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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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"Will" > wrote in news:1112892006.656090.303740
@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com: > I noticed that you wrote: "all flavor in bread comes from a starter OR > yeast". That isn't particularly true. The next time you bake, using > your regular dough, do one loaf at 500F and another at 350F. Let us > know what you discover. > > Will > > Save me the trouble, Will. What IS the difference in taste? |
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Samartha Deva > wrote in
news:mailman.1113270966.27730.rec.food.sourdough@w ww.mountainbitwarrior.c om: > > To prevent this from happening, it is hereby stated: > > Usage of widely different temperatures with Carl's sourdough is > encouraged, be it in single- or multi-stage processes or just for the > heck of it. From freezing to scalding, go for it and play! > > > Samartha The other day I mixed together some yogurt and some buttermilk, and fed that "starter" to a gallon of warm sterile milk. They have different bacterias in them, and I wanted to see what happened if I let the innoculated milk sit at around 85 degrees F for 5 hours. Would I get yogurt or would I get quark? Well, it turned out that I got quark, as evidenced by the rich, mild taste, slacker goo, and lack of sourness or tang. Clearly, the bacteria in the buttermilk was dominant, and I think it was because of the fermentation temperature. I did not try letting a batch ferment at 110 degrees F, the proper temperature for making yogurt. Next time I make a batch, I'll make half at 110 and the other half at 85. If the 110 is tangy and the 85 is mellow, then I'll know the lactobacillus bulgaricus took over in the 110 to make yogurt, and the lactobacillus cremora took over in 85 to make quark. I believe science has well established the temperatures at which various microbes grow best, all other factors being ideal for the cultures. If you want one strain to dominate, and many strains are present in equal proportion, you merely let the mixed-strain culture ferment at the temp that favors the strain you want. I cannot imagine there being a different truth for bread dough than for other culture media, can you? My question to you is: What the bacteria and yeasts are present in Carl's starter, as opposed to other starters, and what are the most favored fermentation temperatures for the ones that give a tangy taste? I understand from some reading I've done that some bacteria get a good start in sponge phase 1 where the sponge ferments for 2 1/2 hours at room temperature, then you elevate the temperature to around 90F for the other two sponge phases. Is this because different bacteria develop in the first stage than in subsequent stages? |
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Samartha Deva > wrote in
news:mailman.1113270966.27730.rec.food.sourdough@w ww.mountainbitwarrior.c om: > > To prevent this from happening, it is hereby stated: > > Usage of widely different temperatures with Carl's sourdough is > encouraged, be it in single- or multi-stage processes or just for the > heck of it. From freezing to scalding, go for it and play! > > > Samartha The other day I mixed together some yogurt and some buttermilk, and fed that "starter" to a gallon of warm sterile milk. They have different bacterias in them, and I wanted to see what happened if I let the innoculated milk sit at around 85 degrees F for 5 hours. Would I get yogurt or would I get quark? Well, it turned out that I got quark, as evidenced by the rich, mild taste, slacker goo, and lack of sourness or tang. Clearly, the bacteria in the buttermilk was dominant, and I think it was because of the fermentation temperature. I did not try letting a batch ferment at 110 degrees F, the proper temperature for making yogurt. Next time I make a batch, I'll make half at 110 and the other half at 85. If the 110 is tangy and the 85 is mellow, then I'll know the lactobacillus bulgaricus took over in the 110 to make yogurt, and the lactobacillus cremora took over in 85 to make quark. I believe science has well established the temperatures at which various microbes grow best, all other factors being ideal for the cultures. If you want one strain to dominate, and many strains are present in equal proportion, you merely let the mixed-strain culture ferment at the temp that favors the strain you want. I cannot imagine there being a different truth for bread dough than for other culture media, can you? My question to you is: What the bacteria and yeasts are present in Carl's starter, as opposed to other starters, and what are the most favored fermentation temperatures for the ones that give a tangy taste? I understand from some reading I've done that some bacteria get a good start in sponge phase 1 where the sponge ferments for 2 1/2 hours at room temperature, then you elevate the temperature to around 90F for the other two sponge phases. Is this because different bacteria develop in the first stage than in subsequent stages? |
