Recipes Information<
 
Web World-SuperSite

How to Bake: Easy Sourdough Bread


A customer emailed us and said that her mother loved sourdough bread but had trouble making it work right. We shared the following recipe with her, which is our easiest, most foolproof recipe for sourdough bread.

Using this recipe for sourdough bread, a small amount of yeast is used in the starter. As the starter is used and refreshed with new feedings of flour and water, wild yeasts are introduced and cultivated. The sour flavor typical of sourdough bread that we love comes from the action of the yeast and friendly bacteria.

The commercial yeast makes an easier starter than culturing wild yeast from the air. Because it's easy, if you abandon your starter after a few weeks, you can readily start another when you're back in the mood or have the time.

Here is the recipe:

For the starter:

1 cup warm water (about 110 degrees)
1/4 teaspoon yeast
1 cup high gluten unbleached flour

Mix the starter in a glass or steel bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and set it aside at room temperature until it is doubled and bubbly, maybe 4 to 6 hours.

For the sponge:

1 cup of the starter
3/4 cup warm water
2 cups flour

Mix the starter amount with the flour and water, cover, and set aside to ferment until it has tripled in volume. At room temperature, it will take four to eight hours. You can put it in a cool place--about fifty degrees--and let it perk all night. Your garage may be just right. You can also let it ferment in the refrigerator overnight. At temperatures of forty to fifty degrees, the friendly bacteria will be more active than the yeasts and the flavor will be more sour.

To recharge the starter, add about one cup of flour and one cup of warm water to your remaining starter. Keep it in the refrigerator and use it or recharge it every few days. After a few recharges, you will plenty of complex wild yeasts in your starter.

For the dough:

All of the sponge
1 1/2 cups flour (more or less)
2 teaspoons salt

Mix the salt with the flour. Knead the combination into the sponge by hand until you have a smooth, elastic, slightly sticky dough, adding more flour as needed. Put the dough in an oiled bowl and let it rise again until doubled, about an hour.

Form the loaves. This works best as a large freestanding round or oval loaf or two smaller loaves. Place a clean cotton cloth in a bowl or basket with which to hold the loaf. Lightly dust the interior of the bowl with flour. Place each formed loaf upside down in a bowl on top of the dusted flour. Cover the loaves with plastic and let them rise again until doubled. This rising will probably take less than an hour.

To from the thick, chewy crust that is typical of artisan breads, follow these instructions: Place a large, shallow, metal pan in the oven on the lowest shelf. You will pour hot water in this pan to create steam in the oven. High heat is hard on pans so don't use one of your better pans. An old sheet pan is ideal. Fill a spray bottle with water. You will use this to spray water into the oven to create more steam.

Preheat the oven to 475 degrees. (If your oven runs on the cool side, set it on 500 degrees.) When the oven is hot and the bread is fully risen and is soft and puffy--being very careful not to burn yourself with the rising steam and with a mitted hand--pour about two cups of very hot water in the pan in the oven. Quickly close the oven door to capture the steam. With spray bottle in hand, open the door and quickly spray the oven walls and close the door.

Gently invert the loaf or loaves onto a slightly greased non-insulated baking sheet on which a little cornmeal has been dusted. With your sharpest knife, quickly make two or three slashes 1/4-inch deep across the top of each loaf. This will vent the steam in the bread and allow the bread to expand properly. Immediately put the bread in the steamy oven. After a few moments, open the door and spray the walls again to recharge the steam. Do this twice more during the first fifteen minutes of baking. This steamy environment will create the chewy crust prized in artisan breads.

After the bread is in the oven, turn the temperature down to 450 degrees and set the timer for about forty minutes. Check on the bread ten minutes before the baking should be complete. If the top is browning too quickly, tent the loaf with aluminum foil for the remainder of the baking to keep it from burning. The bread is done when the crust turns a dark golden brown and the internal temperature reaches 210 degrees. It is important that the bread is well-baked to drive moisture from the loaf. If the bread is under baked, the excess moisture will migrate to the crust and you will no longer have the dry chewy crust of a great artisan loaf.

