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A sourdough Ciabatta recipe please
You can also take pretty much any ciabatta recipe that uses a wet sponge (also called a
poolish) and simply substitute sourdough starter for it., eliminating the commercial yeast. So long as your starter is at 100% hydration (equal weight of flour to water, or about 1/2 cup water to scant 1 cup flour), you shouldn't need any further adjustments, aside for making time for a much longer fermentation period. -- Jeff ---------- Original Message ---------------------------------- From: "Doc" > Reply-To: A ported usenet news group > Date: 26 Sep 2006 19:45:44 -0700 >OldGreyBob wrote: >> If there is no such thing as a sourdough Ciabatta bread, what other >> sourdough Italian type bread would go well with homemade 'pasta e fagioli'? > >Look in Nancy Silverton's "Breads from the La Brea Bakery" There you >will find a recipe for a sourdough ciabatta but it does contain >commercial yeast. It will also take a few iterations to tune it to >your liking. > >Doc > >_______________________________________________ >rec.food.sourdough mailing list >http://www.otherwhen.com/mailman/lis...food.sourdough > >To unsubscribe send a mail to and then reply to the confirmation request. > |
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