose, but this one is exclusively king arthur bread and whole wheat, since I'm doing a side-by-side comparison with a buddy to diagnose any issues with his technique

I thought this was onehundredninetysix@lemmy.blahaj.zone for a second, lol

Just checked it out, I do NOT understand that place at all lol

there's not much to understand, it's just people posting literally anything - you should too!

The only rules are:

  1. post something before you leave (anything)
  2. put "rule" in the post title

It's a bit wacky, but the rules create a lot of content and some of it is amusing.

souruledough

Cooking is Art, Baking is Science.

If you want to get anywhere in baking, take a proven recipe and stick to it to the letter. If it says "lick the loaf", do it, it has a reason...

I mean, that being said, once you get a good guy feeling for the process you can improv pretty well

But as a general rule I 100% agree

For improv, especially on a bread recipe, you'll need a load of experience.

I mean... It looks like OP got it down

There still is a difference between closely following a recipe and being able to wing it.

The post before this one was without a recipe

In fairness, though, I have this one largely memorized, so anytime I don't use a recipe it's more like, "A jazz rendition of the Tartine country loaf"

Other than aesthetics, what is the benefit from having an ear form?

Literally none. I tend to score my loaves straight down the middle, at a 90° angle, which gives the best oven spring without a massive ear

This looks super good! Mind sharing your recipe? I wanna try something different than my usual rye bread

Night before: mix 1tbsp leaven, 200g warm water, 200g 50/50 all purpose and whole wheat

Morning: 700g 80° water, 200g leaven, 900g AP, 100g WW, mix, rest 25-40min

Add 21g salt dissolved in 50g water

Bulk ferment 3-4 hours, 2-3 folds in the first 60-90 minutes (can take longer, this recipe moves slowly)

After BF, divide and shape into rounds for 20-30min bench rest

Shape into loaves and rise at room temp for 3-4 hours, or 12-18 in the fridge