saucisson wrote:... can you define your "cup"
Its a standard volume measure. 236 and a bit cc for the US one.
But volume measures are *bad* for solids with different packing densities.
Pro bakers do their recipes in terms of how much of the other stuff in proportion to the total flour weight.
The scheme is called "bakers' percentages" and it makes a sort of sense.
A typical artisan bread would be around 70% (of the flour weight) water, 2% (again of the flour) as salt, and 2% (you know now) fresh yeast (rather less for instant).
Anyway most bread doughs would be around 70% 'hydration' (�5%).
For the NYT story the water was 406g (but only 375 in the video).
Now that volume of flour could weigh anywhere between 330 and 420g.
So we are talking about a water percentage of somewhere between 89% and 123%.
(EDIT: {before I'm corrected!} The absolute weights are from Aussie cups, but the *proportion* of water to flour by weight (of course) doesn't depend on the size of the cup...
)
These are very wet doughs, but there is one heck of a possible variation.
It would seem simple and appropriate to begin experimenting with 400g of flour + 400g of flour to the quarter teaspoonful of instant yeast.
EDIT 2: Having run around the subject till I'm dizzy, these flour weights are rather too low. In the video, the cups are shaken to pack them tighter - it seems about 475g was being used.
Please see my later post. Use about 80% hydration! Wetter doughs (other things being equal - if only!) produce more and bigger holes in the internal 'crumb'.