This sourdough bread is to die for. The prolonged rising gives the yeast plenty of time to convert the starch to sugars and the friendly bacteria a chance to impart their nut-like flavors.

Last winter, we made dozens of these sourdough loaves. Since this bread is best eaten fresh, we gave scores of loaves away-mostly to folks from church. Funny thing-we were never turned away.

For more articles like this visit The Bakers' Library.

© 2004 The Prepared Pantry


MORE RESOURCES:

Harrisonburg Daily News Record

Recipes for Health Sweet Potato Puree With Apples
New York Times, United States - 17 hours ago
This series offers recipes with an eye towards empowering you to cook healthy meals every day. Produce, seasonal and locally grown when possible, ...
Slow And Easy Turkey Day Harrisonburg Daily News Record
Fix it and forget it St. Joseph News-Press
all 5 news articles


Food Bills Gobbling up Your Income?
MarketWatch - 17 hours ago
Bret Thompson, executive chef of famed restaurant MILK, is teaming up with GOT MILK? to share milk-based gourmet holiday recipes that feed a family of 10 ...


The Spokesman Review

Try these Thanksgiving recipes
Hartford Courant, United States - 17 hours ago
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees, making sure to arrange oven racks so the turkey will fit into the oven. Place a sauce pan of water on the stove and bring ...
Hot lines to holiday help Chicago Tribune
Butterball and Gather Host Thanksgiving Web Chat and Recipe Contest MarketWatch
Need help? Hot lines offer answers, tips 2TheAdvocate
The Spokesman Review - LubbockOnline.com
all 12 news articles


Boston Magazine

Testing Dale DeGroff's Cocktail Recipes At Drink
Bostonist, MA - 15 hours ago
This Bostonist owns many a compact, black and white volume of cocktail recipes, with small type and bare diagrams. Mixologist, booze consultant, and Museum ...
Mixologist Dale DeGroff’s Holiday Drink Suggestion Boston Magazine
all 3 news articles


Baking Expert Puts Health in the Holidays With Canola Oil
MarketWatch - 23 minutes ago
Simply substitute canola oil for other oils or solid fat in recipes to replace "naughty" saturated fat with "nice" unsaturated fat. ...


Neoseeker

Cooking Mama Responds to PETA by Highlighting Vegetarian Offerings ...
MarketWatch - 16 hours ago
Mama wants people to know that World Kitchen includes 51 recipes from around the world, ranging from vegetarian fare like miso soup and rice cakes to ...
Majesco Responds To PETA On Cooking Mama Criticism Gamasutra
PETA attacks Cooking Mama series CVG Online
Cooking Mama World Kitchen is Now Served on Wii DailyGame
TechRadar UK - Wall Street Journal Blogs
all 92 news articles


Recipes steeped in grandma's love
Calgary Herald,  Canada - 2 hours ago
Her collection of hand-written recipes have become worn and scattered, but reliable and written with love. As I drove back home to Calgary, I wanted to do ...


Consider these directions for the preparation of an English ...
Atlanta Journal Constitution,  USA - 15 hours ago
It looks bound to be another keeper, and I’ll tell you my first round of testing recipes from it yielded excellent results. Corriher pays as much attention ...
‘Bakewise’ goodies Atlanta Journal Constitution
all 3 news articles


Dear Food Goddess:
Atlanta Journal Constitution,  USA - 15 hours ago
‘I like to make recipes from scratch. My father told me about a recipe for spaghetti sauce that was on a matchbook cover back in the 1950s or 1960s. ...


Favorite family recipes feature garden fresh carrots
West Fargo Pioneer, ND - 4 hours ago
She lives in West Fargo with her husband, Al. I not only write my recipe column for this paper, I also pen a monthly one for the Midwest Boomers publication ...

Recipes - Google News

home | site map
© 2006