I have been baking steadily now for 2 months and thanks to this great site my results have improved a great deal. Today was my best bake ever! The biggest difference was finally having a baking stone in the oven. Today’s oven spring surpassed even results I have had baking in cast iron. Really nice tasting loaf, with great crust, nice soft crumb and great flavour. This is my first content post, so I hope the photos come out:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/69734840@N03/6845029230/in/photostream
I have been working on the recipe posted my JMonkey under recipes in the handbook:
1 1/3 cup water – OOPS recipe deviation . . .
At around 5:00 pm Friday I started the yeast in warm water and then mix and see you in the morning!
After 25 minutes rest, I shaped a boule as Mr. Hammelman shows on his excellent video:
http://www.kingarthurflour.com/professional/videos.html
I placed the shaped loaf onto bakers parchment dusted with flour and cornmeal and covered with a floured towel and plastic bag to proof. After 1 hour I turned the oven on to 450F and placed an empty broiler pan try on the bottom rack, the stone on the 2nd rack. After 11 minutes the oven was up to heat and I gave it another 19 minutes to let the stone heat up, for a total proofing time of 30 minutes.
I then dusted the loaf with flour, scored it and placed the loaf and parchment onto the baking stone and adding ¾ cup boiling water to the broiler pan. The total baking time was 30minutes.
YAHOO, great loaf, great bake!
SS
So what, did I post this in the wrong place?
Anyhow the second half of the dough kept nicely in the fridge for 3 days, after which I let it come to room temp and finish rising. I then de gassed and pre-formed a ball. Aftger 20 munites rest, I formed a boule and then baked. The extra time in the fridge provided a better crumb, with more open holes and better flavour!
Regards,
SS
From what you describe (higher elevation, different flour), you've been making some good adjustments from JMonkey's original formula that fit your circumstances. Glad to hear that you are enjoying your bread.
Paul
Thanks for the response Paul. I guess I should have mentioned in my original post what a great starter recipe this is to learn about the fine art of great bread. When I gound this recipe in the manual, I was in the middle of doing a bad job of bakers math in reducing that exact KAF formula. So many thanks fo JMonkey for doing the math!!!
I also read with a chuckle shortly after my post that it is quite normal to adjust the flour and water. Duh, I am a newb.
This is proving to be an interesting, satisfying and mighty tasty hobby. I likely didn't need to stretch & fold every 30 minutes for a baguette mix, but it certainly didn't do the dough any harm. I can see how a wetter dough like a ciabatta might need the extra work to firm it up.
I now have the Bread Baker's Apprentice on my kitchen table. Wow, betweeen this book, the TFL website and the excellent KAF professional video, the learning opportunities and learning curve are amazing. Many thanks for sharing fellow bakers.
For last weekend's bake, I adjusted the recipe by adding 33% white rye flour by weight and the results were great! I will post the results of this bake and formula separately.
Regards!
SS