Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
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. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
Posted to rec.food.sourdough
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Howdy --
I've been ploughing through the FAQ pages, and while I have found a recipe-specific reference to using a bread machine with sourdough starter, I'm looking for something more general. Could someone either point me to the right FAQ file (I'm blind or slightly brain-damaged; maybe both) or pass along a website address, or maybe brilliant tips? My sister left me her Zojirushi bread machine when she moved to Japan (should have taken it! No fabulous bread over there!) and I was going to sell it....but realized it might actually be useful now, since I'm baking all the bread around here for the kids and myself. (Sourdough starter changed our universe.) Never thought I'd be using a BREAD MACHINE. Crazy. Thanks -- Tara |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Tara Banfield wrote: > Howdy -- > > I've been ploughing through the FAQ pages, and while I have found a > recipe-specific reference to using a bread machine with sourdough starter, > I'm looking for something more general. Could someone either point me to > the right FAQ file (I'm blind or slightly brain-damaged; maybe both) or pass You can check this website http://www.breadmachinedigest.com/ which has a good collection of recipes and a troubleshooting http://www.breadmachinedigest.com/be...ing_chart.html > along a website address, or maybe brilliant tips? My sister left me her > Zojirushi bread machine when she moved to Japan (should have taken it! No > fabulous bread over there!) and I was going to sell it....but realized it It depends on your taste for the bread. I stayed in Japan for two years and also had a used Zojirushi bread machine. Japanese bread tends to be "RICH", ie with lots of fat and sugar. The bread is close to the pastry, either with some topping or stuffing. For the loaf bread, it's always very soft (Japanese like soft bread), due to its higher fat and sugar content than American ones. If you like sweet and soft bread, Japanese bread does a good job. Bread there can be eaten alone, usually not with the meal. If you like artisan bread, well, you better make by yourself or go to bakeries in big cities. |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tara Banfield wrote:
> Howdy -- > > I've been ploughing through the FAQ pages, and while I have found a > recipe-specific reference to using a bread machine with sourdough starter, > I'm looking for something more general. Could someone either point me to > the right FAQ file (I'm blind or slightly brain-damaged; maybe both) or pass > along a website address, or maybe brilliant tips? I use my ABM--a "Zo" V-20--to mix/knead the dough (usually 2 dough cycles), then take it out to rise and bake in the oven. The X-20 is supposed to have a sourdough cycle, but because rising/proofing times are so variable I don't believe a strictly mechanical approach to be trustworthy. B/ B/ |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Brian Mailman" > wrote in message ... > Tara Banfield wrote: > (Tara's sourdough safari...) > > I use my ABM--a "Zo" V-20--to mix/knead the dough (usually 2 dough > cycles), then take it out to rise and bake in the oven. > > The X-20 is supposed to have a sourdough cycle, but because > rising/proofing times are so variable I don't believe a strictly > mechanical approach to be trustworthy. Thank you, Brian. You have confirmed my suspicions! Last night, I investigated the machine (it's a BBCC-Q20) and then went back online to discover that there are a bazillion models out there. Finally decided to just experiment, and after some stewing, I realized that I couldn't get a long rise time in the final cycle, no matter what I did! So after a kneading a batch of guesswork dough (which gave my 9-year-old HYSTERICAL giggles -- he couldn't stop laughing at the bouncing blob), I turned everything off and baked it this morning. That was some good kneading! Loaf is lovely, though I don't like the paddle mark in the bottom. We'll be keeping the machine for kneading and entertainment purposes, and I'll be hunting down some decent pans -- I have just about everything but my idea of a good loaf pan. Thank you for the reply! Tara |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
To get rid of the paddle mark (there will be the shaft mark but it has much
smaller footprint) I remove dough and the paddle after last mixing and return dough for a final rise. "Tara Banfield" > wrote in message ... > > "Brian Mailman" > wrote in message > ... > > Tara Banfield wrote: > > > (Tara's sourdough safari...) > > > > I use my ABM--a "Zo" V-20--to mix/knead the dough (usually 2 dough > > cycles), then take it out to rise and bake in the oven. > > > > The X-20 is supposed to have a sourdough cycle, but because > > rising/proofing times are so variable I don't believe a strictly > > mechanical approach to be trustworthy. > > Thank you, Brian. You have confirmed my suspicions! > Last night, I investigated the machine (it's a BBCC-Q20) and then went back > online to discover that there are a bazillion models out there. Finally > decided to just experiment, and after some stewing, I realized that I > couldn't get a long rise time in the final cycle, no matter what I did! So > after a kneading a batch of guesswork dough (which gave my 9-year-old > HYSTERICAL giggles -- he couldn't stop laughing at the bouncing blob), I > turned everything off and baked it this morning. That was some good > kneading! Loaf is lovely, though I don't like the paddle mark in the > bottom. We'll be keeping the machine for kneading and entertainment > purposes, and I'll be hunting down some decent pans -- I have just about > everything but my idea of a good loaf pan. > Thank you for the reply! > > Tara > > |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
> Arek Niski wrote:
> To get rid of the paddle mark (there will be the shaft mark but it has much > smaller footprint) I remove dough and the paddle after last mixing and > return dough for a final rise. there's an idea i hadn't heard of before thanks, i'll try it waterboy |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
bread machines | Baking | |||
Bread machines | Baking | |||
Sourdough Bread for Bread Machines | Recipes (moderated) | |||
Sourdough Bread for Bread Machines | Recipes (moderated) | |||
bread machines | Baking |