Looks great, bleekerstgirl. If we did it, we would be double-loading the dough with the olives, sundried tomatoes!![]()
Looks great, bleekerstgirl. If we did it, we would be double-loading the dough with the olives, sundried tomatoes!![]()
My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
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This thread is such a bad (but tasty) influence. I got frustrated with the weekly fighting to get bread from our local bakery (they never know when it will be out, whether they have any, they'll tell you do and then you get there and it's not out of the oven, etc., etc.). I made the basic Boule yesterday (before I stopped to buy the book - I had the wrong yeast measure off the internet and it STILL worked), and I'm in love.
My next project is to see if I can replicate the bread type I've liked. It's a whole wheat sourdough (but not very dark), so I think the basic recipe from the HABin5 will work. However, it has what I think are wheatberries scattered through it. I have some soaking - can you use them in dough after soaking but without sprouting? The ones in the bread we've bought didn't LOOK sprouted. Any idea how much of them to add to the recipe? Or how long they should soak before I do? Any other ideas/tips? I wouldn't think I'd need to adjust the other quantities much.
Most days in life don't stand out, But life's about those days that will...
The Volkornbrot recipe uses wheat berries. It has more water in it than the typical recipes, and instructs you to not use the dough for 24 hours, to enable the wheat berries to absorb moisture.
So...to follow up on my request:
I think I've found my magic bread recipe (or at least one that makes me very happy as a daily loaf). I'm using the recipe from the original book (I think it's called light wheat - it's 5.5 cups white to 1 cup wheat). To that I add 1/2 cup of wheatberries that have been soaked overnight in cool water or quick soaked in nearly boiling water (until it cools). Love the flavor and texture - it's whole wheat without being too dense or chewy.
I still want to try olives in the plain dough - but it's always much stickier and I haven't quite figured out how to add them. All in good time![]()
Most days in life don't stand out, But life's about those days that will...