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On 4/13/05 5:29 PM, "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote:
> "Will" > wrote in news:1112892006.656090.303740 > @f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com: > >> I noticed that you wrote: "all flavor in bread comes from a starter OR >> yeast". That isn't particularly true. The next time you bake, using >> your regular dough, do one loaf at 500F and another at 350F. Let us >> know what you discover. >> >> Will > > Save me the trouble, Will. > > What IS the difference in taste? Baking your standard loaves at 500 vs. 350 will produce differences in crust, crumb and flavor. It has to do with the caramelizing of the sugars in the crust and the gelatinizing of starch in the crumb. I suggested you do the exercise to get a fuller understanding of dough ripening. The temperature spread is enough to tell you quite a bit about your current proofing assumptions. From that, it follows that flavor in conjunction with a fully ripened dough is more than a starter issue. It is about acid balance, fermentation tolerance, etc... etc... Were I to do the exercise myself, one loaf would probably blow up. If I skewed the proof (or the build) to prevent the blow up, the other loaf would be a brick. In either case, they would not taste the same. |
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On 4/13/05 6:01 PM, "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote:
> The other day I mixed together some yogurt and some buttermilk, and fed > that "starter" to a gallon of warm sterile milk. They have different > bacterias in them, and I wanted to see what happened if I let the > innoculated milk sit at around 85 degrees F for 5 hours. Would I get > yogurt or would I get quark? > > Well, it turned out that I got quark, as evidenced by the rich, mild > taste, slacker goo, and lack of sourness or tang. Clearly, the bacteria > in the buttermilk was dominant, and I think it was because of the > fermentation temperature. Not quite. Yogurt culture (like bread levain) is very sensitive to acid. So it's not that the buttermilk culture dominates (due to temperature), it's the whole concoction is too sour for the yogurt to ferment. Buttermilk is already soured. This is much like using old, unrefreshed starter in a dough then getting a bad rise. Same symptoms too: goo, sticky, no structure... Try draining your yogurt first. Add one or two tablespoons of drained yogurt (it's less acidic without the whey component) to about 1.5 quarts of milk. Let that ferment at 90F for about 7 or 8 hours. Not only will the finished batch taste good, you'll notice a better texture than anything you can buy at the store. Drink the buttermilk, or put it in your pancakes. Gonorio... Your instincts are not quite there, though I applaud your sense of adventure. First you muck up bread with potatoes, chipotles and carrot juice. Then you decide that flavor equals starter. To hell with centuries of craft baking which indicates technique. Now you jump the gun on something as simple as yogurt. You say every microbe ferments at it's own temperature. What's the news there? |
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![]() "Will" rhetorically queried "Gonorio Dineri": > You say every microbe ferments at it's own temperature. > What's the news there? It would be most useful if each had its own specific temperature, and certainly newsworthy. But time-temperature characteristics for fermentation come in rather broad ranges, certainly not sharp peaks. For instance, for certain sourdough microbes, see http://aem.asm.org/cgi/content/full/64/7/2616/F1 So I do not think "To each his own" is a good theme song for sourdough microbes to sing about their temperature dependencies. -- DickA P.S. I have proposed that the presence of yeast in a compound culture of yeast and lactobacteria may affect the progress and=20 nature of fermentation to the extent that yeast potentially is food=20 for the bacteria. To wit: that the final production of flavor/acidity in fermenting sourdough is greatly the effect of a feeding frenzy, as yeasts starve, and bacteria feast on their weakened little bodies. |
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"Dick Adams" > wrote in news:7bv7e.74988$cg1.62242
