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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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Posted to rec.food.sourdough,rec.food.cooking
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I took the starter out of the fridge last week and fed it and nothing
happened. Oh, no! But after a week of dumping 2/3 of it every couple of days and feeding, alternating between rye flour and AP flour, I have a pungent and foamy starter again. Not sure if it's the same one I had last spring or not. I use the bread machine on the "dough" cycle to mix and knead the bread. Then transfer it to an old Corningware covered casserole dish and let it rise overnight, and I will bake it in the morning. My starter doesn't rise fast enough to use the bread machine for the whole thing. And I don't think it's configurable enough to program an 8 hour rise time before baking. -Bob |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough,rec.food.cooking
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On Sep 29, 6:32*pm, zxcvbob > wrote:
> I took the starter out of the fridge last week and fed it and nothing > happened. *Oh, no! *But after a week of dumping 2/3 of it every couple > of days and feeding, alternating between rye flour and AP flour, I have > a pungent and foamy starter again. *Not sure if it's the same one I had > last spring or not. > > I use the bread machine on the "dough" cycle to mix and knead the bread. > * Then transfer it to an old Corningware covered casserole dish and let > it rise overnight, and I will bake it in the morning. *My starter > doesn't rise fast enough to use the bread machine for the whole thing. > And I don't think it's configurable enough to program an 8 hour rise > time before baking. > > -Bob When I wake up my starter, I feed it at least twice a day, and it seems to get active pretty quick. Funny that you posted this as I am going to get mine going again- the weather is better for baking now! |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough,rec.food.cooking
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zxcvbob wrote:
> I took the starter out of the fridge last week and fed it and nothing > happened. Oh, no! But after a week of dumping 2/3 of it every couple > of days and feeding, alternating between rye flour and AP flour, I have > a pungent and foamy starter again. Not sure if it's the same one I had > last spring or not. > > I use the bread machine on the "dough" cycle to mix and knead the bread. > Then transfer it to an old Corningware covered casserole dish and let > it rise overnight, and I will bake it in the morning. My starter > doesn't rise fast enough to use the bread machine for the whole thing. > And I don't think it's configurable enough to program an 8 hour rise > time before baking. > > -Bob Would you mind sharing your SD bread recipe for the bread machine. I have a recipe for a mixer but need one for the machine. TKS |
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Norvin Gordon wrote:
> Would you mind sharing your SD bread recipe for the bread machine. I > have a recipe for a mixer but need one for the machine. TKS I use 1 pound of bread flour (cheap stuff from Sam's Club) and 1 tsp of salt dissolved in 1 cup of water. Add about a generous 1/2 cup of starter. Run the bread machine on the "Dough" cycle. When it beeps, I transfer the ball of dough to a generously-greased Corningware covered dish, and I flip it over so the dough gets greased on the top as well as the bottom. Then let it rise until it almost fills the dish. The rise time is quite variable. Bake covered for about 40 minutes. I'm experimenting now with slitting the top of the loaf. I haven't figured out how to rise and bake the SD in a bread machine, I just use it for mixing and kneading. I usually use rye flour for the last feeding of my starter before I bake, and AP flour or bread flour for the other feedings. (I like just a little rye in my SD bread.) And in case you don't know, the starter is just flour and water; no yeast except the naturally-occurring wild yeast. HTH, Bob |
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On Sep 30, 12:42*pm, zxcvbob > wrote:
> Norvin Gordon wrote: > > Would you mind sharing your SD bread recipe for the bread machine. I > > have a recipe for a mixer but need one for the machine. TKS > > I use 1 pound of bread flour (cheap stuff from Sam's Club) and 1 tsp > of salt dissolved in 1 cup of water. *Add about a generous 1/2 cup of > starter. *Run the bread machine on the "Dough" cycle. *When it beeps, > I transfer the ball of dough to a generously-greased Corningware > covered dish, and I flip it over so the dough gets greased on the top > as well as the bottom. *Then let it rise until it almost fills the > dish. *The rise time is quite variable. *Bake covered for about 40 > minutes. > > I'm experimenting now with slitting the top of the loaf. *I haven't > figured out how to rise and bake the SD in a bread machine, I just use > it for mixing and kneading. > > I usually use rye flour for the last feeding of my starter before I > bake, and AP flour or bread flour for the other feedings. *(I like > just a little rye in my SD bread.) And in case you don't know, the > starter is just flour and water; no yeast except the > naturally-occurring wild yeast. > > HTH, > Bob Have you tried the no-knead method using starter? I have, and it works quite well! |
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merryb wrote:
> On Sep 30, 12:42 pm, zxcvbob > wrote: >> Norvin Gordon wrote: >>> Would you mind sharing your SD bread recipe for the bread machine. I >>> have a recipe for a mixer but need one for the machine. TKS >> I use 1 pound of bread flour (cheap stuff from Sam's Club) and 1 tsp >> of salt dissolved in 1 cup of water. Add about a generous 1/2 cup of >> starter. Run the bread machine on the "Dough" cycle. When it beeps, >> I transfer the ball of dough to a generously-greased Corningware >> covered dish, and I flip it over so the dough gets greased on the top >> as well as the bottom. Then let it rise until it almost fills the >> dish. The rise time is quite variable. Bake covered for about 40 >> minutes. >> >> I'm experimenting now with slitting the top of the loaf. I haven't >> figured out how to rise and bake the SD in a bread machine, I just use >> it for mixing and kneading. >> >> I usually use rye flour for the last feeding of my starter before I >> bake, and AP flour or bread flour for the other feedings. (I like >> just a little rye in my SD bread.) And in case you don't know, the >> starter is just flour and water; no yeast except the >> naturally-occurring wild yeast. >> >> HTH, >> Bob > > Have you tried the no-knead method using starter? I have, and it works > quite well! No I haven't. But that's sort-of how I make pizza dough. I just stir it up (using a small amount of dried yeast) and stick it in the fridge for a few days until I'm ready to cook. -Bob |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough,rec.food.cooking
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zxcvbob wrote:
> Norvin Gordon wrote: >> Would you mind sharing your SD bread recipe for the bread machine. I >> have a recipe for a mixer but need one for the machine. TKS > > > I use 1 pound of bread flour (cheap stuff from Sam's Club) and 1 tsp of > salt dissolved in 1 cup of water. Add about a generous 1/2 cup of > starter. Run the bread machine on the "Dough" cycle. When it beeps, I > transfer the ball of dough to a generously-greased Corningware covered > dish, and I flip it over so the dough gets greased on the top as well as > the bottom. Then let it rise until it almost fills the dish. The rise > time is quite variable. Bake covered for about 40 minutes. > > I'm experimenting now with slitting the top of the loaf. I haven't > figured out how to rise and bake the SD in a bread machine, I just use > it for mixing and kneading. > > I usually use rye flour for the last feeding of my starter before I > bake, and AP flour or bread flour for the other feedings. (I like just > a little rye in my SD bread.) And in case you don't know, the starter is > just flour and water; no yeast except the naturally-occurring wild yeast. > > HTH, > Bob Thanks Bob, this will go well with my SD cinnamon rolls for the machine. |
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