NO-KNEAD SOURDOUGH SPELT BREAD
Spelt flour makes a great-tasting bread with a sweet, nutty flavor.
Provided by Mary's Nest
Categories Breads
Time 2h50m
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- Measure 1/2 cup sourdough starter into a bowl and add 1 cup water. Mix well.
- In a second bowl, add 3 cups spelt flour and the salt. Whisk well to distribute the salt with the flour.
- Pour the starter mixture into the bowl with the flour and salt.
- Use your hand to mix well in a roughly formed ball.
- Cover the bowl with a towel and allow to rest for 30 minutes.
- Remove the ball from the bowl, fold it over a number of times, and then form it into a round. (See video.)
- Cover a baking sheet with parchment paper and dust with flour. Place round on the covered baking sheet. Dust the top of the dough with flour, cover with a cloth, and allow to rise 1 1/2 - 2 hours until double in size.
- While the dough is rising, place your Dutch oven with lid into your cooking oven and preheat oven to 500°F.
- When the dough has doubled in size on your covered baking sheet, remove your Dutch oven from your cooking oven. Your Dutch oven will be hot, so use potholders and be careful. Remove the Dutch oven lid. Lift parchment paper with dough on it and place the paper and dough into your Dutch oven. Place the lid back on and transfer your Dutch oven back into your cooking oven.
- Bake bread in your covered Dutch oven for 30 minutes.
- Next, remove lid from your Dutch oven and allow bread to continue baking inside your cooking oven for 5-10 minutes more until golden brown.
- Using pot holders, remove your Dutch oven from your cooking oven, and then continuing to use pot holders, remove the bread from your Dutch oven by lifting it out using the parchment paper.
- Transfer bread on parchment paper to a cooling rack.
- Allow bread to cool, then slice with a serrated knife, and enjoy with butter.
NO KNEAD SPELT SOURDOUGH BREAD
Provided by Sophie
Time 8h20m
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- In a medium bowl, stir together the flour and salt. Add the sourdough starter and water. Use your hands to gently mix the dough until it is completely incorporated and sticking to your fingers. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature until the surface is dotted with bubbles and the dough is 1 1/2 to 2 times in size (7-8 hours or more depending on how active your sourdough starter is).
- When the first rise is complete, place your heavy cast iron pot with lid into the oven and pre-heat the oven and the pot to 475 degrees F. Position the rack in the lower third of the oven. The pot needs to pre-heat for at least 30 minutes.
- Generously dust a work surface with flour. Use a bowl scraper or rubber spatula to scrape the dough out of the bowl in one piece. Using lightly floured hands gently pat the dough out into a rectangle. With your dough spatula (or a large flipper) fold one short side of the dough into the middle and then fold the other short side on top. Then fold the dough in half the other direction. Dust lightly with flour, cover with plastic and let rest for 5 minutes. While you are waiting, line a medium sized bowl with parchment paper, using your fist to push the paper down into the bowl and your other hand to crease the paper around the inside and top edge of the bowl.
- Repeat the folding process outlined above a second time, let the dough rest for 5 minutes and then repeat folding process a third time. With lightly floured hands, lift the dough and place it into the parchment lined bowl seam side down. Cover with plastic and place on the counter next to the stove for 20 minutes for the second rise. To test if the dough is ready, press, do not poke, the tip of one floured finger quickly and lightly, about half an inch, slightly off center, into the crown of the dough (area of maximum expansion). If the indentation remains but springs back slightly, the dough is ready for the oven. If the dent fills in, give the dough another 5-10 minutes to rise and re-test.
- Remove the plastic covering from your bread dough. Using heat resistant pot holders, carefully remove the pot from the oven and remove the lid. Using both hands, lift the dough out of the bowl by holding all corners of the parchment paper and lower it into the pot. The edges of the parchment paper will brown, but will be just fine in the hot oven.
