What a Rice Celebration Week!
I love sticky rice! No matter it is cooked whole in a savory dish or made into rice cake or mochi. Fried, steamed, baked or boiled, it is so versatile. After coming across bread recipes that suggested using up leftover rice cake from Chinese New Year by stuffing it into bread, I decided to create my own version of rice cake bread.
Purple Rice Cake Sourdough with 20% Millet and 20% Sprouted Durum
Dough flour (all freshly milled):
180g 60% Whole white wheat flour
60g 20% Sprouted durum flour
60g 20% Whole millet flour
For leaven:
9g 3% Starter
18g 6% Bran sifted out from dough flour
18g 6% Whey
For dough:
282g 94% Dough flour excluding bran for leaven
160g 53.3% Water
100g 33.3% Whey
45g 15% Leaven
9g 3% Vital wheat gluten
5g 1.67% Salt
For purple rice cake:
25g 8.3% Purple rice flour (glutinous black rice)
25g 8.3% White glutinous flour
50g 16.7% Water
5g 1.67% Coconut cream powder
5g 1.67% Sugar
___________
304.5g 100% Whole grain
282.5g 92.8% Total hydration
Make the rice cake. Combine all ingredients then steam for 15 minutes (I cut the time to 5 minutes since pressure cooker was used). Let cool completely and refrigerate until it firms up. Cut it into cubes. Sprinkle it heavily with flour to prevent sticking. Keep refrigerated until needed.
Sift out the coarse bran from the dough flour, reserve 18g for leaven. Soak the rest, if any, in equal amount of whey taken from dough ingredients.
Combine all leaven ingredients and let sit until doubled, around 2.5 hours.
Roughly combine all dough ingredients except for the salt, leaven, and soaked bran, autolyse for 15 minutes. Knead in the reserved ingredients and ferment for 15 minutes. Fold in the purple rice cake then ferment for 3.5 hours longer.
Preshape the dough then let it rest for 15 minutes. Shape the dough and put in into a banneton. Retard for 11 hours.
Preheat the oven at 250°C/482°F. Remove the dough from fridge 30 minutes before baking.
Score and spritz the dough. Bake at 250°C/482°F with steam for 15 minutes then without steam for 25 minutes more or until the internal temperature reaches a minimum of 208°F. Let cool for at least 2 hours before slicing.
The bread has a rather close crumb, which I think both durum and millet played a role in. Moreover, it is a bit cakely and not chewy enough for my taste…On the bright side, I like that the rice cake added some nice stickiness and chewiness. Also, the yellow-purple contrast is just stunning!
The millet and sprouted durum gave this bread plenty of sweetness and there is very little sourness. I think the subtly sweet and aromatic rice cake makes the bread perfect for when you want dessert for breakfast :)
_____________
Time to try a red fife version of half sprouted red wheat bread.
100% Red Fife Sourdough with 50% Sprouted
Dough flour (all freshly milled):
150g 50% Whole red fife flour
150g 50% Sprouted red fife flour
For leaven:
10g 3.3% Starter
40g 13.3% Bran sifted out from dough flour
40g 13.3% Whey
For dough:
260g 86.7% Dough flour excluding bran for leaven
160g 53.3% Water
100g 33.3% Whey
90g 30% Leaven
9g 3% Vital wheat gluten
5g 1.67% Salt
___________
305g 100% Whole grain
305g 100% Total hydration
Sift out the coarse bran from the dough flour, reserve 40g for leaven. Soak the rest, if any, in equal amount of whey taken from dough ingredients.
Combine all leaven ingredients and let sit until doubled, around 3.5 hours.
Roughly combine all dough ingredients except for the salt, leaven, and soaked bran, autolyse for 15 minutes. Knead in the reserved ingredients and ferment for 15 minutes. Stretch and fold the dough for a few times then ferment for 2 hours longer.
Preshape the dough then let it rest for 15 minutes. Shape the dough and put in into a banneton. Retard for 8 hours.
Preheat the oven at 250°C/482°F.
Score and spritz the dough then bake directly from the fridge at 250°C/482°F with steam for 15 minutes then without steam for 25 minutes more or until the internal temperature reaches a minimum of 208°F. Let cool for at least 2 hours before slicing.
As you can probably tell, I under-proofed the dough slightly. Fortunately, the bread still has great texture and a moderately open crumb.
Containing 50% sprouted flour, the bread tastes amazing. Nevertheless, its taste doesn’t differ from that of regular red wheat as much as I have hoped for. I guess sprouting the grains reduced the faint flavour contrast.
_________
Wow! I can't believe I made so many rice dishes within a week when rice is not even my preferred grain!
Thai pineapple minced pork fried rice
Omelette fried rice
Clear-the-fridge stir fry with minced lamb
Today’s dinner where Shanghai cuisine was the theme
Comments
in the bread. Who does that? Elsie for sure. Love the omelette . Can't live without fried rice no matter what anyone says. I was going to throw away my black rice SD starter levain and the bread made from it. But after 48 hours after eating it no problems at all and the bread was killer good so I just sort of forgot to toss anything and I[m glad I had a change of heart.. Turns out folks have been making Gluten Free SD bread using brown rice SD starter for years with no problems. Sometimes we worry too much even when it pays to be cautious. All of your food looks grand as usual. Love to read your posts.
Making black rice starter SD noodles with Kamut, rye, spelt and wheat whole grains so we can have Carbonara pasta with bacon, soprasata, pepperoni grape tomatoes and basil for dinner tomorrow. The 50% hydration egg dough doubled after 4 hours on the counter and 10 minutes of old fashioned kneading. Knocked it back and put it in the fridge overnight. Should be killer for sure. Well done and happy baking Elsie!
And using it in Carbonara can only make it better. I like your refreshing and summery tweak of adding basil and tomatoes. Although it's not handmade, I'm having pasta for lunch tomorrow too. I just had dinner yet my mouth is watering already...
Black rice starter should look striking for sure. Fortunately you didn't give up on it :) I guess it smells like fermented dosa batter? I has an obsession with red rice currently thanks to Ian. A bake with sprouted red rice flour was planned but given up later since red rice seemed to tough for the mill. It clogged up when I was trying to mill the rice, not once but thrice! Next time I'll soak the rice for hours then grind it up as if I'm making dosa batter. Hopefully it'll turn out better.
Glad you enjoy reading the post! I look forward to your black rice leavened bread and pasta!
I had a similar idea before of incorporating rice cakes in bread some years ago but it didn't materialize due to lack of funds at that moment then I got distracted with other bread and completely forgot about it. I'm glad I saw this post of yours so I can have a guide for the future. I'm so thrilled from this bread. Cheers from a fellow sticky rice lover!
(What a coincidence for Shanghai cuisine, I posted a scallion pancake-derived snack and I had a sheng jian bao from our favorite shop in Chinatown last Tuesday.)
Savory cheese desserts, crispy-bottomed & juicy-centered bao and sticky rice are likely a tiny fraction of food we share our love for :) I was excited about how well this bread turned out so it's nice to know that you feel the same! Who knows rice cake belongs with bread?
Oh you just had sheng jian bao! You triggered the craving again...I must make it soon.
Just to let you know, your Green Onion Barajas gave me the idea on how the leftover garlic chives could be used up:
I only get to taste garlic chives in Chinatown. I'm craving for some again because of you photos.