The Fresh Loaf

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First Loaf with New Starter - 100% milled WW

loydb's picture
loydb

First Loaf with New Starter - 100% milled WW

I've been baking yeasted breads while I rebuilt a starter. Yesterday was the first bake with it, and I'm pleased.

The recipe is the San Francisco sourdough from BBA. I milled 5% rye and 95% hard white wheat.

I did stretch and folds every 20 minutes for the first two hours, then left it alone for three hours. Shaped and put into a banneton, then into the fridge to proof for two hours.

It's very lightly sour, which I expect from a new starter. I'll see how it develops over the next month before making a decision to keep or not.


Comments

seasidejess's picture
seasidejess

It certainly rose your bread very nicely. Are you hoping for it to get more sour?

ninarosner's picture
ninarosner

Looks beautiful, I love that deep brown WW colour. How did it taste?

loydb's picture
loydb

It tasted great, just not very sour. I'll both expect this loaf to get more sour as a couple of days go by (assuming it lasts that long), and for the starter itself to become more sour as it develops over the next few sessions.

 

 

Benito's picture
Benito

What a perfect looking loaf of bread, congratulations.

Benny

idaveindy's picture
idaveindy

Loyd,  I have both editions of BBA,  (original in print/used, 15th anniv in Kindle because it was on sale) but I  couldn't find an exact match for both sourdough and 100% WW.  

If you're willing to share your secret recipe, could you please, pretty please, let folks know the edition, page number, and what modifications you made?

I'm guessing you took the 100% WW with yeast and converted to sourdough.  So timings would help.

Thanks.

loydb's picture
loydb

I'm using the 15th Anniv. BBA, p. 245 recipe for Basic Sourdough Bread. I just used 100% WW (it *does* say unbleached BF or other combination of flours).

The only change I made was adding the stretch and folds at 20 minute intervals for two hours (6 total).

 

 

 

loydb's picture
loydb

As I'd hoped, 48 hours later and the loaf is noticeably more sour. I don't think it's going to last long enough to see much more development.