Monday, February 15, 2010

Sourdough Hearth Loaf- on YouTube


Last week I made a good loaf of sourdough, using the pizza stone that Kate's parents gave me for Christmas. I also video-recorded (most of) the process, and Kate was kind enough to edit the resulting mess into something more or less watchable for the Mad River Valley Localvores.

Mix together:

1/2 cup mixed grain cereal
1/2 cup cold water

Set aside to soak.

Mix together:

2 1/2 cups active whole-wheat sourdough starter
3/4 cup lukewarm water
1 T maple syrup
3 cups white all-purpose flour

Let sit for twenty minutes or so, then mix in

1 Tablespoon kosher salt

Knead for 10-12 minutes, adding an additional

1/4 cup water

Put the dough in an oiled bowl, cover lightly, and let it rise overnight. In the morning, knead in the soaked mixed grains and shape the dough into a round loaf. Flour a cotton towel-- it's fun to use one with a coarse texture that will leave a print on the crust-- and use it to line a medium, shallow basket or bowl. Place the loaf upside-down on the floured towel, cover it lightly (fold the corners over, adding flour if necessary so they won't stick) and leave in a warm place to rise for four or five hours-- I use the oven with the pilot light on.

When the loaf has doubled in volume, take it out of the oven (if that's where it's been rising), put a baking stone on the oven's center rack, and preheat to 500 degrees. Prepare a peel-- a rimless baking sheet, or the bottom side of a cookie sheet-- by sprinkling it thoroughly with cornmeal. When the oven is hot, gently turn the loaf out of the floured towel onto the cornmeal on the peel. Take a razorblade or very sharp knife and score the top of the loaf. With a spray-bottle full of water, open the oven door and spray the walls and floor of the oven to create steam, then quickly slide the scored loaf off of the peel directly onto the preheated bakind stone. The cornmeal should allow the dough to slide easily, all in one piece.

Close the oven door, turn down the heat to 425 degrees, wait 3 minutes and repeat spraying water on the walls and floor of the oven. Close the door, wait another 3 minutes and spray once more. In 45 minutes, check the loaf by tapping the bottom (it should sound hollow). If it's not done give it another ten minutes. When you think it's done, take it out and let it cool, wrapped in a clean cotton towel, on a wire rack.

1 comment:

  1. Great video Glen! Now I'm inspired to try my hand at making bread with some local, Syracuse-area yeast! I'll let you know how it goes.

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