Bread - What are you baking today…..
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@neph93 Au naturell but both of them are ending up in my belly. Just commenting to G that I still can't get my poolish to explode open like that. A few cracks are all I can manage...
I'm thinking that I'm not getting the surface tension right. I added moisture to the dough to see if it needed more internal pressure, but that didn't give me the effect that you guys are managing.
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Room for improvement, but better ( or as @Madame-Buttonfly would say “couldn’t be worse”)
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@goosehd said in Bread - What are you baking today…..:
…much better! How do they taste?
Tell you after dinner (supper, tea?)....
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In chatting with G about protein content, the flour I’ve been using for the poolish and Pan de Cristal is 13.3%.
@neph93 Any idea what your content is? I’m wondering it that’s why my poolish doesn’t explode open or if it’s my technique.
The one flour that I’m considering buying has a content around 15/16% which seems pretty high.
Love to hear your guys thoughts.
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Just FYI, I've had success adding Vital Wheat Gluten to all purpose flour to boost the protein content. There's a good calculator around somewhere online that was a tremendous help in determining how much to add. I mostly went this route to simplify how many types of flour I had piled up in the pantry. It was getting out of control, ha ha!
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@goosehd I use 13g as a rule as it is the best I can get cheaply. Strong bread flour is a foreign concept to Norwegians as they use so much coarsely ground whole grains and save white flour for buns.
Caputo Manitoba flour (15g), is now available here but costs three time the amount as domestic (about 6USD per kilo), so I only buy it on special occasions.
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For high hydration breads (say anything above 85%) I'd probably want a minimum of 12% gluten. I'm most used to working with ~13-14% in this range and find it works well for me. Most whole wheat/grain flours will have a higher gluten percentage than the average white, ap, or bread flour. These whole wheat flours will/can also take a bit more hydration and I've found make it a little more forgiving and easier to handle at the same hydration. E.g. 90% with a 100% white flour at 14% gluten will be MUCH harder to handle than the exact same hydration level even with ~10% of whole wheat flour in the blend.
Vital wheat gluten also works well, know that it isnt 100% gluten when you're doing calculations. Personally, I'd want a minimum of 12% gluten flour for the breads I like to make, and not worry too much beyond that number. Go by taste from there and have fun mixing/blending flours and, if you can swing it, grinding your own from whole grains.
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@neph93 said in Bread - What are you baking today…..:
Caputo Manitoba flour (15g), is now available here
I got this yesterday. 14.9% and reasonably priced (I think).
On an unrelated note, I had a very senior moment yesterday and grabbed the wrong white flour. A general purpose 9%er. The Pan de Crystal I made with it would not have won any competitions....