Discussion
This recipe is adapted from one in Beth Hensperger's "Bread Bible," as published in the NY Times.
The original was in cup measure, didn't have potatoes, didn't use a biga and didn't have an autolyse, but it still turned out a great loaf. Naturally, I think that it's better with the biga, the potatoes and the autolyse.
It's a fairly long recipe, but since it moves along logical lines, it's fairly easy to make. This recipe makes a lot of bread, but the bread
freezes well. I mixed it using the fountain method, but you can use a mixer if you want to.
Ingredients
Biga
| Ingred |
Ounces |
Grams |
| HK Flour |
10 |
285 |
| Water |
6 |
170 |
| Dry Yeast |
1/2 tsp |
2 |
Dough
| Ingred |
Ounces |
Grams |
| Biga |
16 |
455 |
| Warm Potato Water |
30 |
850 |
| HK Flour |
46 |
1300 |
| Stone ground rye flour |
10 |
285 |
| Butter |
4 T |
55 |
| Peeled potatoes |
10 |
285 |
| Non-Fat dry milk |
1 2/3 cups |
400 ml |
| Cardomom pods |
12 pods |
| Sugar |
1 cup |
250 ml |
| Salt |
1 1/4 Tbsp |
19 ml |
| Yeast |
1 Tbsp |
9 |
Melted butter for brushing.
Three large bread pans, at least.
Method
- Make the biga a day ahead and let it develop in the refrigerator overnight.
- Peel and slice the potatoes. Set them to boil in plenty of water. When they are cooked, save the water and mash the
potatoes. Set them to cool.
- Gently crush the cardomom pods and break the seeds out. Clean away as much of the chaff as you can.
- Put the cleaned seeds between two pieces of wax paper and crush them up good and fine. Set them aside.
- Mix together the potato water, unsalted butter, sugar, crushed cardomom seeds and the dry milk. BUT NOT THE SALT!
- Using the paddle on the mixer, mix them together for a minute or two to melt the butter. Let the mixture cool
below 90 F / 32C.
- Add 10 ounces / 285 grams of flour and mix for a minute or two.
- Add the yeast. Cut up the biga and add it to the mixture. Mix for 2 minutes.
- Switch to the dough hook and begin adding the flours a bit at a time, until you have added about half the flour.
- Knead for about 3 minutes, until the dough is well-mixed. The biga will not have dissolved much.
- Dump the rest of the flour onto the counter and slowly add the liquid mixture from the mixer bowl into the fountain.
- Work the dough until all the liquid and flour are mixed together. Knead for a minute by hand.
- Cut the dough in half and place half back in the mixer. Knead for a minute. Remove the dough and knead the other
half of the dough.
- Place one half the dough on top of the other and cut them in half. Repeat the half-batch knead.
- Repeat this process twice. Then add half the salt to one of the halves, knead, and process the other with the rest
of the salt.
- Repeat the half-batch kneading twice more, then place all the dough on the counter and knead by hand for 5 minutes.
- Place the dough in a large pot, put the lid on it and let the dough ferment for 45 minutes.
- Fold the dough, then let it ferment 40 minutes. Fold it again, then let it ferment 30 minutes.
- Take the dough out of the container and let it rest on the counter for 10 minutes.
- This recipe makes almost 8 pounds / 3600 grams of dough. I made 3-2 pound / 910 gram breads and 2-14 ounce / 400 gram
breads. For my pans, the 2 pound loaves were a bit small. I think they would have been better
at 2 pounds 4 ounces / 1020 grams.
- Butter or grease the pans, shape the doughs and plop them in. Note that I made two in baguette pans in strange shapes
as an experiment. I think that handling the dough so much made one of the baguette shapes really balloon up.
- Heat the oven to 350 F / 175 C.
- Let the loaves rise for 45 minutes.
- You can either brush the tops with butter as you put them in the oven or you can wait and brush them 20 minutes into the bake.
- Bake for 20 minutes, then turn the loaves and continue baking until the loaves are a golden brown.
Then take the loaves out of the pans, turn off the oven and leave the loaves in the cooling oven for 5 minutes.
Here we go
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