Sourdough thread............

My recipe:

325g water
120g active starter
500g flour
17g salt

I mix the water/starter together. Then add the flour and salt. Once mixed, I let it sit for 30 minutes. After that first 30 minutes, I did the first of four stretch and folds, 30 minutes apart. At the end of my stretch and folds, I let it rise/proof on the counter until it's grown to 50%ish. Then I prepare my counter with a little flour and dump the dough onto the counter. I stretch out the dough flat on the counter, then fold it into thirds and start shaping the dough. I drag/tuck the dough under itself, until it's nice and round. I keep the top on top the entire time and when I'm done, I put it in my prepared banneton, bottom side facing up. If I need to, I pinch the dough together to make a nice bottom of the dough.

I cover my banneton with shower caps that you can get from Walmart and put it in the fridge for 24 hours. When I'm ready to cook, I preheat my oven, with my dutch oven inside, to 450. Once warmed up, I get my dough out of the fridge and place it on a sheet of parchment paper. I score the top and pull the DO out of the oven. I've sprinkled rice on the bottom of my DO, just so there's some room between the loaf and the bottom of the DO, to prevent burning. Place the loaf in the DO, put a few pieces of ice between the parchment paper and DO, which causes steam and let it bake covered for 35 minutes. Once that's up, I take the lid off and bake for another 10 minutes uncovered. The bread will be ready when it's temped at over 200 degrees, but you can leave it in until it's however dark you like it.

Remember, with baking it will continue to cook, so don't cut into it until it's cooled. I have started adding 1 stick of grated butter, to my loaves and it makes a huge difference. I do 1/2 the butter and fold it into the 3rd stretch/fold, then the other 1/2 on the last stretch/fold. The good thing about baking sourdough, that if it's not how you like it, or your scoring didn't take or it's overproofed/underproofed..........everyone will still eat it!
 
I'll add in my recipe for a sandwich type sourdough versus the "rustic" crunchy style.

This will need to be tweaked based on your pan size, but it makes one large and one small loaf for me.

First stage: (autolyze)
  • 735 g water
  • 735 g flour (I do 500 g freshly milled whole wheat, 235 g organic all purpose)
Mix well and let it sit for 45-60 minutes. This allows the gluten to start developing and really helps with the high amount of whole grain.

Second stage:
  • 375 g all purpose flour
  • 90 g unrefined coconut oil
  • 24 g kosher salt
  • 300 g active starter (50:50)
Mix until fully incorporated, adding a little extra flour if needed. Rest 20 minutes.
Then knead five minutes.
Transfer to an oiled container. I also use shower caps to cover the bowl.
Stretch and fold at 30 and 60 minutes.
Coil fold at 90 and 120 minutes.
Let proof another hour or two after that.
Dump it onto a lightly floured work surface, roll it out into a huge rectangle, and divide based on your pan sizes.
Roll each portion (like you're rolling a carpet) and place them in your greased pans.
At this point if you want it more sour you'd place it in the fridge. I usually don't and just let it rise immediately. As it's approaching the top of the pan preheat the oven to 375. I like to preheat for at least a half hour.
When the dough is just below the top of the pan is the best time to bake, but if it goes a bit over it'll be ok. Too much, though, and the oven spring will make it flop over the sides.
Place in oven, reduce to 350, and bake 20 minutes.
Reduce to 325 and bake another 20 minutes. If baking more than one loaf together, rotate pans at this point.
Remove from pans and bake right on the oven rack another 10 minutes. This helps firm up the crust on the part of the loaf that was in the pans, I find it tends to be a bit too soft/soggy otherwise.
Cool on rack for two hours before cutting.

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I'm not finding a great picture of the crumb, but this one gives you a good idea.

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Sourdough Pizza Crust

  • 500 g all purpose flour (or 00 Italian flour if you really want to)
  • 325 g water
  • 100 g active sourdough starter (50:50)
Mix water and starter together well, mix in flour until evenly incorporated, rest 20 minutes.
Knead 3-4 minutes, transfer to oiled container.
Stretch and fold at 30, 60, 90, 120 minutes.
Proof another 1-2 hours.
Dump onto lightly floured work surface, divide into 4 even portions, roll up into balls, and place each in a separate container. (I use quart size cottage cheese or yogurt containers.)
Refrigerate 1-3 days. You can go longer but the dough gets pretty hard to work with at that point. I went 5 or 6 days once and it was a PITA.
Take out from fridge and let warm up for an hour or so, then on a floured work surface stretch each piece into a circle (as best you can).
Once mine is about halfway stretched I transfer it to parchment paper, finish stretching it, and do everything from this point forward on that.
You'll have to YouTube some videos on stretching the dough, I suck at it and am in no position to give any advice there!
Add sauce, cheese, toppings, etc., and bake.
Bake at as high a temperature as your oven can handle. I set mine to 550 and preheat for an hour.

