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notbob 29-02-2016 05:47 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
Since I don't interact with JB threads and most of the bonus puppets
have disappeared, I thought I'd post an article about actual cooking.
Scary, but true.

I jes combined these ingredients to start my starter:

50 grams stone ground whole-grain flour
50 grams unbleached all-purpose flour
100 grams warm tap water

<http://www.examiner.com/article/whole-wheat-sourdough-bread-part-i>

Is this a valid approach? Should I post ina baking group? If so,
which one? I'll even entertain responses from whatserface, Mz Bake
Expert. You know ....the one who gets all offended and calls me
Hitler.... or did I call her Hitler? I ferget. ;)

Anyway, I jes saw a new 4 part episode about cooking and baking
(Cooked), with Michael Pollan waxing poetic about the miracle of
bread, so I thought I'd make me some. (I prefer beer, but it doesn't
lend itself to making a sammy, fer dammit!)

I realize this may come as a surprise to many of you, but this IS rfc
.....the "c" DOES stand fer "cooking". Seriously. ;)

nb


Janet B 29-02-2016 06:02 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 29 Feb 2016 17:47:37 GMT, notbob > wrote:

>Since I don't interact with JB threads and most of the bonus puppets
>have disappeared, I thought I'd post an article about actual cooking.
>Scary, but true.
>
>I jes combined these ingredients to start my starter:
>
> 50 grams stone ground whole-grain flour
> 50 grams unbleached all-purpose flour
> 100 grams warm tap water
>
><http://www.examiner.com/article/whole-wheat-sourdough-bread-part-i>
>
>Is this a valid approach? Should I post ina baking group? If so,
>which one? I'll even entertain responses from whatserface, Mz Bake
>Expert. You know ....the one who gets all offended and calls me
>Hitler.... or did I call her Hitler? I ferget. ;)
>
>Anyway, I jes saw a new 4 part episode about cooking and baking
>(Cooked), with Michael Pollan waxing poetic about the miracle of
>bread, so I thought I'd make me some. (I prefer beer, but it doesn't
>lend itself to making a sammy, fer dammit!)
>
>I realize this may come as a surprise to many of you, but this IS rfc
>....the "c" DOES stand fer "cooking". Seriously. ;)
>
>nb


that's fine. Boron and Graham do a lot of sourdough. I have one
starter that I abuse. For safety I get it foaming really good and
then spread a large smear out on plastic wrap and let it dry. When
dry I crunch it up, wrap in a small baggie, put in a tightly sealed
jar and store it in the freezer. This process makes it safe for
another year. When I want some again I take a bit of the frozen
flakes and add to flour and water and in a day or so my starter is
active again. Good Luck
Janet US

notbob 29-02-2016 06:15 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 2016-02-29, Janet B > wrote:

> On 29 Feb 2016 17:47:37 GMT, notbob > wrote:


>>Is this a valid approach?


> that's fine. Boron and Graham do a lot of sourdough.


That's who I was trying to recall, Boron. Thnx.

> I have one starter that I abuse. For safety I get it foaming really
> good and then spread a large smear out on plastic wrap and let it
> dry. When dry I crunch it up, wrap in a small baggie, put in a
> tightly sealed jar and store it in the freezer. This process makes
> it safe for another year. When I want some again I take a bit of
> the frozen flakes and add to flour and water and in a day or so my
> starter is active again.


Ooh ooh!.... Great idea, Janet. I hate the thought of throwing most
of the starter in the trash or feeding it, daily. You method sounds
like a great solution to that problem. Again, thank you. ;)

nb



Good Luck Janet US

graham[_4_] 29-02-2016 06:19 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 29/02/2016 10:47 AM, notbob wrote:
> Since I don't interact with JB threads and most of the bonus puppets
> have disappeared, I thought I'd post an article about actual cooking.
> Scary, but true.
>
> I jes combined these ingredients to start my starter:
>
> 50 grams stone ground whole-grain flour
> 50 grams unbleached all-purpose flour
> 100 grams warm tap water
>
> <http://www.examiner.com/article/whole-wheat-sourdough-bread-part-i>
>
> Is this a valid approach? Should I post ina baking group? If so,
> which one? I'll even entertain responses from whatserface, Mz Bake
> Expert. You know ....the one who gets all offended and calls me
> Hitler.... or did I call her Hitler? I ferget. ;)
>
> Anyway, I jes saw a new 4 part episode about cooking and baking
> (Cooked), with Michael Pollan waxing poetic about the miracle of
> bread, so I thought I'd make me some. (I prefer beer, but it doesn't
> lend itself to making a sammy, fer dammit!)
>
> I realize this may come as a surprise to many of you, but this IS rfc
> ....the "c" DOES stand fer "cooking". Seriously. ;)
>
> nb
>

