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Sourdough (rec.food.sourdough) Discussing the hobby or craft of baking with sourdough. We are not just a recipe group, Our charter is to discuss the care, feeding, and breeding of yeasts and lactobacilli that make up sourdough cultures. |
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On 8/30/04 2:20 PM, "Wcsjohn" > wrote:
>> >> Well, no... Gluten can be developed mechanically as you mention, >> chemically (see supermarket bread labels for more on that), and by >> hydration alone: Just mix some flour with water, and wait. >> >> All the best, >> >> -- >> Kenneth >> > Are you seriously saying that dough merely needs to be mixed and left and that > it will, without further mechanical input, develop a gluten elasticity and > structure that is good enough to make bread worth eating? > > John John, YES! You can let hydrolysis do the heavy lifting and enjoy excellent levain bread. This is not quite so true with commercially yeasted breads. That form of yeast works too quickly (unless severely retarded) for the gluten to develop so you need to mechanically develop the dough. High gluten/high protein flours and mechanical kneading (and aeration for that matter) go hand-in-hand as technical "improvements" to facilitate factory produced bread. I don't mean "factory produced" in a pejorative sense here. It took me longer to accept lower protein flours than hydrolysis. But that subject would be another thread. Will > _______________________________________________ > rec.food.sourdough mailing list > > http://www.otherwhen.com/mailman/lis...food.sourdough |
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