Oddley wrote:Hi dougal, I know all about the tight as% way of doing things because I am one...
All flours are different so measuring out to the last gram of water does not always work, so as irritating as it is, we must use non scientific methods to get the right consistency.
Its not the cost of the yeast (which even I think trivial), but that using less, and longer slower cooler fermentation actually changes the process. There's more enzyme action it would seem. Certainly one develops a much more pronounced flavour from the exact same flour... which I, personally, prefer.
The fact of the difference was something I was introduced to in Elizabeth David's English Bread and Yeast Cookery. The enzyme action is attested by Lepard and Reinhart (who was introduced to the ideas of autolyse and retardation by Gosselin). The essence of sourdough is that the there is a stable system created with the yeasts and lactobacilli. But its when you bring in the enzyme action too that it starts getting special.
When I'm making 'my' bread, I tend to adjust by feel.
But as I said above, when trying to do things someone else's way, at least for the first time, the thing is *not* to adjust to one's own ideas of consistency.
And in doing that, I follow Lepard's wisdom that flours are much more consistent by weight than volume, and that liquids are more precisely, and consistently, measured by weight also. (No, I don't fancy using a burette or pipette
)
And ooh yes, I am very well aware of the vast number of different ways that two flours can differ.
There's nothing very original in the suggestion of baking bread in an enclosed container, either.
Elizabeth David's discussion of Baking Ovens begins with a discussion of "baking under" and goes on to discuss westcountry Cloume (or Clome) ovens - remarkably similar to something I was reading not terribly long ago about baking under a cloche.
Humidity manipulation is a basic bread baker's tool. It does make a heck of a difference.
But some notables (including Dan Lepard) fall into the trap of wanting visible (ie condensing therefore cooling) steam. He actually uses ice cubes - good for visible condensation, but not ideal for humidity, or oven temperature.
One reason gas ovens are often thought 'better' for baking is that their heat is intrinsically quite humid. Gas + oxygen giving CO2 & water.
There's nothing novel about not kneading, either. It was an important part of the famous "Grant" loaf.
But its important to recognise that this is one more of the 'controls' at our disposal. You can't do a Chorleywood process in your food processor, but its very easy to make a dough that is distinctly 'unusual'...
Bread machines. A world unto themselves!
Here as I understand it the hot pot is being used to 'shock' the dough and get a good spring - rather as with a baking stone.
The bread machine has to warm the bread through from proofing temp to baking temperature - again something that one can do in a regular oven, again as something suggested by Mrs David as an unusual but workable process.
There's nothing new...