I like the article but I warn you that IME it takes quite a while to
build an effective starter.
I recommend that when it is fairly active, use some of it to make a loaf
but add a little (1 tsp) of fast-acting yeast to the final dough. That
way you will get a tasty loaf but you'll make it in a reasonable time.
Early stage SD cultures are frustratingly slow. After a few loaves made
the above way, the culture should be sufficiently strong to make a
proper SD loaf.
The former denizens of the now moribund rec.food.sourdough would yell:
"Sacrilege"! But members of the struggling alt.bread.recipes are more
forgiving.
Graham

graham[_4_] 29-02-2016 06:22 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 29/02/2016 11:15 AM, notbob wrote:
> On 2016-02-29, Janet B > wrote:
>
>> On 29 Feb 2016 17:47:37 GMT, notbob > wrote:

>
>>> Is this a valid approach?

>
>> that's fine. Boron and Graham do a lot of sourdough.

>
> That's who I was trying to recall, Boron. Thnx.
>
>> I have one starter that I abuse. For safety I get it foaming really
>> good and then spread a large smear out on plastic wrap and let it
>> dry. When dry I crunch it up, wrap in a small baggie, put in a
>> tightly sealed jar and store it in the freezer. This process makes
>> it safe for another year. When I want some again I take a bit of
>> the frozen flakes and add to flour and water and in a day or so my
>> starter is active again.

>
> Ooh ooh!.... Great idea, Janet. I hate the thought of throwing most
> of the starter in the trash or feeding it, daily. You method sounds
> like a great solution to that problem. Again, thank you. ;)
>

Further to my other post, rather than discarding excess starter when
you refresh it, add it to the mix of a conventional yeasted loaf.
Graham


notbob 29-02-2016 06:28 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:
>>

> I like the article but I warn you that IME it takes quite a while to
> build an effective starter.


Apparently! I mixed mine an hour ago and it ain't done spit. 8|

> I recommend that when it is fairly active, use some of it to make a loaf
> but add a little (1 tsp) of fast-acting yeast to the final dough. That
> way you will get a tasty loaf but you'll make it in a reasonable time.
> Early stage SD cultures are frustratingly slow. After a few loaves made
> the above way, the culture should be sufficiently strong to make a
> proper SD loaf.


Noted.

> The former denizens of the now moribund rec.food.sourdough would yell:
> "Sacrilege"! But members of the struggling alt.bread.recipes are more
> forgiving.
> Graham


heh heh.... Yeah, that's when Boron and myself first got into it.
Something about "real" SD (no added yeast) and yer method. I'll give
it a week.

One last question: should the starter be a thin batter or a thick
batter?

nb

graham[_4_] 29-02-2016 06:46 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 29/02/2016 11:28 AM, notbob wrote:
> On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:
>>>

>> I like the article but I warn you that IME it takes quite a while to
>> build an effective starter.

>
> Apparently! I mixed mine an hour ago and it ain't done spit. 8|
>
>> I recommend that when it is fairly active, use some of it to make a loaf
>> but add a little (1 tsp) of fast-acting yeast to the final dough. That
>> way you will get a tasty loaf but you'll make it in a reasonable time.
>> Early stage SD cultures are frustratingly slow. After a few loaves made
>> the above way, the culture should be sufficiently strong to make a
>> proper SD loaf.

>
> Noted.
>
>> The former denizens of the now moribund rec.food.sourdough would yell:
>> "Sacrilege"! But members of the struggling alt.bread.recipes are more
>> forgiving.
>> Graham

>
> heh heh.... Yeah, that's when Boron and myself first got into it.
> Something about "real" SD (no added yeast) and yer method. I'll give
> it a week.
>
> One last question: should the starter be a thin batter or a thick
> batter?
>
> nb
>

There are two schools of thought to this question. Traditional
Californian-style sourdough uses a batter based on equal weights of
flour and water (100% hydration using bakers' %) so it's a thickish batter.
The French style, pain au levain, which has a subtler flavour, uses a
dough-like starter based on ~60g of water per 100g dough (60% bakers' %).
The batter favours acid producing bacteria that are the trademark of San
Francisco SD bread. Therefore, if you want to make that type of bread,
use a thick batter, but definitely a batter.
Of course long proofing stages using the French starter will result in a
sour tang.
HTH
Graham


ImStillMags 29-02-2016 06:48 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Monday, February 29, 2016 at 10:23:05 AM UTC-8, graham wrote:
> On 29/02/2016 11:15 AM, notbob wrote:
> > On 2016-02-29, Janet B > wrote:
> >
> >> On 29 Feb 2016 17:47:37 GMT, notbob > wrote:

> >
> >>> Is this a valid approach?