@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net: > > "Will" rhetorically queried "Gonorio Dineri": > >> You say every microbe ferments at it's own temperature. >> What's the news there? > > It would be most useful if each had its own specific temperature, > and certainly newsworthy. > > But time-temperature characteristics for fermentation come in > rather broad ranges, certainly not sharp peaks. > > For instance, for certain sourdough microbes, see > http://aem.asm.org/cgi/content/full/64/7/2616/F1 > > So I do not think "To each his own" is a good theme song for > sourdough microbes to sing about their temperature > dependencies. > > -- > DickA > > P.S. I have proposed that the presence of yeast in a compound > culture of yeast and lactobacteria may affect the progress and > nature of fermentation to the extent that yeast potentially is food > for the bacteria. To wit: that the final production of flavor/acidity > in fermenting sourdough is greatly the effect of a feeding frenzy, > as yeasts starve, and bacteria feast on their weakened little bodies. > > > Dick, on the chart you cited I see salient PEAKS at 28C (82F) at 25 minutes for the candida milleri yeast, and 33C (91F) at 45 minutes for the bacillus sanfranciscensis bacteria. It might not be news that every microbe ferments at its own temperature in its own good time, but it certainly is a fact. Samartha's three-phase sponge technique, derived from centuries old European baking craft and validated by modern science, does provide two temperatures at which the sponge is allowed to develop. Phase 1 grows at a lower temperature than phases 2 and 3. That seems to corroborate my comments, don't you think? Neither you nor Will answered my question about the microbes present in Carl's starter and what favorable fermentation temperatures. However, I do appreciate your comments about the symbiosis between yeast and bacteria. |
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![]() Will wrote: > > On 4/13/05 6:01 PM, "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote: > > > Not quite. Not quite, is exactly right. I have a lot to add to "not quite." And, if I am still able to function after Tax Day, you may have to suffer through it. Regards, Charles -- Charles Perry Reply to: ** A balanced diet is a cookie in each hand ** |
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![]() Will wrote: > > On 4/13/05 6:01 PM, "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote: > > > Not quite. Not quite, is exactly right. I have a lot to add to "not quite." And, if I am still able to function after Tax Day, you may have to suffer through it. Regards, Charles -- Charles Perry Reply to: ** A balanced diet is a cookie in each hand ** |
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Will > wrote in
news:mailman.6.1113444770.62570.rec.food.sourdough @mail.otherwhen.com: > On 4/13/05 6:01 PM, "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote: > >> > Yogurt culture (like bread levain) is very sensitive to > acid. So it's not that the buttermilk culture dominates (due to > temperature), it's the whole concoction is too sour for the yogurt to > ferment. Buttermilk is already soured. Thanks for explaining that, Will. Yogurt is already soured, too, and it is much more sour than buttermilk. When I put a cup of yogurt/buttermilk starter in a gallon of warm sterile milk, the milk was not acidic at all. Thus, all the bacteria were off to a good running start in a medium they could use as food without being suppressed by acid. To avoid error from embracing your conjecture, I'm going to try the experiment again with two batches at different temperatures. I'll report the results. > First you muck up bread with potatoes, chipotles and carrot juice. Potato is good starter/sponge food. I find that it gives the bread a chewier crumb and a nice flavor. The vegetable juice and chipotles give the bread a unique and delicious taste, too. Yes, they all muck up your ideal of sourdough bread, but my customers love it, and so do I. Plus, I enjoy the experimenting. If you ever find yourself yearning for some adventure, you might try it and see how your family responds. > Then you decide that flavor equals starter. To hell > with centuries of craft baking which indicates technique. I am not so skilled at baking craft yet, but I am becoming more so as I learn its why-and-wherefore. I appreciate the responses of the bakers in this newsgroup for that very reason. I believe it important to learn the craft from experts FIRST, then to experiement, if I must, but what the heck, I can't restrain myself from premature experimentation. Thanks for your contributions to my education. > Now you jump > the gun on something as simple as yogurt. You say every > microbe ferments at it's own temperature. What's the news there? It's not news, but it is a reality. Rising bread dough is much less acidic than yogurt or buttermilk, and so I do not see why it does not provide food for lactobacillus bulgaricus and lactobacillus cremora, particularly if I use milk instead of water in the dough. Those bacteria like to eat milk (hence their names) so they should ferment in the dough, and contribute flavor to it. Have you tried it? If not, how do you know it's not worth trying? > > Try draining your yogurt first. Add one or two tablespoons of drained > yogurt (it's less acidic without the whey component) to about 1.5 > quarts of milk. Let that ferment at 90F for about 7 or 8 hours. Not > only will the finished batch taste good, you'll notice a better > texture than anything you can buy at the store. Drink the buttermilk, > or put it in your pancakes. > Here's how