The Fresh Loaf

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Whole wheat in sourdough bread

BaniJP's picture
BaniJP

Whole wheat in sourdough bread

Hi everyone!

Due to the pandemic there is basically no good wheat flour in the shelves anymore (only high extraction type 405). I still get good loaves out of what I have, but I also want to get some kind of nutritional value out of them.

So I want to use whole wheat flour or at least have a certain amount in my bread (30%+). My question is, what adjustments do I need to make and what to look out for? I kinda know about higher hydration and my book is also giving some tips, but I also would like to hear some advice from the fountain of bread knowledge that is The Fresh Loaf :)

(I wanted to do this already for some time, but wanted to perfect my standard loaf first. Now is a good opportunity...I've already worked with small amounts of barley flour and cracked wheat, works great!)

idaveindy's picture
idaveindy

WW ferments quicker than white flour.   Fresh-milled even more so.  I have to reduce either the percent prefermented flour, or ferment/proof times, or both, compared to white flour loaves.

seasidejess's picture
seasidejess

The autolyse is more important for ww. The bran needs to hydrate. I usually go an hour or overnight. I have heard advice to autolyse white and ww flour separately, or the white steals all the water before the ww can soak any up. I only use ww so I haven't seen that myself.

dbazuin's picture
dbazuin

If you a overnight autholyse of ww do you leave it on the counter or in the fridge. 
If have tried a overnight a few days ago and leave it on the counter and it was a disaster. 

I did it with a very high hydration 80% so that was not a good combination. 
For now i stay with a 1 our autolyse. 

What I wanted to try next time is sifting the bran out of the flour soak that overnight and the rest for a our.