Sourdough Buckwheat Boule

Toast

This is really Hamelman's Vermont Sourdough, with buckwheat instead of rye. 

Working with buckwheat flour seems like the kitchen equivalent of very wet cement. I'd be inclined to be even more aggressive about folding, especially earlier in the bulk ferment, and I'd bake straight from cold, rather than leave the overnight-proofed boule out for an hour before baking, but all told, I'm pleased with the result. The buckwheat provides a very delicate texture that adds a certain elegance to the bread, and the taste is delectable.

 

It is quite similar to your work, isn't it? Somewhere along the line I also tried Eric Keyser's formula, in a batard shape that was nice as well. It also strikes me that buckwheat would have an affinity for certain bread spices, analogous if not just like rye. 

Thanks for asking. Venice was fantastic, as always, although it seems to get more crowded every year, if that's possible. I'd like to bake there one time. The availability of decent baked goods in the city itself is pretty bad. I did bring home a couple of sacks of 00 flour to play around with, though. 

Hi all - Thanks to the reply from Kiseger I've now found the answer to my query for recipes for Farine de ble noir made a loaf yesterday 500 grms with 80% strong white flour - here in France Type 65 plus the 20% Buckwheat plus 25 mls of olive oil ,Dry yeast 10 grms and 320 mls of tepid water. Result very similar to loaf shown above. Very tasty but a "wet" dough and the loaf rose about the same as that in the photo - good  crust - will now experiment some more