- Working quickly dust the top of the bread with flour using a small sieve (optional). Use a sharp pair of scissors to make 3-4 shallow cuts at a 45 degree angle along the center line of the dough to assist in "oven spring". Cover the pot with the lid and put it back into the oven. Reduce the heat to 450 degrees F and bake for 30 minutes.
- After 30 minutes, remove the lid and place a large baking sheet or tin foil on the rack underneath the pot (to help prevent burning on the bottom) and continue baking for another 10 minutes until the bread is a lovely chestnut color but not burnt. Use a heatproof spatula or pot holders to carefully lift the bread out of the hot pot and place it on a rack to cool thoroughly. If you have an instant read thermometer, the bread is done when the internal temperature is 190-200 degrees F.
NO KNEAD 50% SPELT SOURDOUGH
This 50% spelt sourdough bread has a soft nutty flavor and a lovely crispy crust. The method is no knead, and ideal for beginners and advanced bakers alike who are looking for a simple and healthy ancient wheat sourdough bread.
Provided by Melissa Johnson
Categories Recipes
Time 55m
Yield 12
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Thoroughly mix all of the ingredients in a bowl and, if possible, transfer the dough to a straight-walled container like this 2 qt. dough bucket. Mark the level on the container and let the dough rise until it is close to double in size. This was about seven hours for my starter strength and ambient temp.
- Flour your countertop and scrape the dough out of the bucket. Using a bench knife or floured hands, fold the dough onto itself so all the outer surfaces are floured. Then flip the dough and pre-shape it into a ball.
- Cover the dough with a bowl and let it rest about 20 minutes.
- Flour the top of the dough ball, flip it onto the floured side using your bench knife, and form the dough into your final bread shape (boule, batard, oblong loaf). Shaping how-to videos can be found here.
- Place your dough seam-side up in a proofing basket, stitching it tighter if it seems loose. Cover and let the basket sit at room temperature for 20-60 minutes (do the longer end of that range if your dough was less than doubled for the bulk fermentation).
- Place your covered proofing basket in the refrigerator overnight (8-16 hours).
- Preheat your oven to 500F for 30 minutes with your baking vessel inside.
- Flip your dough onto parchment paper, score it, and load it into the hot baking vessel.
- Bake at 500F for 20 minutes with the lid on.
- If you're baking in cast iron, slide a baking sheet under the vessel, same shelf with direct contact at this point.
- Lower the oven temperature to 450F, remove the lid, and bake for an additional 15 minutes or until the internal temperature of the bread is over 205°F.
DUONYTE'S NO-KNEAD SOURDOUGH BREAD
I baked many loaves until I finally came up with a successful sourdough version of the recent no-knead phenomenon. This is a great, beautiful loaf of bread.
Provided by duonyte
Categories Sourdough Breads
Time 21h30m
Yield 1 loaf, 16 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- Measure the flour and salt into a bowl.
- Measure the sourdough into a cup, and add enough room temperature water to equal 1 1/2 cups. Stir the starter to dissolve it in the water.
- Pour the starter-water mixture onto the flour. Stir together until all of the flour is incorporated. (I just mix with my hands). It's important to make sure all of the flour is incorporated.
- Cover with plastic wrap and a towel, and leave overnight in a room at about 70 deg. F. for 12 to 18 hours.
- At this point, the dough should be quite puffy. Lightly oil your hands. Without removing the dough from the bowl, fold the edges of the dough into the center. Once you've gone all around, pick up the dough, pull it to a rectangular shape and roughly fold one end over the other (like folding paper for an envelope). Do it again, pulling from the opposite edge. Now plop it back down into the bowl. Cover and let rise and additional two hours.
- About 30 minutes before the two hours is up, place your pot with its lid (3 to 4 qt size) in the oven and heat your oven as hot as it can get. (Grease your pan if you feel it might stick).
- When your dough is doubled, pull the pot from the oven and very carefully remove the lid. Tip the dough right into the pot (a silicone spatula helps tremendously), cover, and return to the oven. (Also, see Katzen's review for a great suggestion on using parchment paper to simplify transfer).
