Easiest Way to Make Tasty Sourdough Bread
Sourdough Bread. Read Customer Reviews & Find Best Sellers. Tangy, chewy sourdough bread is a lot easier to make than you think. Plus, it's a great project when you have time on your hands…and no yeast handy.
I like to think of it as a bread pet: You must feed it, take care of it, and watch it grow! Sourdough bread is particularly rich in nutrients that the body can easily absorb. This is due to the way that the lactic acid bacteria in the bread interacts with these nutrients. You can cook Sourdough Bread using 6 ingredients and 15 steps. Here is how you achieve it.
Ingredients of Sourdough Bread
- You need 8 oz of "Fed" Sourdough Starter.
- Prepare 12 oz of warm water (100-110F).
- It's 2 tsp of active dry yeast.
- You need 1/2 oz of sugar.
- It's 2 1/2 tsp of salt.
- You need 21 1/4 oz of all-purpose flour (or bread flour).
Baking a loaf of sourdough bread is pure therapy: food for the body and food for the soul. Not only will it fill your kitchen with delish smells of yeasty goodness, you'll walk away with a handful. Rustic Sourdough Bread This chewy loaf has rich, deep, flavor with mild sourdough tang. Since it includes commercial yeast as well as starter, you're guaranteed a good, strong rise — even if your starter isn't quite up to snuff.
Sourdough Bread instructions
- Combine all ingredients in mixer. (Referred to as "straight dough method").
- Ensure to scrape down sides of bowl to ensure all ingredients get incorporated..
- With dough hook, mix on medium low speed (2 or 3 depending on mixer) for about 8-12 minutes until a nice soft dough ball forms. This develops gluten in the bread. Dough should pull away from sides of bowl (known as cleanup stage).
- Dough should be tacky feeling. If it seems to tacky, add small Mounts of flour a little at a time while kneeding. Don't add to much extra.
- Note: I add more starter than what recipe calls for; I put about 10-12 ounces of starter based on how I feel, how my starter smells and looks, and just because I can, I started adding more on occasion to experiment to see how different the bread turns out. To me a little more starter makes bread turn out better. Feel free to give it a go if you feel daring..
- Place dough into a large lightly greased bowl and tightly cover with plastic wrap..
- Allow dough to rise until doubled in bulk, about 90 minutes..
- Gently divide dough in two. It will deflate a little..
- Gently shape the dough into two oval loaves, or for longed loaves, two 10" to 11" logs or baguettes. Place on a lightly greased or parchment lined baking sheet. Cover and let rise until very puffy, about 1 hour,.
- Note: I used two cloche to do bread in. This is a stone container that will give that stone oven bake to the bread and gives a great crust to it. I make my two logs and place in stone cloche then cover for the second rise. After rise I remove top, cut my slashes on top And lightly spray water from a spray bottle then recover for the bake. This creates a steam that helps develop bread and crust..
- Preheat oven to 425°F..
- Spray loaves with lukewarm water. Cut 2 or 3 slashes diagonal across top. Don't go to deep.
- Bake bread 25-30 minutes. If using cloche, uncover for last 5 minutes of bake to allow crust to be one a deep golden brown.
- Remove from oven and cool on rack before cutting.
- Enjoy!!!.
Sourdough Bread This no-knead bread is no fuss to make and delicious, too, which I first learned when I was the cook at a remote fishing camp. It has a crisp crust and distinctive sourdough flavor from the "starter" yeast mixture you stir up in advance. I was surprised at how easy it is! This is a homestead-version of sourdough bread, which is a non-fussy technique that will not require complicated measurements or instructions. This recipe is perfect for people (like me) who like a simple, hearty loaf that doesn't require tons of effort and time.
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