Thursday, December 11, 2008

Baking with the starter

I did another batch of those French rolls - this time I tried used the starter that I'd made instead of dry packaged yeast. The starter displaces some of the flour and some of the water, and I had to figure out just how much I was replacing, involving some guess work.

So I added 2 cups of the starter, and took out 1 cup of flour and 1 cup of water. It kneaded pretty wet, and I ended adding the excluded cup of flour back in. If I were to do this again, I would take out all 1.5 cups of the water and just use the liquid from the starter.

The kneaded dough took twice as long to rise at both stages - I don't know if I should attribute that to the excess water or the quality of the starter. I didn't take any pictures during the process but I did take a shot of the end result.


The bread had a hint of sourness, but I guess that's to be expected since I used sourdough starter instructions. Kathy says she doesn't notice any sour flavour at all.

It's probably because I've been re-mixing in the clear alcohol-smelling liquid that comes out on top of the starter as instructed. (The liquid is called hooch.) I wonder if I can minimize that sour taste if I get rid of the hooch instead of mixing it back in.

I was a little worried at first about if it was just plain "gone bad" but I ate half a bun last night, and I didn't end up in the hospital. I ate another one in the morning after toasting and it was not too bad either... Toasted and buttered it was actually pretty good.


Allen.

2 comments:

Jenny said...

I just got the Bread Bible out of the library, so I'm going to try making some bread this week. From what I've read, the cake/pastry is very fine and has much less protein in it than all purpose or bread flour, which is might also be why your dough is behaving that way...

Allen said...

Yeah I read up on it afterwards and it says that the cake flour doesn't form enough gluten to properly capture the gases from the yeast.

Later on, I did bake 2 batches at once with all-purpose flour. I wanted to see the difference between dry yeast and the yeast starter. The starter just didn't rise as much as the dry stuff did.