I've been doing it for the past 5 years. I put a cup of yogurt in a gallon of sterilized warm milk containing two cups of powdered milk to add body, and ferment it at 110F for 4 1/2 hours. I have found that longer times makes it too sour, and shorter times not tangy enough. I sterilize the milk by elevating it to 185F, then I cool it to 120F and innoculate it with the culture. I do the same thing with buttermilk as an innoculate, but ferment it 16 hours at 85F in a stainless steel pot.When finished, it is a thick goo that is set like, but not as stiff as, yogurt. I then pour the gooey mass into a fine-mesh nylon bag and hang it above the pot to drip for 8 hours. I save the whey for drinking and baking, and pack the resulting "quark" (cottage cheese) into 1-quart containers. About half the volume of the goo is whey, so I get a little over 2 quarts of quark. I like quark cheese much better than yogurt cheese, and so do my customers. The yogurt cheese is too sour for my taste, and not as rich- tasting as the quark. For the next batch of yogurt I make, I shall, in keeping with your suggestion, reduce the volume of the innoculate to 1/4 cup and increase the fermentation time to 8 hours. # # # |
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Gonorio Dineri > wrote in
: > "Dick Adams" > wrote in > news:7bv7e.74988$cg1.62242 @bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net: > >> >> "Will" rhetorically queried "Gonorio Dineri": >> >>> You say every microbe ferments at it's own temperature. >>> What's the news there? >> >> It would be most useful if each had its own specific temperature, >> and certainly newsworthy. >> >> But time-temperature characteristics for fermentation come in >> rather broad ranges, certainly not sharp peaks. >> >> For instance, for certain sourdough microbes, see >> http://aem.asm.org/cgi/content/full/64/7/2616/F1 >> The article associated with the above link is interesting. Thanks for posting the link. Note the below, from which I draw these conclusions: Temperature, time, salt, acidity, types of sugars, and presence of other microbes affect bacterias and yeasts differently in the fermentation process. The trick (the goal of baking craft) is to combine the factors so as to produce delicious texture, aroma, and flavor. That is achieved with San Francisco sourdough bread more readily than most, which is why the study was done. It is okay to experiment with sourdough processes so as to make better breads. Excerpts: The observation that L. sanfranciscensis LTH2581 and LTH1729 and C. milleri LTH H198 exhibit the same response to temperatures below 26°C provides an explanation for the stable association of these organisms in a sourdough for more than 20 years (2). Our data are furthermore in agreement with the "baker's rule" that low temperatures during sourdough fermentations (20 to 26°C) are better for yeast growth than higher temperatures (30). ....increasing dough yields leads to faster acidification of doughs. The addition of salt may alter the composition of the microflora, because C. milleri is much less sensitive to salt than the strains of L. sanfranciscensis. Yeast growth in dough may even be stimulated by the addition of NaCl. ....the addition of NaCl to wheat doughs inhibited the growth of lactic acid bacteria while it exerted a stimulating effect on yeast (9). pH has little effect on the growth of C. milleri is in accordance with our earlier observations of a cereal-based growth medium. Remarkably, the growth of L. sanfranciscensis was not inhibited by undissociated acetic acid. The growth of C. milleri was strongly inhibited by acetic acid, and was inhibited to a much lesser extent by lactic acid. Certain strains of heterofermentative lactobacilli are known to grow at ethanol concentrations as high as 18% (4). Because the ethanol concentration in doughs does not exceed 1%, it is unlikely to exert an inhibitory effect on lactobacilli but may contribute to the inhibition of yeast growth. Unlike the metabolic end products lactate, acetate, and ethanol, CO2 does not accumulate in the dough during fermentation but rather is dissolved in equilibrium to a 100% CO2 athmosphere. The importance of antagonistic and synergistic interactions between yeasts and lactobacilli based on the metabolism of carbohydrates and amino acids was emphasized by Gobbetti and Corsetti (10). However, sourdough yeasts do not affect the cell yield of L. sanfranciscensis in sourdough (8, 27, 32). This is consistent with the conclusion that under practical conditions the pH is the limiting factor for growth of lactobacilli. The maltose, amino acid, and peptide concentrations are not depleted during sourdough fermentations in wheat or rye doughs (16, 19, 31). Maltose is the preferred carbon source for L. sanfranciscensis but is not utilized by either C. milleri or S. exiguus (12). The cell yield of C. milleri and S. exiguus is greatly reduced in the presence of lactobacilli both in wheat and in rye doughs (8, 27). The accumulation of metabolic