About a month ago I
succeeded in getting sourdough starter going in my kitchen. Capturing and
cultivating wild organisms to ferment flour is a kind of farming in my mind.
Whether I’m growing crops or raising livestock isn’t clear to me. All I know is
that I take care of my starter organisms and they take care of me. We have a
nifty symbiotic relationship going, feeding each other.
Once the starter got going
I had to learn how to use it. Right away I was in trouble because sourdough
bread is traditionally made of white flour and baked as a round loaf. I wanted
to use whole wheat flour and make rectangular loaves of sourdough, so most recipes were
irrelevant. A few home bakers are making whole wheat sourdough and several have
posted their recipes on line. I’ve been trying various ones like Goldilocks,
looking for the flour, starter, and water combination to produce the perfect
9-inch rectangular loaf of sourdough bread.
I made recipe after recipe,
tinkering with ingredients and proportions. Some were too small, some were too
hard, some were too messy, and none of them filled the bread pan just right.
I’ve made so many loaves. I’ve given loaves away to friends and even shared some
with Annie and the chickens. Finally, Ta-Da! I think I’ve worked it out, using
a little bit of commercial yeast to boost the rise.
Whole wheat sourdough will
never look like white sourdough, with its loft and big holes. That’s because
white flour is pure starch while whole wheat flour contains not only the
starch, but also the heavier grain elements, such as bran. Its rise produces
only small holes and the loaf weighs a ton, but it has the characteristic sour
taste of fermentation and a firm structure.
Whole Wheat Sourdough Bread
1 cup lukewarm water
½ teaspoon commercial yeast
2 tablespoons oil
1¼ cups of whole wheat sourdough
starter
2 teaspoons salt
3 to 3½ cups of whole wheat flour or whole wheat bread flour
Starting in the late
afternoon, pour the water into a large mixing bowl and sprinkle the yeast over
it. When the yeast has dissolved, add the oil, salt, and starter. Stir to mix
well, then add the flour, one cup at a time,. If 3½ cups of flour make a stiff dough, stop there. If not, add
more flour up to another ½ cup. If you use an electric mixer with a dough hook to mix the dough, further kneading is not needed. If you mix the dough by hand, knead the dough for a few minutes and replace it in the mixing bowl.
Cover the bowl with a lid
or plastic. Let the dough rise overnight. This bread is incredibly slow rise!
The next morning, punch the dough down and form it into a loaf. Put the loaf in a buttered 9-inch
bread pan, cover it with a dishtowel, and leave it to rise again.
When the dough is nicely
rounded over the top of the pan, bake it in a preheated 375ยบ oven for 40
minutes. Turn the loaf out of the pan onto a rack to cool. Try not to cut that
first slice until the bread is just warm, not hot.
Copyright
2014 by Shirley Domer
1 comment:
Beautiful, Shilrley! It looks like a perfect loaf. I am going to borrow your recipe!
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