> >
> >> that's fine. Boron and Graham do a lot of sourdough.

> >
> > That's who I was trying to recall, Boron. Thnx.
> >
> >> I have one starter that I abuse. For safety I get it foaming really
> >> good and then spread a large smear out on plastic wrap and let it
> >> dry. When dry I crunch it up, wrap in a small baggie, put in a
> >> tightly sealed jar and store it in the freezer. This process makes
> >> it safe for another year. When I want some again I take a bit of
> >> the frozen flakes and add to flour and water and in a day or so my
> >> starter is active again.

> >
> > Ooh ooh!.... Great idea, Janet. I hate the thought of throwing most
> > of the starter in the trash or feeding it, daily. You method sounds
> > like a great solution to that problem. Again, thank you. ;)
> >

> Further to my other post, rather than discarding excess starter when
> you refresh it, add it to the mix of a conventional yeasted loaf.
> Graham


I never throw away discard. I put it in a mason jar and keep in the fridge. Don't want to waste that flavor when it can be used in a lot of things.


notbob 29-02-2016 08:58 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:

> There are two schools of thought to this question. Traditional
> Californian-style sourdough uses a batter based on equal weights of
> flour and water (100% hydration using bakers' %) so it's a thickish
> batter. The French style, pain au levain, which has a subtler
> flavour, uses a dough-like starter based on ~60g of water per 100g
> dough (60% bakers' %). The batter favours acid producing bacteria
> that are the trademark of San Francisco SD bread. Therefore, if you
> want to make that type of bread, use a thick batter, but definitely
> a batter. Of course long proofing stages using the French starter
> will result in a sour tang.

HTH

It does. Immensely.

I've also read where the San Francisco wild yeast is not limited to
the SFBA. That explains why a Denver bread maker usta make a SF SD
that was better than my memories of the real deal.

Looks like I gotta lot more research to do. ;)

nb



notbob 29-02-2016 08:59 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 2016-02-29, ImStillMags > wrote:

> I never throw away discard. I put it in a mason jar and keep in the
> fridge. Don't want to waste that flavor when it can be used in a
> lot of things.


Too true. ;)

nb

graham[_4_] 29-02-2016 09:27 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 29/02/2016 1:58 PM, notbob wrote:
> On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:
>
>> There are two schools of thought to this question. Traditional
>> Californian-style sourdough uses a batter based on equal weights of
>> flour and water (100% hydration using bakers' %) so it's a thickish
>> batter. The French style, pain au levain, which has a subtler
>> flavour, uses a dough-like starter based on ~60g of water per 100g
>> dough (60% bakers' %). The batter favours acid producing bacteria
>> that are the trademark of San Francisco SD bread. Therefore, if you
>> want to make that type of bread, use a thick batter, but definitely
>> a batter. Of course long proofing stages using the French starter
>> will result in a sour tang.

> HTH
>
> It does. Immensely.
>
> I've also read where the San Francisco wild yeast is not limited to
> the SFBA. That explains why a Denver bread maker usta make a SF SD
> that was better than my memories of the real deal.
>
> Looks like I gotta lot more research to do. ;)
>
> nb
>
>

There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
"Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.
Graham

Janet B 29-02-2016 09:45 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 14:27:54 -0700, graham > wrote:

>On 29/02/2016 1:58 PM, notbob wrote:
>> On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:
>>
>>> There are two schools of thought to this question. Traditional
>>> Californian-style sourdough uses a batter based on equal weights of
>>> flour and water (100% hydration using bakers' %) so it's a thickish
>>> batter. The French style, pain au levain, which has a subtler
>>> flavour, uses a dough-like starter based on ~60g of water per 100g
>>> dough (60% bakers' %). The batter favours acid producing bacteria
>>> that are the trademark of San Francisco SD bread. Therefore, if you
>>> want to make that type of bread, use a thick batter, but definitely
>>> a batter. Of course long proofing stages using the French starter
>>> will result in a sour tang.