end products of the heterolactic fermentation inhibits the growth of these yeasts in sourdough. The glucose concentration in rye flours and whole-wheat flours remains high enough to support yeast growth throughout the fermentation (19, 23). Fermentations that employ white wheat flours as the raw materials are characterized by low concentrations of glucose, and small amounts of lactic acid are produced because of the low buffering capacity. In these doughs, depletion of glucose and fructose may occur and limit the growth of yeasts (19, 27). Generally, the predictions made with the model are in good agreement with the literature data on dough available, indicating that the most important factors contributing to the microbial stability of sourdough fermentations have been taken into account. A more detailed verification of the model in situ is in progress. The model allows the assessment of factors contributing to the stable association of lactobacilli and yeasts in traditional sourdough fermentations, and it can therefore provide important information for the design of novel sourdough processes. |
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![]() > Samartha's three-phase sponge technique, derived from centuries old > European baking craft and validated by modern science, does provide two > temperatures at which the sponge is allowed to develop. Phase 1 grows at > a lower temperature than phases 2 and 3. That seems to corroborate my > comments, don't you think? It does indeed. In fact, I almost asked why you didn't discuss Detmold in your earlier post about temperature flavoring specific populations. > > Neither you nor Will answered my question about the microbes present in > Carl's starter and what favorable fermentation temperatures. True enough. I wouldn't recognize the yeasts if they carried signs. As far as fermentation temperatures go, that's personal choice isn't it? Dan Wing published the ranges back in 1997. They are either in the FAQ's or found more easily at Samartha's site. Temperature and pre-fermenting are part of what I use to control flavor. Though another, and I would argue, more fundamental, is flour choice. There's got to be a reason that so many bakers here pay 2 or 3 times more for KA than Pillsbury. |
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![]() > Samartha's three-phase sponge technique, derived from centuries old > European baking craft and validated by modern science, does provide two > temperatures at which the sponge is allowed to develop. Phase 1 grows at > a lower temperature than phases 2 and 3. That seems to corroborate my > comments, don't you think? It does indeed. In fact, I almost asked why you didn't discuss Detmold in your earlier post about temperature flavoring specific populations. > > Neither you nor Will answered my question about the microbes present in > Carl's starter and what favorable fermentation temperatures. True enough. I wouldn't recognize the yeasts if they carried signs. As far as fermentation temperatures go, that's personal choice isn't it? Dan Wing published the ranges back in 1997. They are either in the FAQ's or found more easily at Samartha's site. Temperature and pre-fermenting are part of what I use to control flavor. Though another, and I would argue, more fundamental, is flour choice. There's got to be a reason that so many bakers here pay 2 or 3 times more for KA than Pillsbury. |
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![]() "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote in message = .. . > Samartha's three-phase sponge technique, derived from centuries old=20 > European baking craft and validated by modern science, does provide = two=20 > temperatures at which the sponge is allowed to develop. Phase 1 grows = at=20 > a lower temperature than phases 2 and 3. That seems to corroborate my = > comments, don't you think? Samartha's researches might well be interpreted to link your opinions to = the=20 wisdom of the ages, not to mention the phases of the moon. > Neither you nor Will answered my question about the microbes present = in=20 > Carl's starter and what favorable fermentation temperatures. Will and I are trying to contact Carl. Then we will get back to you. -- DickA |
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Will > wrote in
news:mailman.7.1113496873.62570.rec.food.sourdough @mail.otherwhen.com: > True enough. I wouldn't recognize the yeasts if they carried signs. As > far as fermentation temperatures go, that's personal choice isn't it? > Dan Wing published the ranges back in 1997. They are either in the > FAQ's or found more easily at Samartha's site. Temperature and > pre-fermenting are part of what I use to control flavor. Though > another, and I would argue, more fundamental, is flour choice. There's > got to be a reason that so many bakers here pay 2 or 3 times more for > KA than Pillsbury. > > I've been buying Albertson's bread flour lately for $1.29 per 5-pound bag. Reading the label, I discovered it has identical ingredients to KA Unbleached Bread Flour, and as you pointed out, it's much less expensive. The difference is that the Alberton's flour is noticeably whiter. Do you suppose that matters? And you know what? Albertson's makes excellent bread. Unless I do a side- by-side comparison, I can't tell the difference between it and KA when it comes to taste. And, I haven't done a side-by-side test. |
