Reading through some of the Baguette CB posts I noticed that alfanso had made Hamelman's Sourdough Seeded Bread and when I was deciding what to make this week I decided to have a go at this.
Monday I refreshed my starter and then before I went to bed I mixed up the soaker & the levain
Soaker: 27 g flaxseed & 81 g room temperature water. Covered and left overnight
Levain: 12 g starter + 73 g water + 57 g flour mixed, covered and left overnight.
Tuesday 9 am Dry toasted 23 g sesame seed & 46 g sunflower seed in skillet as I didn't want to heat the oven just for this.
9:30 am Instructions were to mix all ingredients together. I decided to add the toasted seed mix later during bulk ferment so mixed together all of the soaker + 136 g water + all levain. This was then added to 294 g flour + 1 g diastatic malt + 31 g rye flour + 8.8 g salt. I felt dough was a little dry so I added 2 tspn water. I did fewer slap & folds than usual then rested dough for 40 mins.
10:30 am The dough felt really quite strong and Hamelman suggests only 1 fold after an hour and a quarter. I felt this was too long to wait to incorporate the sesame & sunflower seeds so I gently pulled the dough out as much as it would allow then sprinkled the seed mix over, folded the sides in then folded the dough bottom to middle then top down and left to rest for another 45 minutes.
11:15 am At this point the dough was very strong but I did manage one gentle coil fold to ensure the seed mix was evenly distributed. I left the dough to ferment for 3 more hours.
2:15 pm Shape dough, place in banneton and leave on bench. At 3:45 pm I had to go out so I popped dough in the fridge until the next morning. I could see there was some slight increase in volume but it wasn't big during final proof or bulk ferment.
I saw a post by Gavinc who had also made this formula and felt his final proof should have gone longer (if I remember correctly). This was why I gave the dough a 90 minute bench proof before retarding.
The other bread I made was also a new formula & method for me. I made fullproofbaking's 50% wholewheat sourdough, and I followed her method as much as I could - it is very different to anything I have done before.
I did a second refresh of my starter Monday night, feeding it 50:50 white:wholewheat flour. Yesterday morning early I built the levain and kept it in the microwave at about 27 deg C until it was ready to use. Because I don't trust the flour here in NZ to perform well with an extended autolyse, I only did a 2 hour rather than 4 hour autolyse for the wholewheat portion. It was really wet. The white flour had its own autolyse and once again I shortened it to just 1 hour.
Once the levain was ready, I added the starter to each autolyse and mixed for several minutes. In the end I gave the white flour dough 50 SLAFs and the wholewheat I mixed with a spoon as it was too wet and showed very little evidence of gluten development. After resting for 45 minutes, I added salt to each dough and mixed again as before. The doughs were rested another 45 minutes and then combined by way of lamination. The combined dough was soft but seemed ok.
I managed another 3 sets of coil folds then left dough to ferment. Instructions said 2 hours so I thought sweet! I have to go out but should be back in time. Room temperature (and dough temperature) were lower than fullproofbaking"s so I thought all will be well.
Oh dear, I came home to pancake. It was close to the indicated time and dough had spread and puffed up a bit so I shaped as well as I could and put it in the fridge to retard overnight.
BAKING
This morning I baked both loaves in DO at 250 deg C for 15 minutes, lid off and another 15 minutes at 230 deg C. The 50% wholewheat loaf was done so I removed it from the oven but had to put the Seeded sourdough loaf back for another 10 minutes until internal temperature was 205 deg F.
What a contrast.
Seeded sourdough - the back loaf in the lead photo
Here is the crumb
I think it could have done with a bit more on the bench before retarding but whilst firm it isn't actually too dense. The addition of the diastatic malt (thank you Albacore!) has meant I finally have some decent caramelisation of the crust!! The taste is really good so I will make this again, possibly adding a bit more water given how strong this dough was. I wonder if an autolyse would have made this more extensible
50% wholewheat - oh dear:(
It's pretty flat! Quite disappointed.
Crumb shot
Ok, so the profile is pretty flat, but the crumb isn't too bad. It tastes really good.
I used the same white bread flour in both these bakes and whilst the strength of the seeded sourdough was more than I thought it would be, this flour does seem to be strong and my bakes have shown that. It was a bit of a surprise that the 50% wholewheat dough was so slack, I can only think that this was mostly to do with the wholewheat. I will have to try again, but next time I will reduce the length of the autolyse and the hydration especially in the wholewheat. I will also incorporate a lot more slap and folds to build strength
Leslie