Frequent Feedings and Flavor
I was away for a few weeks (in Scandinavia and the Baltics, where rye bread is standard) and came back home and refreshed my rye starter. It was alive but lethargic (needing 12+ hrs at 72 F to double rather than the usual 8 hrs at 70 F), so I did another feeding.
It was right back to normal after the 2nd feeding, and I made Hamelman's 100% Workday whole wheat photos: Workday 100% Whole Wheat formula and notes in here: Bread Formulas
The loaves weren't the most attractive, but they were the best tasting ones for this formula that I remember. I made them at 85% hydration and added 3 rounds of folds during bulk fermentations (stretch and fold, coil fold, and a lamination fold for strength and to incorporate the walnuts for my wife, per the notes for the formula).
Each step was 12 hrs apart (mix levain, mix final dough, shape & proof, bake).
The only differences between this one and the usual batches were:
- Two refreshes of the starter before mixing the levain instead of the usual one weekly feeding
- 12 hrs for the levain to develop before mixing the final dough instead of the usual 16 hrs
- Baked about 5 minutes longer than usual to an internal temp of 210 F rather than the usual ~198 F
Would any of these changes (or some combination) have improved the flavor enough to notice?
Thanks
I don't have a definitive answer here, but a few thoughts. Of course, you haven't said in what way the flavor seems better.
1. Baking to a higher internal temperature probably cooked the crust more than usual. Crust flavor adds to the overall flavor sensation, sometimes quite a bit.
2. At the lower temperature, the interior would have been moister and that could have subdued the flavor enhancement of the crust.
3. The change in refresh and levain schedules probably changed the balance between yeast and bacteria, and might have changed the composition of the flavor components created by the bacteria.
4. The starter might not have gotten back to normal even though it rose in the usual time.
Somewhat speculative, I know, especially the last two items.
TomP