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"Dick Adams" > wrote in
: > > Samartha's researches might well be interpreted to link your opinions > to the wisdom of the ages, not to mention the phases of the moon. > >> Neither you nor Will answered my question about the microbes present > in >> Carl's starter and what favorable fermentation temperatures. > > Will and I are trying to contact Carl. Then we will get back to you. > > -- > DickA > > You can always be counted on for leavening (or is it levity) in this group. Maybe Roy or some other pro baker will get a sample of Carl's to a lab for testing and cataloguing. |
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![]() "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote in message .. . snip > I've been buying Albertson's bread flour lately for $1.29 per 5-pound bag. > Reading the label, I discovered it has identical ingredients to KA > Unbleached Bread Flour, Identical? Isn't that a little like saying a Ford and a Chevy are identical because they both have tires? You know nothing of the ultimate components of either flour other than it is called bread flour. Janet |
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I concur. Even knowing that two different flour brands were both milled
from hard winter wheat to the same total protein specification, there can still be significant differences in each flour's performance characteristics. Heck, I've seen performance differences in different lots of the SAME brand. - Steve Brandt "Janet Bostwick" > wrote in message ... > > "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote in message > .. . > snip >> I've been buying Albertson's bread flour lately for $1.29 per 5-pound >> bag. >> Reading the label, I discovered it has identical ingredients to KA >> Unbleached Bread Flour, > Identical? Isn't that a little like saying a Ford and a Chevy are > identical because they both have tires? You know nothing of the ultimate > components of either flour other than it is called bread flour. > Janet |
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![]() >Even knowing that two different flour brands were both milled >from hard winter wheat to the same total protein specification, there can >still be significant differences in each flour's performance >characteristics. Heck, I've seen performance differences in different lots >of the SAME brand. That is true.....flour even from the same manufacturer but milled at different times or periods can have variability in baking performance. But that is normal. The quality control department of any flour mill had the so called acceptable range of flour quality performance specifications .i.e, protein content, farinograph, extensograph and amylograph readings, ash and moisture content. But the ultimate judge for such experimental parameters is the experimental baking test. Even at this point of flour evaluation the test baker had also its so called baking quality performance range where a flour can be finally labeled in his tests as passed or rejected. In some cases specially in peak demands and there is no time to do the time consuming baking tests, the flour is considered passed when it has passed the normal laboratory evaluation procedures without the benefit of baking tests. I am not sure of king arthur follows the standards of the well know flour millers like for example Conagra ,General Mills, Pillsbury etc or they have their own systems One thing that complicates the test baking procedure is that if King Arthur flours are designed for artisanal baking and therefore ; specifically test a particular flour for artisanal typeof bread which does not provide measurable qualities such as bread volume in cubic centimeter or inches per gram/ounce, standard bread grading parameters including textural characteristics ,crumb color and grain which are detailed and quantifiable.( provided with numbers to signify its grade). Look artisanal loaves does not require much of so called product consistency and uniformity like the industrial loaf so its likely that flour for such purpose had higher variability. The bottom line that the miller had to ensure that the protein level is up to the minimum level. With such a loose baking evaluation which is based on artisanal bread which are not even considered standard recipe to test flour by traditional flour millers.; variability can be more significant than for flour designed for industrial baking which have tighter quality and baking performance specifications. Roy |
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>get a sample of Carl's to a lab for testing and cataloguing.
