Greetings from SFO!
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I forgot you have a proofing feature on your oven.
Maybe you can find an old Weber Smoky Joe somewhere and use the lid. Not sure how to get the smoky smell out, though.
Or maybe this, if you're up for a long drive....
https://kalispell.craigslist.org/tag/d/kalispell-toy-weber-grill/7826117053.html
j/k...that looks like plastic, too....
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Yesterday I fed a bit of my starter some rye flour as an experiment. Holy cow! @Jodi was right...
The jar was half full and it spent the night in the frig. It's almost up to the top and I'll have to find a bigger jar!
Will let it develop for a while and try it in my next loaf of bread in a few days.
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The rye bread recipe that I use is 2 parts of regular flour to one part dark rye (I use Bob's Red Mill). Definitely a lot stickier than an all-bread flour loaf, but worth the extra work.
I've looked at Lithuanian rye bread recipes but haven't tackled any yet. Mostly rye and very dense.
https://theryebaker.com/black-rye-breadjuoda-rugine-duona-lithuania/
What I grew up on. Wonder Bread was a shock the first time I had it...
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@wtg said in Greetings from SFO!:
Yesterday I fed a bit of my starter some rye flour as an experiment. Holy cow! @Jodi was right...
The jar was half full and it spent the night in the frig. It's almost up to the top and I'll have to find a bigger jar!
Will let it develop for a while and try it in my next loaf of bread in a few days.
I put it in a jar that is twice as big and it's up to the top already and way more bubbly than I've ever seen starter. Nice sour smell. Will probably throw together a loaf on Sunday and will bake on Monday. Can't wait.
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Sandwich loaf. This time I managed to catch it before it stuck to the top bread pan. I make them smaller, so they don’t rise that much over the top. Put 1/3 cup rye flour in with the rest. And proofed it more slowly today on the counter, in our fairly cool kitchen (67 degrees) instead of in the oven - made it at 8:30 am, and baked at 5pm.
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Looks delish!!
I used my rye-fed starter today. I used my usual recipe (I weigh everything) and the dough is extremely sticky. I finally gave up and kneaded in some additional bread flour and got it to something I could at least handle. It's rising again. I'll see how it looks in a couple of hours. If it's risen reasonably, I'll form the loaf and put the proofing basket in the frig overnight and then bake tomorrow morning.
I tried a little of the dough and it is SOUR. Can't wait to see how it bakes up. I made corned beef today so it could chill overnight for easier slicing and hoping upon hope that I have a successful loaf so we can have corned beef sandwiches tomorrow for lunch.
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Do you guys put salt in your starter?
I’ve read that it makes the starter more sturdy - they call it “training the starter”.
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The theory is that if your starter is raised with salt in it then being combined with the salt in the dough won’t slow it down.
It’s one of many questionable assertions I’ve found bouncing around YouTube and Reddit.
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Like @Jodi I don't put the salt directly on the starter when I'm putting together the ingredients to make a loaf of bread. I start with the starter (!), then put water on that, dump in the flour and sprinkle the salt on top of the flour. Stir everything together.
I do remember making a loaf of bread when I was a kid. The bread came out looking very nice, but much puffier and larger than usual. I cut a slice and buttered it and it became obvious why the loaf looked so different than usual. I forgot to put in the salt.
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@Steve-Miller said in Greetings from SFO!:
The theory is that if your starter is raised with salt in it then being combined with the salt in the dough won’t slow it down.
It’s one of many questionable assertions I’ve found bouncing around YouTube and Reddit.
Lots of things people do that make this more way more complicated than it needs to be! Temperature is one of the biggest factors in how fast it rises. I let the bread I made yesterday rise on the counter, it took a couple hours longer than it does in the oven with the light on. But since it didn’t matter when I baked it, it didn’t matter how long it took. And I could have just stuck it in the fridge and let it proof overnight and baked it this morning. Sourdough is something you just have to be willing to be flexible with, depending on your conditions/environment at the time.