>> HTH
>>
>> It does. Immensely.
>>
>> I've also read where the San Francisco wild yeast is not limited to
>> the SFBA. That explains why a Denver bread maker usta make a SF SD
>> that was better than my memories of the real deal.
>>
>> Looks like I gotta lot more research to do. ;)
>>
>> nb
>>
>>

>There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
>to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
>"Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
>over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
>and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
>numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
>The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
>from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
>fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
>versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.
>Graham


that was always good for a protracted and hissy argument :)
Janet US

notbob 29-02-2016 09:59 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:


> There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales"
> attached to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is
> called "Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD
> cultures all over the world.


So I've read.

> The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain and are not
> floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable numbers, in
> contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.


....ditto...

> The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
> from grapes or plums


Seen that episode of Julia and the grape-must yeast thingie.

> the wheat beasties will eventually replace the fruit beasties.


As an experienced beer brewer, I cannot disagree with this premise.
No doubt it's been explored.

> Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice versa.


Actually, there has been Champagne yeast brewed beers. Not sure if
they are still available. I've not seen it the other way around, but
them Belgians are amazing. Who knows what they've occomplished.

> Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.


Noted. ;)

nb

Bruce[_26_] 29-02-2016 10:13 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 14:27:54 -0700, graham > wrote:

>On 29/02/2016 1:58 PM, notbob wrote:
>> On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:
>>
>>> There are two schools of thought to this question. Traditional
>>> Californian-style sourdough uses a batter based on equal weights of
>>> flour and water (100% hydration using bakers' %) so it's a thickish
>>> batter. The French style, pain au levain, which has a subtler
>>> flavour, uses a dough-like starter based on ~60g of water per 100g
>>> dough (60% bakers' %). The batter favours acid producing bacteria
>>> that are the trademark of San Francisco SD bread. Therefore, if you
>>> want to make that type of bread, use a thick batter, but definitely
>>> a batter. Of course long proofing stages using the French starter
>>> will result in a sour tang.

>> HTH
>>
>> It does. Immensely.
>>
>> I've also read where the San Francisco wild yeast is not limited to
>> the SFBA. That explains why a Denver bread maker usta make a SF SD
>> that was better than my memories of the real deal.
>>
>> Looks like I gotta lot more research to do. ;)
>>
>> nb
>>
>>

>There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
>to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
>"Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
>over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
>and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
>numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
>The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
>from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
>fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
>versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.


True. And using grapes or plums to make a starter only slows down the
process because "the wheat beasties will eventually replace the fruit
beasties" takes time and is a useless step. Better aim straight for
wheat beasties.

--
Bruce

dsi1[_17_] 29-02-2016 10:16 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Monday, February 29, 2016 at 11:28:36 AM UTC-10, graham wrote:
> On 29/02/2016 1:58 PM, notbob wrote:
> > On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:
> >
> >> There are two schools of thought to this question. Traditional
> >> Californian-style sourdough uses a batter based on equal weights of
> >> flour and water (100% hydration using bakers' %) so it's a thickish
> >> batter. The French style, pain au levain, which has a subtler
> >> flavour, uses a dough-like starter based on ~60g of water per 100g
> >> dough (60% bakers' %). The batter favours acid producing bacteria
> >> that are the trademark of San Francisco SD bread. Therefore, if you
> >> want to make that type of bread, use a thick batter, but definitely
> >> a batter. Of course long proofing stages using the French starter
> >> will result in a sour tang.

> > HTH
> >
> > It does. Immensely.
> >
> > I've also read where the San Francisco wild yeast is not limited to
> > the SFBA. That explains why a Denver bread maker usta make a SF SD
> > that was better than my memories of the real deal.
> >
> > Looks like I gotta lot more research to do. ;)
> >
> > nb
> >
> >

> There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
> to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
> "Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
> over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
> and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
> numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
> The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
> from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
> fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
> versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.
> Graham


We rented the condo upstairs for a couple of years. It's about 20 feet higher than our unit. The rice would start breaking down from the microorganisms in the air after a few hours. This did not happen in the unit a few feet away. My guess it was some strain of Aspergillus oryzae that was the cause but what this means is that some of these critters are highly localized.

sf[_9_] 01-03-2016 09:43 AM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 14:27:54 -0700, graham > wrote:

