How To make King Arthur Flour Sourdough Starter Tips 1
-DEBBIE CARLSON (PHHW01A) -KING ARTHUR FLOUR HINTS
The following information comes from King Arthur Flour "A Short Course in Cooking With & Keeping the Elusive Wild Yeast". What is a Sourdough Starter? "A sourdough starter is a wild yeast living in a batter of flour and liquid. Yeasts are microscopic fungi related distantly to mushrooms. There are many varieties of these tiny organisms around us everywhere. Wild yeasts are rugged individualists which can withstand the most extreme of circumstances. Some will make delicious loaves of bread; others will create yogurt and cheese out of milk; still others will turn the juices of grains and fruit into beer and wine." "Active dry yeast, the kind we can buy in packets at our grocer's, is a domesticated descendant of these wild relatives, one which has been grown for flavor, speed of growth and predictability. But domestic yeasts are much more fragile and can't be grown at home without eventually reverting to their original wild state." "If you can imagine a world without any packets of active dry yeast, you can imagine how important your sourdough starter would be to you. Without it, you would be doomed to some pretty awful eating. It is no wonder that sourdough starters were treasured, fought over, and carried to all ends of the earth. To the early prospectors, it was such a valued possession (almost more than the gold they were seeking), that they slept with it on frigid winter nights to keep it from freezing. (Ironically, freezing won't kill a sourdough starter although too much heat will.)" Fermentation (or the Microscopic Magic of Yeast): "As we mentioned above, yeast is a microscopic fungus. As it feeds on the natural sugars in grain, it multiplies and gives off carbon dioxide (just as we do when we breathe). This invisible activity of yeast is called fermentation. When you make bread with wheat, by kneading the long elastic strands of wheat protein (called gluten) into an elastic mesh, you create traps for these carbon dioxide bubbles causing the dough to expand as if it contained a million tiny balloons."
How To make King Arthur Flour Sourdough Starter Tips 1's Videos
YOUR FIRST SOURDOUGH (Sourdough Bread For Complete Beginners)
Welcome to Your First Sourdough! When I started making sourdough bread a decade ago, I had a lot of questions and a LOT of failures and could have really used a step by step video to walk me through an entry level loaf. This video is just what young-Brian would have wanted. The lower hydration makes it easier to handle and more sourdough starter ferments the loaf faster so it takes less time to make start-to-finish. This is a perfect place to begin your sourdough journey. We can get into higher hydration and silky open crumb in the future. For now, we're talking about an awesome, tasty, rustic sourdough loaf that anyone can make, even if you're an absolute beginner.
▶️Check out my sourdough starter video here:
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9 ROUND PROOFING BASKET (FOR BOULE):
ESCALI DIGITAL SCALE:
INSTANT READ THERMOMETER:
5.5 qt LE CREUSET DUTCH OVEN:
PIZZA PEEL:
MY FAV STAINLESS BOWL:
STAINLESS BENCH SCRAPER:
BREAD KNIFE:
BREAD LAME:
RECIPE:
*i've listed measurements in grams and volumetric, but i HIGHLY recommend using gram measurements as listed for the best results*
1. Build the Leaven
•100g room temp water (78 F/25 C) or 1/2 cup
•25g or 1 TBSP ripe sourdough starter
•100g or 1 cup all purpose flour (11.7% protein)
Measure water, sourdough starter, and flour into a high sided container and stir to combine. Ferment, covered, at room temperature for 12 hours.
2. Mix the Dough
•310g water (92 f / 33 C) or 1 1/4 cup
•200g or about 1 cup leaven or (from build stage above. 25g will be left over to propagate your future sourdough starter)
•400g or 3 1/4 cup purpose flour (11.7% protein)
•50g 1/3 cup whole wheat flour (14% protein)
•12g or 2 tsp salt
Add water, leaven, flours, and salt to a bowl and stir to combine with a sturdy spoon. Once combined into a shaggy mess of dough, begin to pinch and squeeze with a wet hand until well mixed (about 2-3 minutes depending on how fast you mix). Cover and begin the bulk fermentation
3. Bulk Fermentation
Place the dough you just mixed from step 2 above in a warm place to ferment for 30 minutes.
After 30 minutes, give you dough a set of strength building folds. See 6:30 for process.
Cover dough and place in a warm place for another 30 minutes.
After 30 minutes (or 60 minutes total of bulk fermentation, repeat the strength building folds. Cover and place in a warm place and continue to ferment for 2 more hours.
4. Shaping
Flour the dough and work surface and flip the dough out onto the work surface. Shape as shown at 8:19. Scoop dough ball into a well floured proofing basket, seam side up.
5. Proofing
Cover with a towel and allow to rise at room temperature for 90 minutes.
After 90 minutes, when poked your dough ball should hold an indent briefly before bouncing back.
6. Baking
Preheat dutch oven in a 500 F / 260 C oven for 30-45min.
Sprinkle Semolina or cornmeal onto a piece of parchment and flip your proofed dough ball onto the parchment seam side down. Score with lame, razor blade, or scissors.
