Anschul
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2008
- Posts
- 875
Requesting. It's my beloved's favorite, having grown up in San Franscisco. I've seen recipes for it and I think I can just start some, feed it once a week and wait about ten days to use it, correct? I started baking all our bread a few months ago (I had never made bread before then). I've made farmhouse white, wheat, honey bran, challah (easy cause I remember my mom making it every week), foccacia and rye, but no sourdough yet. Any tips you care to share are gratefully appreciated.
PS I am currently reading Bill Buford's Heat. What a fascinating book!
I promise to get back to you with the last word on sourdough. I got it, just not the time. The best easy tip I can give you is that you have to keep making it. Sourdough isn't bread, it's commitment. I'll give you the best I got (another post), but be prepared. Sourdough used to be the standard in Atlantis, and you know what happened there.
Chefzilla
Well, I'm back.
For several years, I used a starter I got in SF. You can buy it now at a terrific web site called sourdo dot com slash culture dot aich tee em (got it?). They will sell you a culture of the true SF-bacteria-laden starter for fourteen bucks, and it's very good. I recommend cruising their site for recipes, and following any of their instructions (to the letter). I like the willow basket recipe. It makes a bread with an amazing, genuine crust. Use a pizza stone in the oven. (that's another of the secrets). Keep the oven atmosphere moist (that's another).
The reality is, sourdough is a pain in the ass. It means actually using the starter and refreshing it within ten days, or rejuvenating it is iffy at best. You could cruise for recipes, and make your own starter (it works), but I truly believe the bacteria in the SF culture makes the bread taste different, and I swear EE will taste the difference--it will taste like home. It's sort of like Philly and cheese steaks. They make them all over the country--even fast food joints make something called a "Philly Cheese Steak," but you gotta go to Passyunk Avenue to get a real one. Sourdough is the same. If you're going to make the commitment (and I mean it IS a commitment), then get the real thing. Sourdo dot com has the best culture I have ever tasted, and I have used it.
I hope you actually attempt this. Its reward is WAY worth the effort, and the time commitment at any one time is no different than any other breadbaking. But still...
Break a leg
Chefzilla
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