Nice!Yes, it does!
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Nice!Yes, it does!
Hmmm, hadn't heard of that. The recipes I've been using have an initial and an "in the pan" rise. I wonder if maybe my bread tends to be flatter than I expect because I don't really pay attention to when it gets to "doubled". If it is doubled when I check it, I deflate and stick it in the pan for second rise. Maybe it has been sitting at "doubled" for some time and that causes issues?Out in Wyoming, it took 3 rises to make good bread.
Hmmm, something to try on my next baking day to see if it works for me.Out in Wyoming, it took 3 rises to make good bread. Because of the elevation, it took only 45 minutes for the dough to double in size, so I would have to knock it down twice before forming into loaves for the last rise.
That is nice looking bread!This is a NEW RECIPE Aria's New Sourdough Multigrain Seeded Bread: 4 cups warm water dash sugar 1 teaspoon yeast 1 cup Sourdough Starter
Mix cover warm place 10 minutes Add: seasame
sunflower, pumpkin seeds 1 teaspoon or 1 tablespoon of each seed.....your choice.
In mixer 2 teaspoons pink salt 1/3 cup av0acado oil
1/3 cup 1/2 honey 1/2 molasses. Add 1/2 cup of multigrain mix 1 cup whole wheat flour 8-9 cups bread flour. ADD FLOUR little at a time (dough should not stick to sides of bowl). Remove from mixer..hand knead 5-10 minutes. Place in a LARGE greased bowl cover warm place 30 minutes remove from bowl knead and place back into large bowl for 30 minutes. Divide into 3 loaves 9 x 5. Can make as one solid loaf or 3 separate pieces of dough next to each other in tin. Cover place in warm place. Rise top of tin.
Bake 400 degree 30 minutes. NOTE: I made my
own Multigrain Mix...will post if anyone is interested.
Thank you, I'll keep that in mind! Certainly possible.@BigBlueHen53 About your bread that didn't rise so much - is there a chance that you let it over-rise when you put it in the warm oven?
How is the texture of the bread, if the crumb is not as good as usual, that may have been the issue. When bread dough over-rises, it breaks some of the gluten strands and will form a bread with a more crumbly texture that won't rise as well (since the gluten strands are what hold the air bubbles that cause the bread to rise).
Out in Wyoming, it took 3 rises to make good bread. Because of the elevation, it took only 45 minutes for the dough to double in size, so I would have to knock it down twice before forming into loaves for the last rise. A friend was visiting one day while I was making bread and saw me doing the 3 rises and then got to try the resulting bread. He went home, did the same process and called me up and said his bread was so much better - he never realized that they were letting the bread over rise on the second doubling.
I think it was about two hours. No, I'm wrong. That was the first rise. The second rise, in the pans, was at least 4 hours. Maybe 5. It was sooooo slow! I finally just got tired of waiting and figured it wasn't going to rise any more, so I popped it in the oven, and put water in the bottom. Fifteen minutes at 375°, fifteen more at 350°. I would have baked it 20 at 350, but it was clearly done.About how long to 2nd rise the Bread> 30 minutes 45 or 1 hour? Just estimated of course. Aria
I hope you enjoy the cookbook!I ordered the Escoffier cookbook I mentioned a while ago. English translation.