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Bonus super easy pizza sauce recipe:

1/4 yellow onion, minced
2-6 cloves garlic, minced or crushed
2 Tablespoons olive oil
1 28 oz can crushed San Marzano tomatoes
1 Tablespoon Italian seasoning
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes (optional)

Heat oil on medium heat in medium saucepan, add onions, cook until translucent, add garlic, cook one minute, and tomatoes and seasoning, bring to a simmer and reduce heat to keep it there, cook for about twenty minutes or until your desired thickness. Done!
 
Sourdough pancakes or waffles
  • 260 g all purpose flour
  • 355 g water
  • 240 g active or discard sourdough starter
Mix all together in a large bowl, cover, rest on counter overnight.

Now add:
  • 2 eggs
  • 60 g oil
  • 2 Tablespoons sugar
  • 2 teaspoons salt
Mix well. Now mix 1 teaspoon baking soda with 1 tablespoon water and mix into the batter.

Cook and enjoy!

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See anything completly wrong here?
I know it is a bit different than some, but I think the basics are about the same
The method looks fine but I'm worried about the recipe. If my math is right that's 77-78% hydration, which is very high and would probably be a real pain to work with.
 
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That's up to you to a degree. Looking back at my chart it looks like I had settled on 72% as my preference for that style. It still has good texture but was easier to handle.
 
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That's up to you to a degree. Looking back at my chart it looks like I had settled on 72% as my preference for that style. It still has good texture but was easier to handle.
For this one I will start with 305g of water if my Texas math is mathing that should be about 74%

I feed my starter every other day, unless I know I am going to bake, it's a small 25/25/25 starter, but I forgot to feed Tuesday, so I hope it wakes up fast!
 
I keep a 125/125/125 starter and typicallly am about 65% hydration. I use 325g water, with 500g of flour. I found that the higher hydration %, the harder it is for me to work with, on the folds and final shaping.
 
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I've made these several times and they're great. They don't last very long, thick and chocolatey brownies.

Sourdough brownies

INGREDIENTS​


  • 8 tablespoons (113 g) unsalted butter
  • 12 oz. (340 g) semi sweet chocolate chips
  • ½ cup (40 g) dutched cocoa powder (or regular cocoa powder)
  • 2 teaspoons (10 g) vanilla extract
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 1 cup (200 g) granulated sugar
  • ½ cup (110 g) dark brown sugar
  • ½ cup (125 g) sourdough starter discard
  • 1 cup (120 g) all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon (5 g) salt

  • Preheat oven to 350°F (176°C) and line a 9" x 9" baking dish with parchment paper.
  • Melt the butter in a small saucepan over low heat. Add the chocolate chips, vanilla extract and dutched cocoa powder. Stir the ingredients until the chocolate chips have melted and the mixture is smooth. Remove the saucepan from the burner and set it aside to cool down.
  • In a large mixing bowl, beat the eggs and yolk, brown sugar and granulated sugar with an electric mixer for 7-10 minutes. Add the sourdough discard and chocolate mixture to the bowl beat on low until combined. Add the flour and salt and stir with a spatula until just combined. (The batter will be very thick.)
  • Pour the batter into the baking dish and smooth the top. Bake for 35-40 minutes.

  • Allow the brownies to cool completely in the pan after they come out of the oven. Remove the brownies from the pan by lifting them with the parchment paper and cut into squares.
 
I keep a 125/125/125 starter and typicallly am about 65% hydration. I use 325g water, with 500g of flour. I found that the higher hydration %, the harder it is for me to work with, on the folds and final shaping.
I am really new to SD, but I think all the loaves I have baked were labeled "beginner friendly" from places like "The Perfect Loaf" and "Clever Carrot" have all been in the 73-76% range, at least that is my recollection.
 
I am really new to SD, but I think all the loaves I have baked were labeled "beginner friendly" from places like "The Perfect Loaf" and "Clever Carrot" have all been in the 73-76% range, at least that is my recollection.

I've worked and experimented with higher % ranges and it just frustrates me, with how sticky and hard it is to come together. I've settled on 65%, which is perfect for me. Again, that's what's great about this. Trying different hyrdation %s is fun and they're always eaten!

Bake three loaves, if you have time. Do 65%, 70% and 75%. Cool them and see which ones you like best. Much easier to compare in real time too.
 
I've worked and experimented with higher % ranges and it just frustrates me, with how sticky and hard it is to come together. I've settled on 65%, which is perfect for me. Again, that's what's great about this. Trying different hyrdation %s is fun and they're always eaten!

Bake three loaves, if you have time. Do 65%, 70% and 75%. Cool them and see which ones you like best. Much easier to compare in real time too.
My wife would kill me if I made 3 loaves, however I may pull this bake down to 70%
 
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