Sourdough Bread

 The treats are still hard to chew. Big girl teeth will soon be in and there will be no looking back.  The new choppers are huge!

 Starter, bread and foccacia developing in the oven. 

 My sourdough recipe:




The Recipe:

Early morning the day before baking:

* Remove your starter from the fridge, feed it and let it sit at 75 degrees for 3-4 hours until very bubbly.

* Take 12 oz. of the starter and put it in the bowl of your mixer. I am using weights rather than measures because it gives me the exact mixture I am looking for. Feed the remaining starter and let it sit again for several hours and then refrigerate it.

* Add 1 tsp. of instant rise yeast to the starter, 1 T. salt, 2 pounds and 2 ounces of flour and 18 ounces of water.

* Knead this until you have a strong smooth dough. Split it into two balls and let rise at 75 degrees for 3-4 hours until doubled in bulk. Oil the bowl a bit so the dough will not stick and cover with plastic wrap.

* After it has doubled, gently fold it into a tight ball and place it back into it's bowl. Cover with plastic and place it in the refrigerator for at least 24 hours. This will retard the rising and let it develop the sour flavor. I am leaving mine in the fridge for 48 hours to develop a stronger flavor.

* When you are ready to bake your bread, remove it from the fridge and let it rise again until doubled.

* Preheat your oven, with 2 covered bowls in it, to 450 degrees.

* When the oven and bowls reach 450 degrees, carefully remove the bowls from the oven. Using pot holders, remove the lids being careful not to get burned from the steam. They are HOT!!! Spray the inside of the bowls with cooking spray then gently roll the dough into the bowls. Immediately cover the bowl with their lids. Remember, the lids are VERY HOT too!

* Return the covered bowls to the oven and let them bake for 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, carefully remove the lids and slide the breads onto the oven rack. I keep a pizza stone in my oven at all times so I just roll the bread out onto it.

* Let the bread bake for another 30 minutes or until the internal temperature reaches 200 degrees on an instant read thermometer.
 I use vintage pottery bowls with lids to make mine.  You can use a dutch oven or any heavy covered pot.

 I flip them out onto my pizza stone half way through.

 This recipe make 2 wonderful loaves.

 They are very crisp on the outside and have a chewy interior.

This makes wonderful toast and great French toast too.

Comments

NanaDiana said…
That looks delicious. I can't read the red print on the grey background though for some reason. Hope you have a great weekend. xo Diana
TARYTERRE said…
beautiful and scrumptious. winnie will soon have a new set of teeth. imagine all the treats she will eat.
Leanna said…
David threw my starter out two weeks ago and I'm still mad at him. I've had it since we got married. I love to bake and sourdough bread or pancakes are the bomb. I need to feed my new starter this weekend so I'll be making at least two loaves of bread.
I couldn't read the recipe you had posted. The red print on the grey killed my eyes.
Linda said…
As hard as I try, I cannot read the red against the dark page.
jaz@octoberfarm said…
okay it's fixed! sorry! i have no idea how that happened!
Rain said…
That looks great Joyce! I've only made sourdough bread once and we did like it. Thanks for the recipe! Winnie is a darling! :)
Guillaume said…
Sourdough bread is great for bruschette.