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I know there are some sourdough people here.
I've been working from home this week. stuff going on.
took advantage of my time, and got my starter fired up. my 1st ever sourdough is in the proofing basket!! I'll heat up my oven in a few, with the dutch oven. go time. |
Love sourdough. Need to eat the loaf quick though. Good sourdough goes stale fast.
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Craigster hooked my wife up with some SD starter that has paid dividend in my waistline...really great stuff.
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Makes me sad...Being concerned about my health, Cindy quit her sourdough baking. No more of her bread, and I really, really miss her sourdough blueberry pancakes. "Herman" was the starter name.
F**K Diabetes! |
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^^^ You could just do what I do and pretend you don’t have diabetes, eat whatever you want and then complain all day that you feel like crap
Wife makes sourdough and I love it. She bakes all types of bread and I will never stop eating bread, or pancakes…don’t care if it kills me |
I'm fighting to the ragged edge not to creep into Diabetic range. I'm run every single morning at 4:30 am.
but, no rice, noodles and bread for the most part. if I want bread, I'm gonna make it. haha..I'm lazy, so I should barely eat it. |
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One of my co-workers spent time in San Frisco and fell in love with sourdough. He said his wife got a start and they were eating lots of of it. After a few years his wife was sick of the work involved, and she said she committed murder, and they ate their last loaf and no more starter. She said it was liberating.
The husband was disappointed, but he understood her plight and they went on a two week vacation and did not have to worry about the starter. |
I am no expert. but even in my short stint of harboring a sourdough starter, I learned quick that is is nothing to get all anal about. I barely feed mine. once every 10 days with it in the fridge. I went 14 days when I went out of town. heck, I learned I could smear it thin on parchment, let it dry, store it dry, and use it to seed a new batch later. even years later.
I made one before and it took a week and about 2lbs of rye flour. it was stupid easy, and I totally over thought every step. |
I was introduced to making sourdough bread by my daughter...love everything about it! I usually make some kind (many recipes) a couple times a month; I just finished a round of sourdough baguettes. My daughter gave me a book when I began, recipes, pictures, various crust designs, Artisan Sourdough Made Simple, by Emilie Raffa. Beyond that, plenty of info on the net.
Good luck! |
While you are on a dough making journey, I suggest becoming an expert on pizza dough and making wood fired pizza. My wife uses a dough recipe that needs to be made 3 days ahead of time. She makes that and I tend to the fire. Labor intensive for sure but you end up with 4 small pizzas at least and really there few things better than this, in my opinion
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729190358.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729190482.jpg |
well, that was easier than I imagined it to be. no alchemy involved.
scadush! |
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Nice zaa
I make all sort of thing from sourdough starter and waste.. English muffins http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194031.jpg Focaccia with roasted garlic http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194117.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194117.jpg Cemitas http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194239.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194239.jpg Weck rolls http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194311.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194311.jpg Beef on Weck http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194311.jpg And a Boule http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729194419.jpg |
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For those interested, this guy (who has since passed) traveled the world gathering cultures from many countries. The Bahrain and Egyptian cultures go back to the era of the Pyramids. I have the San Francisco culture and the Austrian culture. Having grown up in the Bay Area I'm a sourdough fanatic! https://sourdo.com/ |
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https://www.jamesbeard.org/recipes/jim-laheys-no-knead-pizza-dough |
Thanks, but darn. That's what I do but everyone else's pizza dough is better than mine - particularly yours LOL
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what you see above looks good maybe because i got the oven to 750 degrees fahrenheit. makes a big difference. the pizza should be done in about 50 seconds |
what i want to learn how to make is crumpets. i love them. they seem very simple to make.
also i remember Bialy from when i lived in nyc and long island. can’t get either of the above around here |
You may have diabetes, that doesn't mean you cannot eat any carbs. Modify your intake and you will be fine. I am diabetic and have been for a long time. I still eat breads "on occasion" , that is the key right there...on occasion. Limit your portions of carbs and sugars...you will be ok. I am also going on two years Keto. So, 50g of carbs is my total daily intake, a goodie here or there won't upset the apple cart. I have also lost 35 lbs. I make Keto/diabetic Chocolate chip cookies that tasta as good as Toll House, if not better. You just have to control yourself.
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Tim's stuff too above....wow. Looks impressive
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this was my first bite.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1729207916.jpg |
Great looking bread! You are evil.
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"Like a boss!" Of course in this case, that's literal and figurative. |
My wife makes the stuff. These are relatively inexpensive and make a real nice oval loaf fwiw.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0CJDLKZBX/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1 |
Starter can be made from scratch. No need to get it from someone else. One of the things you will find out about sourdough people is how they love to play up where their starter originated. "Mine came over on the Oregon Trail." "Oh yeah? Mine came over on the Mayflower." "Pffft... Jesus's mother Mary started mine." And so on. When you look at how the process works, you start to recognize that there is far more current b.s. than old starter in the process.