Load parchment and dough into preheated dutch oven, reduce oven temperature to 485 F / 250C and bake for 18 minutes.
See video for alternative baking method.
After 18 minutes, remove lid from dutch oven. Reduce oven temperature to 465 F / 240 C and bake for 25 more minutes.
CHAPTERS:
0:00 Intro + Sourdough Theory/Overview
4:00 Build Stage
4:50 Mix Stage
6:10 Bulk Fermentation Stage
7:55 Shaping Stage
9:24 Proofing Stage
11:10 Baking Stage
#beginnersourdough #easysourdough #yourfirstsourdough
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KING ARTHUR FLOUR SOURDOUGH STARTER TIPS 5
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Sourdough bread: making the dough
Robyn shows Terri how to make bread dough beginning with a sourdough starter.
15 Mistakes Most Beginner Sourdough Bakers Make
Wanna learn how to bake fresh, delicious, artisanal style sourdough bread at home? (No matter how busy your schedule is)
Click the link below and download my FREE bread baking checklists:
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Misen Serrated Bread Knife:
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Le Parfait 1L Jar for Sourdough Starter:
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-Sourdough Recipe-
Flour (1000 grams total)
600 grams of all purpose flour
300 grams of whole wheat
50 grams of spelt flour
50 grams of einkorn
770 grams of water (77% hydration)
150 grams of starter- (15%)
20 grams of salt (2%)
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NEW! - How to Create a Sourdough Starter : Step by Step
All new tools available at
UPDATE: During the first three days, stir your starter at least once day. You do not want it to dry out on top. If it looks dry, add a spoonful of water when stirring.
This is the definitive video and demonstration to learn how to create your own sourdough starter. This in-depth tutorial demonstrates every step of the process and helps beginners understand the how, and why of each step in the process, and visual examples of what to expect each day from Day 1 through Day 9.
What is a sourdough starter?
How is it different than commercial yeast?
What flour to use?
What water to use?
How to make a starter?
How to feed a starter?
Common questions and problems answered!
NEW VIDEO: Check out the new supplemental video The First 10 Days of Your New Sourdough Starter: Troubleshooting and Tips. It is an add-on video that picks up where this video leaves off.
IMPORTANT: If your new starter is not peaking within 24 hours, watch this new video
If you like these videos, please subscribe to my channel, The Sourdough Journey!
Thank you!
Tom Cucuzza
The Sourdough Journey
Cleveland, Ohio
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Sections in this video:
0:00 Introduction
1:42 Part 1 - Sourdough Starters
3:25 What is a sourdough starter?
5:00 What is in a sourdough starter culture?
6:17 How does a sourdough starter differ from commercial baking yeast?
8:08 Yeast and lactic acid bacteria
9:22 The ingredients for a sourdough starter
12:24 Part 2 - How to Make a Sourdough Starter
13:14 Selecting the Flour
15:50 Selecting the Water
18:42 Flour sources can make a difference
21:57 Day 1 - Mixing
27:14 Day 2 - Check in
28:10 Day 3 - Check in
29:53 Day 4 - Check in
30:56 Starter feeding ratios
36:26 Day 4 - 8 hours later
37:17 Days 3-5 The Quiet Days
37:57 Day 5 - Feeding
40:26 Day 5 - 6 hours later
40:54 Day 6 - Feeding
41:43 Day 6 - 4 hours later
42:28 Time-lapse video of starter rising
42:23 Day 7 - Feeding
44:52 Day 8 - Feeding
45:45 Adjusting the starter feeding ratio
47:14 Starter Feeding Ratios: The Camping Analogy
48:48 Day 9
50:16 When is a starter ready for baking?
The Best Everyday Sourdough (using unfed starter) is Pain De Campagne
Have you heard of Pain De Campagne? It might be the only sourdough bread recipe you'll ever need. Martin is in our kitchen to show you how easy it is to make this everyday loaf, which effortlessly fits within the cracks of your daily routine. Using unrefreshed (unfed) sourdough starter, minimal kneading, and long fermentation, this recipe can be adapted to your own schedule — which means you may very well find yourself baking this bread weekly (or even daily!).
Recipe link:
Blog link:
Bread Flour:
White Whole Wheat Flour:
Extra Large Dough-Rising Bucket:
Brotform and Liner Set:
Credits
Host: Martin Philip
Producer: Tucker Adams
Chapters
0:00-0:53: Introduction to Pain De Campagne
0:54-2:04: What is unrefreshed or unfed starter?
2:05-2:38: Making the bread dough with starter
2:39-4:14: Making the first two folds of the dough
4:15-5:32: Folding for a third time and resting to rise
5:33-8:08: Dividing and pre-shaping the dough into two loaves
8:09-10:28: Shaping the loaves and placing in brotform baskets
10:29-12:24: Scoring the loaves and placing in the oven
12:25-13:46: Baking the boule in a covered pan and the batard on a peel
13:47: Voila! Two baked loaves of Pain De Campagne sourdough