Hey everyone, it is John, welcome to my recipe page. Today, we’re going to prepare a special dish, all natural san francisco sourdough bread. One of my favorites food recipes. For mine, I will make it a little bit tasty. This is gonna smell and look delicious.
San Francisco-Style Sourdough Bread Instructions: Add all the ingredients except cornmeal in the bread pan of bread machine. Process according to manufacturer's instructions for a dough setting. Do not be afraid to open the lid and check the dough.
All Natural San Francisco Sourdough Bread is one of the most popular of current trending meals on earth. It is appreciated by millions every day. It is easy, it’s fast, it tastes delicious. They are nice and they look fantastic. All Natural San Francisco Sourdough Bread is something that I have loved my whole life.
To get started with this particular recipe, we have to first prepare a few ingredients. You can cook all natural san francisco sourdough bread using 10 ingredients and 10 steps. Here is how you cook it.
The ingredients needed to make All Natural San Francisco Sourdough Bread:
- Get Phase One
- Prepare 1/2 cup whole wheat flour
- Take 1/2 cup water
- Get Phase two
- Take 200 g water
- Get 120 g sourdough starter
- Get 236 g whole wheat flour
- Get Phase Three
- Prepare 400 g Whole Wheat flour
- Make ready 100 g Buckwheat Flour
Miners would often carry sourdough starters with them on their journey to ensure they'd always have access to freshly baked bread. Gold miners valued it for their camps. WHAT MAKES IT SPECIAL Our Organic San Francisco-Style Sourdough is a chewy and tangy sourdough bread made in the west coast tradition. San Francisco Sourdough French Bread companies, only Boudin and Colombo (which was more of an East Bay brand) survive.
Steps to make All Natural San Francisco Sourdough Bread:
- Combine Phase One ingredients in a mason jar or a small dish. You need to leave a little room at the top for it to expand. Stir up this flour goo and set it aside in a warm place.
- Over the next few days, this goo should start to bubble a little. Just check in every so often and see what it looks like. If it starts to bubble, or if it separates, with a layer of kinda gross looking water at the top, add a little more flour and water and stir it up again. Some sources recommend feeding every 12 hours, and I guess this is ideal. But that type of setup stresses me out, so I just feed it when it looks hungry.
- Depending on where you live, within a week or so (in San Francisco it can happen in a few days, but we're obviously known for our sourdough) you should find that, when you add flour and water to the mix, it can almost double in volume within a couple of hours. This means your starter is ready to go!
- Now, to make a loaf of bread, you combine Phase Two ingredients in a large bowl. Mix well. Cover with a kitchen towel and wait for about 12 hours. I like to do this in the evening so I can do the next step when I wake up in the morning. Once you have your dough fermented, continue with step 7. The next 2 steps are just some pointers on maintaining a natural starter.
- Any remaining starter from mixing your dough can be kept alive with a fresh helping of flour and water mix. Also, at any point in this process before you bake your bread, the dough should contain some of the yeast you've captured in your starter. That means you can always save some portion of this dough as a future starter. Give it away to friends or use it to replenish your own stash. Just feed it regularly, every couple of days or so.
- If you won't be using your starter for awhile, you can put it in the fridge. In this case, you only need to feed it maybe once a week. For more long term storage, wait until it's particularly bubbly and active, then spread it out on a sheet of parchment and let it dry to a crisp. Then, break up the chunks and store in a dark, airtight location. When you want to use it, just mix some of these flakes with some flour and water paste again and wait until it wakes up.
- So, continuing with step 4 above, just combine the ingredients listed in Phase Three with your fermented dough. Knead them together until you have a nice ball of dough. Put this in a bowl, cover it with plastic, and let it sit in the refrigerator for 24 hours. Note: Feel free to experiment with different flours. I used a combo of these two because I had them in my kitchen.
- When the 24 hours is up, take your fermented dough out of the fridge. Knead it just a bit to form it into a smooth ball. Pinch the seams together gently to seal them up. Set your dough ball in a warm spot with a towel over it and just let it be for about 5 hours or so. Feel free to use any other kinds of fancy bread-shaping techniques here if you know them.
- Time to bake. Heat your oven to about 450f. On the top rack, a pizza stone is ideal. On the bottom rack, a cast iron pan or an oven-proof pan you don't really care about.
- Give your loaf a light dusting of flour, slice into the top about 1/4" in a few spots so that steam will escape as it bakes, and slide it onto the hot stone. Carefully pour a cup or so of water into the pan on the bottom rack and shut the oven door. Bake for about 45 minutes. When done, your bread should give a hollow knock when thumped.
When I was thinking about the old line sourdough french bread bakeries I seem to recall that Bordenave's in San Rafael is still around. (Redirected from San Francisco sourdough). Sourdough bread is made by the fermentation of dough using naturally occurring lactobacilli and yeast. It uses biological leavening rather than using cultivated baker's yeast. I have made walnut bread with my San Francisco-style sourdough several times, and it has been delicious. I generally have a couple thick slices of crusty sourdough bread with that salad.
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