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Ron, You selected one that was given by someone else....YOU need toYou only have to clean it if the dough sticks!
The cloth goes into the washing machine
suggest one original of yours. Yes....Please. Aria
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Ron, You selected one that was given by someone else....YOU need toYou only have to clean it if the dough sticks!
The cloth goes into the washing machine
You get a better pattern that way!I don't use a cloth with mine, just a heavy sprinkling of flour. Surprisingly, it hasn't been a problem to clean up.
Humm, I don't have a mixer of any sort. Would this be reasonably easy to do hand mixing and kneading?Crusty Sourdough Boule
Kevin Lee Jacobs (www.kevinleejacobs.com)
Ingredients for 1 loaf (approximately 1 1/2 lbs.)
3 cups all-purpose or “plain” flour (plus extra for dusting)
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
2 cups fully-active sourdough starter
1 cup warm (110°F) water
Special equipment: A standing mixer; a large, lightly-greased bowl for rising the dough; a colander; 2 tea towels, and a 5-7 quart oven-proof pot with a lid (enameled cast iron is ideal)
Tip the flour and salt into the bowl of the standing mixer, and blend at “low” speed for 15 seconds. Add the sourdough starter and water, and blend at low-speed just until the flour disappears into the liquid ingredients. Then increase the speed to “medium,” and knead until the dough becomes smooth and elastic — 5-7 minutes.
Scrape the dough into the greased bowl, then invert the dough to grease its other side. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap. Set the bowl in a warm location until the dough doubles in volume — 2-3 hours.
Meanwhile, dust one of the tea towels with 2 tablespoons of flour. Rub the flour into the towel, and then arrange it as liner in the colander.
When the dough has doubled in volume, punch it down. Then scrape the dough onto a lightly-floured surface, and pat it out. Form the dough into a ball, and place it, seam-side-down, into the lined colander. Cover the colander with the second tea towel. Let the dough rise until doubled in volume — 45 minutes to 1 hour.
While the dough is rising, place the pot (covered with its lid) on the center rack of the oven. Preheat the oven to 450°F.
Remove the pot from the oven, and place it on your work surface. Then gently pick up the floured towel, and use it to flip the dough into the pot, the seam now facing up. (Don’t worry if some of the dough sticks to the towel.) Shake the pot to help center the dough. Immediately cover the pot, and return it to the oven. Bake for exactly 30 minutes. Then uncover the pot, lower the oven temperature to 400°F, and bake until the crust turns bronze and splits at the seams — 15 minutes.
Transfer the boule to a wire rack. Let cool completely before slicing
Welcome! I don't really share much either but I absorb as much as possible from everyone else on here.Following along. No recipes or techniques to share at the moment. If I ever find my cheesecake recipe I'll have to share it. I lost it in the move three years ago... I used to be into bread baking. My favorite loaf I made was a turkey shaped bread with white bread for the body/breast and rye for the legs and wings. It looked really neat. I'll try to find a picture.
Is it a stickier dough with the recipe you used? I have it raising right now. I used half wheat flour and it’s like normal bread dough should be...just wondering.You only have to clean it if the dough sticks!
The cloth goes into the washing machine
Following along. No recipes or techniques to share at the moment. If I ever find my cheesecake recipe I'll have to share it. I lost it in the move three years ago... I used to be into bread baking. My favorite loaf I made was a turkey shaped bread with white bread for the body/breast and rye for the legs and wings. It looked really neat. I'll try to find a picture.
I just kneaded it by hand, but it may not turn out either. I’m just getting started with this sour dough stuff.Humm, I don't have a mixer of any sort. Would this be reasonably easy to do hand mixing and kneading?