FoodBanter.com

FoodBanter.com (https://www.foodbanter.com/)
-   Sourdough (https://www.foodbanter.com/sourdough/)
-   -   "sourdough" or "natural rise?" (https://www.foodbanter.com/sourdough/85479-sourdough-natural-rise.html)

ray 11-03-2006 07:55 PM

"sourdough" or "natural rise?"
 
I'm trying to expand my breadmaking skills from conventional yeasted
breads. I couldn't find a local source of starter so I set up a rye-based
starter, and then fed it with Gold Medal organic unbleached wheat flour
for a couple of days. It started bubbling nicely, and rather than throw
the excess away when I fed it, I made a sponge.

I've been reading Susan Jan Cheney's book Breadtime, and found its chapter
on "natural rise" bread quite interesting. Would this be an example, or
is it sourdough, despite the very short starter development time?

I let the sponge mature overnight, and about an hour ago I mixed in salt,
olive oil, and enough organic unbleached flour to make a sturdy dough. It
seems to be rising nicely, and has a definite sour smell. Of course, the
bread may be a disaster when it bakes-- who knows.

Ray

Trix[_1_] 11-03-2006 08:08 PM

"sourdough" or "natural rise?"
 
Let us know how it works out and post pictures if you can. (tinypic.com
is a quick, easy way to do that.)

The rye starter that I started a few weeks ago is doing a fine job.


TG[_2_] 12-03-2006 06:07 PM

"sourdough" or "natural rise?"
 

ray wrote:
> I'm trying to expand my breadmaking skills from conventional yeasted
> breads. I couldn't find a local source of starter so I set up a rye-based
> starter, and then fed it with Gold Medal organic unbleached wheat flour
> for a couple of days. It started bubbling nicely, and rather than throw
> the excess away when I fed it, I made a sponge.
>
> I've been reading Susan Jan Cheney's book Breadtime, and found its chapter
> on "natural rise" bread quite interesting. Would this be an example, or
> is it sourdough, despite the very short starter development time?
>
> I let the sponge mature overnight, and about an hour ago I mixed in salt,
> olive oil, and enough organic unbleached flour to make a sturdy dough. It
> seems to be rising nicely, and has a definite sour smell. Of course, the
> bread may be a disaster when it bakes-- who knows.
>
> Ray


HI Ray,

Don't get wrapped up in the name sour-dough. It should only as 'sour'
as you like it. It's still sourdough even if it's been fermented only
long enough to get it to rise. Note that it's called sour dough not
sour bread. : -)

TG



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:51 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FoodBanter