Carls starter is already popular and its proprietor should already had an idea what ' creatures are supposed to be thriving in their product. |
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"Roy" > wrote:
>Carls starter is already popular and its proprietor should already had >an idea what ' creatures are supposed to be thriving in their product. You really don't know, do you? Check out the web site http://home.att.net/~carlsfriends/ Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G |
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>You really don't know, do you?
>Check out the web site Gary what is your point? Do I have to watch a military style funeral of an old man as displayed in that URL? I don't need to as I had attended military training in my younger days. and had my share of attending funerals as well. BTW,I was once a drummer for a short time in the ,military band.in those days. How about you? .. How close you are to a military style burial, or are you also interested on attaining burial with honors<g>.No problem mate.... I will be one of the guys beating the drums for your hearse<g> If you prefer.... I woudn't mind carrying your beloved, the urn( containing the jar) of the the Carl starter to be buried with you<g> Roy |
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"Roy" > wrote:
>Gary what is your point? Do I have to watch a military style funeral of >an old man as displayed in that URL? The point was that Carl ain't telling. More to the point, unless you spend big bucks for a lab culture/identification, you won't know what's in that sourdough culture. I humbly submit you shouldn't. I'm not sure that all the military blather has much to do with sourdough, and I only played French Horn in the boot camp band before ultimately earning a good conduct medal for four years of undetected crime. But that was long ago, in an ocean far away. Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G |
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"Roy" > wrote:
>Gary what is your point? Do I have to watch a military style funeral of >an old man as displayed in that URL? The point was that Carl ain't telling. More to the point, unless you spend big bucks for a lab culture/identification, you won't know what's in that sourdough culture. I humbly submit you shouldn't. I'm not sure that all the military blather has much to do with sourdough, and I only played French Horn in the boot camp band before ultimately earning a good conduct medal for four years of undetected crime. But that was long ago, in an ocean far away. Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G |
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Gary Woods wrote:
> "Roy" > wrote: > > >>Gary what is your point? Do I have to watch a military style funeral of >>an old man as displayed in that URL? > > > The point was that Carl ain't telling. More to the point, unless you spend > big bucks for a lab culture/identification, you won't know what's in that > sourdough culture. > I humbly submit you shouldn't. Why not? To cover the cost, King Roy could make a donation for that test to: Oregon Trail Sourdough P. O. Box 321 Jefferson, MD 21755 USA Note, on the web site, it says: Please do not publicize the above postal address , as it will change from time to time. Now - is that going to work? It costs probably a chunk of money. Could a larger donation check written to Oregon Trail Sourdough be cashed there? Samartha |
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Gary Woods wrote:
> "Roy" > wrote: > > >>Gary what is your point? Do I have to watch a military style funeral of >>an old man as displayed in that URL? > > > The point was that Carl ain't telling. More to the point, unless you spend > big bucks for a lab culture/identification, you won't know what's in that > sourdough culture. > I humbly submit you shouldn't. Why not? To cover the cost, King Roy could make a donation for that test to: Oregon Trail Sourdough P. O. Box 321 Jefferson, MD 21755 USA Note, on the web site, it says: Please do not publicize the above postal address , as it will change from time to time. Now - is that going to work? It costs probably a chunk of money. Could a larger donation check written to Oregon Trail Sourdough be cashed there? Samartha |
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On 4/20/05 8:04 AM, "Gary Woods" > wrote:
