by Massimo Maddaloni » Fri May 13, 2011 12:01 am
Hello all,
Inspired by this thread, I began baking again and experimenting. In another post I reported about my progresses but now I managed to get the real thing. I serendipitously stumbled across the book "The Bread Baker's Apprentice: Mastering the Art of Extraordinary Bread" by Peter Reinhart and then I bought "Crust and Crumbs" by the same author. It has been an EPIPHANY!
To make (among many others) Altamura/casareccio/Sicilian bread he advocates long fermentation times primed by minimal amount of yeast. By minimal I mean so little that one would never think it could work.
He begins with an odd starter, called "Poolish", which has a consistency of a liquid batter. No salt. Overnight in the fridge.
Then he makes the "pre-dough", again very fluid: Poolish plus flour. few hours at room temperature, then again overnite in the fridge.
The final day the pre-dough is worked in a very unusual way: it's stretched and folded (no kneading) and kinda "laminated" by layering flour in between the folds. Fermented few hours then into the oven.
He uses a pinch of malt to provide fermentable sugars for the yeast during overnight fermentations. He also explains clearly what to look for to decide when dough has been mixed enough.
The results are nothing short of AMAZING!! The bread comes out nutty, almost cakey, redolent of grains and other misterious fragrances. The crust has a wonderful copper/brown colour and it's crackly and glazed. The crumble is supple and soft with amazing bubbles. I recall eating such a good bread ontly twice in my entire life. You gotta check out these books.
Regards
Massimo
PS I made my breads with a mix of unbleached, unbromated, high-protein white flour + whole wheat flour + semolina (approximately 2,1,1)
Massimo Maddaloni
No one knows more than all of us (quoted from Zulululu)