Sourdough Bread: Difference between revisions
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Mix 2 and 1/8 cups of water plus 3 tablespoons of sugar in another bowl. | Mix 2 and 1/8 cups of water plus 3 tablespoons of sugar in another bowl. | ||
=Mixing Starter and | =Mixing Starter and Dough= | ||
Mix 1/2 to 1 cup of the starter into the | Mix 1/2 to 1 cup of the starter into the dough bowl. | ||
=Salt= | =Salt= | ||
Add 2 teaspoons of salt into the | Add 2 teaspoons of salt into the dough bowl. | ||
=Flour= | =Flour= | ||
Add and mix 4 cups of whole wheat flour into the | Add and mix 4 cups of whole wheat flour into the dough bowl. Stir until wet and sticky. | ||
=Leaving | =Leaving Dough Bowl= | ||
Cover the | Cover the dough bowl and leave it out for 14 hours. |
Revision as of 00:18, 28 June 2012
Output
For 1 loaf of bread and to get started on preparing for more bread.
Making the Sourdough Starter
Pour and mix flour and water in a volume proportion of 1 to 1 in a glass container.
Cover the top opening with a lid (but don't tighten it) or a piece of cloth tightened around the jar (ex. with a rubber band). The point here is to allow air to seep into the mixture while preventing insects like flies from contaminating the food.
Leave the mixture jar out on a countertop for a 2-4 days. The point here is to allow yeast (microbes, in this case from the air) to enter the mixture and produce acid by digesting the flour's starch. This small amount of acid is what causes the sourdough bread to be sour.
Every day, mix the starter bowl (to prevent surface mold) and add 1-2 tablespoons of flour.
Starter
Dough Bowl
Mix 2 and 1/8 cups of water plus 3 tablespoons of sugar in another bowl.
Mixing Starter and Dough
Mix 1/2 to 1 cup of the starter into the dough bowl.
Salt
Add 2 teaspoons of salt into the dough bowl.
Flour
Add and mix 4 cups of whole wheat flour into the dough bowl. Stir until wet and sticky.
Leaving Dough Bowl
Cover the dough bowl and leave it out for 14 hours.