> The point was that Carl ain't telling. The point is, Carl didn't know. Nor do any of his friends. And, as you point out in the section I snipped: it doesn't matter. And if someone writes a large check to figure this out, as Samartha just posted, WHO WILL CARE? This morning, I've got another new starter working to lift its first dough. It's one of those really simple ones: no potato, grape skin, yogurt, buttermilk, nose puppies... I didn't worry about whether the tap water was dechlorinated or whether the mixing spoon was nickel steel or regular stainless. This one began as wheat berries, soaked, mashed and fermented, not even milled. Do I know what's in it? Not a clue. It smells fresh and cidery, for whatever that's worth. Would it work better if it were ancient: passed down from the days of wagon trains or pyramid building? Don't know that either. Will it proof better at 78.00004 F. or would 29.00327 C. put it in the zone? Can't say. Now... I heard a rumor, from a reliable source. To wit: These posters, who are techno-science baking are also from the same demographic that rip their bread with $200 knives that say Emeril on them somewhere. Is this true? |
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Will wrote:
> On 4/20/05 8:04 AM, "Gary Woods" > wrote: > > >>The point was that Carl ain't telling. > > > The point is, Carl didn't know. Nor do any of his friends. And, as you point > out in the section I snipped: it doesn't matter. And if someone writes a > large check to figure this out, as Samartha just posted, WHO WILL CARE? Dunno - but for sure it could be used to shut up the recurring posts: Carl's does not get sour, tangy enough, not rising.... and put it in front of other starter suppliers: Fella: oss gotta cartifaid crittars in thee LB strains LTHXXXX and LTHYYYY with a dominating candida milleri strain LTHZZZZ. Not oua fawlt if ya messin up, go lean da ropes haw to be cortshas to ya stata. On the high tech side - if the strains are documented you could really exercise them by the book. I'd find it slick. Haven't yet estimated DA's nOObee blast firepower increase with this. Samartha |
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![]() Samartha Deva wrote: > Dunno - but for sure it could be used to shut up the recurring posts: > Carl's does not get sour, tangy enough, not rising.... Those posts would evolve: mitochondrial smears and calcium tolerance numbers would be next. Someone would want to know if there was hydroxyl group hanging off the side of the alpha-LB when it conjugates. >and put it in front of other starter suppliers: Ed Woods wouldn't care. His schtick is glamour. His latest critters were captured in a volcano in Rotorua. They ferment houses in their off hours. |
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Like I said, the ingredients are about the same, and if I get good bread
from Albertson's, why pay double, triple, or quadruple for KA? If I were running a bakery, I might insist on a proper test of the flour before using it. Since I don't, my test is: make a batch of bread, and if it comes out delightfully risen, crumby, smelly, tasty, and chewy, the FLOUR (not to mention my preparation and baking skill) is GOOD. |
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"Roy" > wrote in news:1113959404.477027.104700
@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com: >>get a sample of Carl's to a lab for testing and cataloguing. > > Carls starter is already popular and its proprietor should already had > an idea what ' creatures are supposed to be thriving in their product. > > I'm guessing Carl had no idea whatsoever. If I recall rightly, the starter was handed down as family tradition and it made good bread. Critter content was irrelevant then as it is now. Except for one thing. It might contain unique strains of yeast and bacteria. If so, maybe the bacteria would be called lactobacillus carlus. |
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![]() Dick Adams wrote: > "Gonorio Dineri" > wrote in message .. . > > > Samartha's three-phase sponge technique, derived from centuries old > > European baking craft and validated by modern science, does provide two > > temperatures at which the sponge is allowed to develop. Phase 1 grows at > > a lower temperature than phases 2 and 3. That seems to corroborate my > > comments, don't you think? > > Samartha's researches might well be interpreted to link your opinions to the > wisdom of the ages, not to mention the phases of the moon. > > > Neither you nor Will answered my question about the microbes present in > > Carl's starter and what favorable fermentation temperatures. > > Will and I are trying to contact Carl. Then we will get back to you. > > -- > DickA There are no microbes present. |
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