My mix for starter is really simple. 20 grams of old starter, 80 grams of the cheapest damn flour I can find, and 80 grams of water. If starting from scratch, leave out the old starter and leave the mix out for a week or so, uncovered. It will attract yeast from the air. After a week or so, use 20 grams of it and follow the aforementioned recipe. It may take a month to get it living and active, but it will. Once you have ripe and active starter, start storing it in the fridge when you are not going to use it. The morning of the day before you want to make a loaf, "feed" it. We do this by using 20 grams of it, adding the 80 grams each of flour and water, mixing, and leaving it out overnight. That, of course, leaves you with 160 unused grams of starter. We call this "discard". Don't discard it, though. Put it in the fridge. Keep saving it every time you "feed" your active starter. After awhile, you will have enough "discard" to make pizza dough, focaccia, cinnamon rolls, etc. (lots of recipes out there for sourdough "discard"). Once fed, take your starter and mix it up to make a loaf. I like 150 grams of starter, 300 grams of water, and 15 grams of salt. Mix this up real good, then add 500 grams of cheap ass white general purpose flour. Too many make the mistake of using too good of a flour here - remember, this is "peasant food". Too good of flour ruins it. Once mixed, let it sit in the mixing bowl for an hour or so. Then, once an hour or so, stretch it in four directions. Stretch it, lay it back down in the mixing bowl, rotate 90 degrees, stretch, repeat four times. Do this four or five times or whenever the hell you feel like it. Remember - "peasant food". You're out tilling your fields, milking cows, slaughtering lambs, beating laundry... you get to your bread when you get to your bread. Don't over think it, or over schedule it. If you are using a timer, throw it away. At the end of the day, "form" your loaf. We call this "putting tension" into the loaf. Throw out some flour, get some on your hands, and do your best to roll and compact it into the smallest, tightest ball possible. It's amazing how much smaller you can make it when you do this. This is key, don't skip this. Once ready, put it into a "proofing" basket, cover it, and put it in the fridge overnight to "cold ferment". Take it out the next morning and let it rise most of the day. When it's ready, slice the top with a "lame" as many times as you like, either all parallel or make a cross, or whatever. This keeps the top from splitting wide open when baked. Put your Dutch Oven in the oven on the second from bottom shelf. Put a baking pan under it on the bottom shelf. Preheat to 425 degrees. Put the loaf in the Dutch Oven and bake for 25 minutes. Remove the lid and bake for another 25. This may vary with your oven, of course, so take a look at about 20 minutes. That's it, that's all. Easy peasy. The most important part is learning to "read" your starter. When to feed it, when it's ready to bake, and all of that. It's always going to produce edible bread, it's just a matter of how "fluffy" it turns out. That's the real art of sourdough. I've made some real "curling stones" in my day, but they are still edible. The fluffy, airy loaves are better, or course, and those are the sign of an accomplished sourdough baker who can really "read" his starter. And, yes, you can become a real slave to your starter. It's a living, breathing organism. But it's not as fragile and demanding as many will say. Remember - "peasant food". Yes, it's better if we bake every day, like for sustenance. That's its real role. "Designer" sourdough, and those who see it as a "treat", doesn't really work. My wife and I eat nothing but, along with various discard forms of "bread". You have to keep the starter "working" - that's what it is meant to do. People who give up on it are approaching it wrong. They want it at their convenience, "sourdough in a box", like other things they bake. It just doesn't work that way. It's at its best when used every day, for sustenance. Peasant food. |
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holy crap what a thread! LOVE sourdough. And rye. And a really good nutty pizza dough. So key to a great pizza.
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The second is autolyze. Loosely mix your flour and water and let it sit for 30 min or up to an hour before you add your yeast/starter and knead. This allows for some enzyme activity and some long gluten to form. It really yields a dough that is easier to work with. This site is a great rabbit hole of home pizza info- https://www.varasanos.com/PizzaRecipe.htm- they guy went from a home nerd to a full on pizzaiolo. |
A big thanks Greg. I've cut and pasted your words into my pizza dough file and will try that soon.
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Are you saying that this is your first loaf? Really? Honestly? My wife would hunt you down and gut you if that's the case, she took several months of experimenting and testing to get a loaf with a good ear, and you did it by accident??? There will be times when you have starter discard. Lots of it. Piles of it. Discard pancakes, discard biscuits, discard CRACKERS. You can make Cheez-its with discard sourdough in about 30 minutes. Freaking CRACKERS. Unlimited cheese and herb CRACKERS. |
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Thanks Greg. I made pizzas last night following your advice. The best pizzas EVER. Yes, really. The dough had an amazing flavour and with big air bubbles in it. . |
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