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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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![]() I have a different interpretation of porridge bread and it is somewhat connected to the concept of porridge. If you crack grain, slake it down, and let it sit in a covered bucket for a day or so, it starts to ferment. This fermentation is an essential part of making regular porridge as bran needs to be softened by water and phytic acid is reduced during fermentation. If you then add coarse flour to a cup or so of the softened, wet cracked grain, the whole business then performs like a regular sponge. From there the process is like the wet ferment stage of any other bread. In the end you get a smooth, silky bread as the kneading and bulk ferment finish breaking down the cracked grain. The bread's flavor is very mild. |
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Will wrote:
> I have a different interpretation of porridge bread and it is somewhat > connected to the concept of porridge. > > If you crack grain, slake it down, and let it sit in a covered bucket > for a day or so, it starts to ferment. This fermentation is an essential > part of making regular porridge as bran needs to be softened by water > and phytic acid is reduced during fermentation. If by "regular porridge" you mean something like Quaker Oats in hot water or milk (as I would), has the process you describe already been done to such products before they are packaged and sold? Or is heating another way of accomplishing, quickly, the same thing? -- To get my e-mail address, remove a dot and replace a dot with a dash. |
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![]() On Wednesday, June 8, 2005, at 10:09 AM, Greg wrote: > Will wrote: > >> I have a different interpretation of porridge bread and it is >> somewhat connected to the concept of porridge. >> If you crack grain, slake it down, and let it sit in a covered bucket >> for a day or so, it starts to ferment. This fermentation is an >> essential part of making regular porridge as bran needs to be >> softened by water and phytic acid is reduced during fermentation. > > If by "regular porridge" you mean something like Quaker Oats in hot > water or milk (as I would), has the process you describe already been > done to such products before they are packaged and sold? Or is heating > another way of accomplishing, quickly, the same thing? Porridge, to me, is cracked (or rolled) and soaked, slightly fermented grain that is then slow cooked. There is a difference in both texture and flavor when you use cooked cereal vs. the raw, fermented soaker stuff that was probably last popular a hundred years ago. Bread with cooked cereal, as in Quaker oats, or even my own home brew variety when cooked, is heavier and gummier. The flavor is more vegetal as well. "is heating another way of accomplishing, quickly the same thing..." I suppose the answer is yes and no. Yes, it is quicker if you measure elapsed time. No, it is not quicker, if you measure effort, you must cook the cereal, clean the pot, etc.... |
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On Wed, 8 Jun 2005 11:13:42 -0500, Will
> wrote: >"is heating another way of accomplishing, quickly the same thing..." > >I suppose the answer is yes and no. Yes, it is quicker if you measure >elapsed time. No, it is not quicker, if you measure effort, you must >cook the cereal, clean the pot, etc.... Howdy, I may be missing something here, but... Heating does not produce the tastes and textures of fermentation of grain in my experience. All the best, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
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![]() Kenneth wrote: > > Howdy, > > I may be missing something here, but... > > Heating does not produce the tastes and textures of > fermentation of grain in my experience. > You got it. Cooked oatmeal in bread, tastes like... well, cooked oatmeal. I was trying to finesse the issue of "quickly". I usually have trouble with it, since "bread" and "quickly" seldom seem to rendezvous at the taste line. Perhaps making bread is one of those fascinating, real life, examples of "asynchronous" time. Three days is 20 minutes. |
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On 8 Jun 2005 09:54:52 -0700, "Will"
> wrote: >I was trying to finesse the issue of "quickly". I usually have trouble >with it, since "bread" and "quickly" seldom seem to rendezvous at the >taste line. Hi Will, This is an endlessly amusing issue. On other groups I often read of folks who delight in being able to bake a loaf of bread from start to finish in mere moments. I sometimes try (to little avail I suspect) to explain that making bread is not unlike making wine. No doubt, these folks would enjoy wine that they made overnight... All the best, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
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