- Reduce temperature to 450 deg. F. and bake for 30 minute Remove the lid and bake an additional 15-30 minutes.
- Remove loaf from pot and allow to cool before slicing.
- Note1: A plastic bowl or basin really works well. Get one that has a smallish flat area at the bottom - this will help shape your loaf.
- Note2: Thanks, Zurie, for reminding me of the mix in the bowl technique - my late aunt first taught this to me, but I'd forgotten about it. It really works and you end up with much less cleanup.
- Note3: Starters vary tremendously in how liquid they are. You may need to add a little water to get the right consistency. Remember, this dough is not going to look like a traditional dough in the first phase. It should be soft but not gloppy or liquid.
- Note4: Substitute 6 ozs. of wheat flour for 6 ozs. of white flour for a heartier loaf.
- Note5: It's sometimes difficult to visualize what a doubled loaf looks like. Remember that a 10" diameter ball has double the volume of an 8" diameter ball. Don't let your bread overrise.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 103.3, Fat 0.3, Sodium 218.6, Carbohydrate 21.6, Fiber 0.8, Sugar 0.1, Protein 2.9
NO-KNEAD SOURDOUGH BREAD
Update: This bread is not suitable for sandwiches, it's perfect for those that like the crust of an artisian bread, and because of the wet dough besure to place in a bowl or pan to help shape the loaf. After Mark Bittman's feature in the New York Times (November 8, 2006) on Jim Lahey's no-knead bread, I started the search for a sourdough method. I think Breadtopia has the best. The use of parchment paper or proofing baskets makes it very simple. See Recipe #290761. I've found it best to proof the starter in the morning (8-10 hours), then make the sponge in the evening, allowing it to sit out overnight (15 - 18 hours) and then baking it the next day. Cooking time indicated does not include proofing time needed. NOTE: Even though it's recommended to use a La Cloche or a 6-8 quart dutch oven I've been baking my boule in a 4 qt. cast aluminum dutch oven.
Provided by Galley Wench
Categories Sourdough Breads
Time 1h
Yield 1 1 1/2 pound loaf
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Mix together the dry ingredients in large non-metalic bowl.
- In measuring cup mix together water and sourdough starter.
- Mix in liquid until the flour is incorporated. The consistency should be firm and shaggy.
- Cover with plastic and let sit on the counter for 16-18 hours at room temperature, about 70°F (Note: At 70-75 degrees the bread leavens well and has the distinct sourness and flavor of sourdough. At more than 75 degrees the dough becomes too acidic which inhibits the wild yeast and leavens poorly. At much less than 70 degrees the dough leavens well but has a mild flavor. ).
- With plastic scraper remove dough from bowl and gently place on floured surface.
- Gently flatten dough into rectangle and fold the ends inward (like a letter).
- Fold the sides inward and form a dough ball.
- Place dough, seam side down, on parchment paper bowl or frying pan (helps to hold shape and cover loosely with a towel and allow to rise until doubled in size, about 1 1/2 hours.
- If using proofing basket,spray the basket with non-stick oil and dust with flour or wheat brand and place dough directly in the basket.
- Cover with towel and let rise about 1 1/2 hours.
- Dough is ready when it will not readily spring back when poked with a finger.
- Thirty minutes before baking, place cast-iron Dutch Oven or La Cloche (with lids) in oven and preheat to 500 degrees.
- With serrated knife place slits in top of loaf.
- Remove pot or La Cloche from oven and carefully lift dough with parchment from bowl and transfer to La Cloche or Dutch Oven.
- Shake pan once or twice if dough is unevenly distributed; it will straighten out as it bakes.
- Replace lid and return to oven.
- Turn oven to 475 degrees and bake for 30 minutes.
- Remove cover; reduce heat to 450 degrees and bake an additional 15-20 minutes or until golden brown; interior temperature should be 200 degrees and the bottom sounds hollow when thumped.
- Remove from pan and cool completely on rack before cutting.
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