This is my first loaf bake in six months. I have been making small flatbreads in the meantime.
I milled seven pounds of flour on Friday the 11th -- 3 pounds of Prairie Gold hard white spring wheat, 2 pounds of Kamut, and 2 pounds of hard red winter wheat.
The goal here was to re-do the previous bake, #19: http://weightloss-slim.fit/node/62664/19th-bake-3202020-18-tsp-instant-yeast%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E%3Cp%3Ewith a longer autolyse, and a shorter ferment.
[ 2 hours 2 minutes autolyse.]
11:23 pm. Finish S&F. Was very tight still. Should have waited for it to relax and do more S&F.
[ 9 hours 14 min bulk ferment. 11:11p - 8:25a ]
9:06 am. Start oven pre-heat, 495/475 F.* With Lodge 3.2 qt combo cooker.
9:45 am. Oiled cast iron pot, sprinkle with corn meal.
[ 1 hr 22 min final proof. 8:25 - 9:47 ]
9:47 am. Bake covered, 495/475 F, 10 min.
9:57 am. Bake covered, 470/450 F, 10 min.
10:07 am. Bake covered, 450/430 F, 12 min.
10:19 am. Bake UNcovered, 420/400 F, 20 min.
10:39 am. Bake uncovered, 400/380 F, 2 min.
10:41 am. Internal temp 209.7 F.
* First number is thermostat setting, second number is actual.
1) Bring total dough weight up to 1200 g.
4) Wait for dough to relax after adding salt, and do more S&Fs.
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Time really improves WW, even with "just" commercial yeast.
Dave I can’t believe you hadn’t baked any bread for six months! I’m not sure I could go that long.
But plenty of flatbread & bannock in both the toaster oven and on the stovetop. And some fry-bread too I think.
Making a single flatbread per day, but not every day, is also a way to self-regulate bread intake. It's too easy to over-eat when I make a many-portion loaf.
The taste improved a half day after baking, but then it stopped.
The 2nd and 3rd day taste with this yeasted loaf didn't improve as much as my sourdough loaves did.
Net: sourdough is worth the taste.