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It's Real Bread Week, and one of the best things we could do to improve the
quality of our diet is to get into the habit of making bread, rather than
relying on shop-bought, which is often of poor quality.
“I appreciate that for many, the biggest obstacle to baking bread at home is
time. So to counter this, I have developed a recipe designed to fit around
busy lives. Something that can be done by all and which requires no fancy
equipment. So, no matter how crappy your oven is, everyone can bake great
bread at home.”
Many bakeries will share sourdough starter with amateurs keen to begin
baking bread. Real bread bakers have it tough enough, competing with the
convenience and price advantage offered by supermarkets and corner stores,
so isn’t it counterproductive, getting their customers to bake their own
bread?
“Not at all. This is all about encouraging more people to bake real bread. I
believe the more people that can enjoy real bread, the better. Over 70 per
cent of the ‘bread’ consumed in this country, and I use the word very loosely,
is mass-produced pre-sliced white. By baking for yourself you understand
and appreciate the process involved and once you get the taste for it, there is
no going back. And let’s be honest, the majority of us will not bake every
day, so on the days that you don’t bake, you have us,” Ryan says.
But if you want to make your own sourdough starter from scratch, Ryan's
instructions are below.
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Place the flour and water into a clean bowl and stir together until fully
combined. Cover and leave at room temperature overnight.
To the sourdough starter add 75g wholemeal flour and 75g water. Stir
together until fully combined. Cover and leave at room temperature
overnight.
Discard 100g of sourdough starter. To the remainder, add the flour and mix
in the water. Cover and leave overnight.
Discard 150g of sourdough starter and to the remainder add the flour and
water. Cover and leave overnight. The starter should start to smell
pleastantly sour with small bubbles appearing on the surface.
Discard 200g of sourdough starter. Add the flour to the remainder of the
starter, and mix in the water. Cover and leave overnight. The starter should
appear active and full of bubbles.
The starter should be quite active now and be full of little bubbles and smell
slightly sour. Discard 250g of sourdough starter. Add the flour and mix in
the water. Cover and leave overnight.
Day 7 The starter should now be very active and full of bubbles and is now
ready to use.
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07/11/2021, 12:36 Even better than sliced bread: Sourdough for beginners
“The only reason we discard some of the starter is to prevent you from
ending up with too much,” Ryan says. “The more starter you have, the more
you have to feed. For a home baker you only require a small amount.”
Sourdough
you can
make at
home, in a
casserole
dish
Ingredients
5g salt
325g water
Method
1. Add the flour to a clean mixing bowl. Mix the salt through the flour. Add
the water and sourdough starter. Combine all the ingredients to form a
rough dough.
2. Turn the dough out on to a clean work surface. Knead the dough for 10
seconds. Return the dough to the mixing bowl and leave to one side for
approximately 10 minutes. When kneading, do not worry if the dough is
slightly wet or sticky. Resist the temptation to add any extra flour.
3. After 10 minutes, turn the dough out onto the work surface and knead for
another 10 seconds, then return the dough to the mixing bowl and allow the
dough to rest for a further 10 minutes. The dough will need to be kneaded
one more time. After the third time of kneading for 10 seconds, the dough
should be smooth, smooth and elastic.
4. Return the dough to the mixing bowl, cover with cling film and allow it to
prove for four hours at room temperature. After four hours, turn the dough
onto a work surface and knock it back. Knocking back simply involves
knocking the air from the dough and equalising the temperature within the
dough. Form the dough into a tight round ball.
5. Line a 2.5l round Pyrex dish with a clean tea towel and dust with flour.
Place the dough, seam side facing up, into the dish. Cover the dish with the
lid, put it in the fridge and leave it overnight.
8. Using a sharp knife, cut the surface of the dough; this is what is known as
the baker’s signature. The dough can be cut up to half a centimetre deep. Put
the lid back on and place the dish in the preheated oven. Baking the dough
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with the lid on creates steam, which will allow the dough to rise and open up
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while baking. The dough will need to be baked for 50 minutes. After 25
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minutes, remove the lid from the dish and continue to bake for a further 25
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9. Once baked, remove the bread from the dish and allow it to cool. the Norway way
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