> On 29/02/2016 1:58 PM, notbob wrote:
> > On 2016-02-29, graham > wrote:
> >
> >> There are two schools of thought to this question. Traditional
> >> Californian-style sourdough uses a batter based on equal weights of
> >> flour and water (100% hydration using bakers' %) so it's a thickish
> >> batter. The French style, pain au levain, which has a subtler
> >> flavour, uses a dough-like starter based on ~60g of water per 100g
> >> dough (60% bakers' %). The batter favours acid producing bacteria
> >> that are the trademark of San Francisco SD bread. Therefore, if you
> >> want to make that type of bread, use a thick batter, but definitely
> >> a batter. Of course long proofing stages using the French starter
> >> will result in a sour tang.

> > HTH
> >
> > It does. Immensely.
> >
> > I've also read where the San Francisco wild yeast is not limited to
> > the SFBA. That explains why a Denver bread maker usta make a SF SD
> > that was better than my memories of the real deal.
> >
> > Looks like I gotta lot more research to do. ;)
> >
> > nb
> >
> >

> There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
> to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
> "Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
> over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
> and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
> numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
> The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
> from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
> fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
> versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.


SF sourdough was noted for its crust, which is impossible to find
anymore - even in restaurants.


--

sf

Bruce[_26_] 01-03-2016 09:51 AM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 01:43:42 -0800, sf > wrote:

>On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 14:27:54 -0700, graham > wrote:
>
>> There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
>> to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
>> "Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
>> over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
>> and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
>> numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
>> The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
>> from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
>> fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
>> versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.

>
>SF sourdough was noted for its crust, which is impossible to find
>anymore - even in restaurants.


Myth, sorry.

--
Bruce

sf[_9_] 02-03-2016 05:54 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 20:51:30 +1100, Bruce > wrote:

> On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 01:43:42 -0800, sf > wrote:
>
> >On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 14:27:54 -0700, graham > wrote:
> >
> >> There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
> >> to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
> >> "Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
> >> over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
> >> and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
> >> numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
> >> The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
> >> from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
> >> fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
> >> versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.

> >
> >SF sourdough was noted for its crust, which is impossible to find
> >anymore - even in restaurants.

>
> Myth, sorry.


What's a myth?

--

sf

Bruce[_26_] 02-03-2016 05:59 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Wed, 02 Mar 2016 09:54:34 -0800, sf > wrote:

>On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 20:51:30 +1100, Bruce > wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 01:43:42 -0800, sf > wrote:
>>
>> >On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 14:27:54 -0700, graham > wrote:
>> >
>> >> There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
>> >> to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
>> >> "Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
>> >> over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
>> >> and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
>> >> numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
>> >> The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
>> >> from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
>> >> fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
>> >> versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.
>> >
>> >SF sourdough was noted for its crust, which is impossible to find
>> >anymore - even in restaurants.

>>
>> Myth, sorry.

>
>What's a myth?


The SF sourdough spiel.

--
Bruce

sf[_9_] 02-03-2016 08:46 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Thu, 03 Mar 2016 04:59:27 +1100, Bruce > wrote:

> On Wed, 02 Mar 2016 09:54:34 -0800, sf > wrote:
>
> >On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 20:51:30 +1100, Bruce > wrote:
> >
> >> On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 01:43:42 -0800, sf > wrote:
> >>
> >> >On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 14:27:54 -0700, graham > wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> There is a lot of folklore and "old, married, females' tales" attached
> >> >> to SD Bread, especially from SF. The principal bacterium is called
> >> >> "Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis" but this is found in SD cultures all
> >> >> over the world. The yeasts and bacteria IMO come from the wheat grain
> >> >> and are not floating around in the SF atmosphere in any appreciable
> >> >> numbers, in contrast to what some devotees would have you believe.
> >> >> The wild yeasts are specific to the source so after making a starter
> >> >> from grapes or plums, the wheat beasties will eventually replace the
> >> >> fruit beasties. Note, you don't use wine yeasts to make beer and vice
> >> >> versa. Note, this is all my opinion but I am not alone in thinking this.
> >> >
> >> >SF sourdough was noted for its crust, which is impossible to find
> >> >anymore - even in restaurants.
> >>
> >> Myth, sorry.

> >
> >What's a myth?

>
> The SF sourdough spiel.


I live in San Francisco.

--

sf

Bruce[_26_] 02-03-2016 09:21 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Wed, 02 Mar 2016 12:46:33 -0800, sf > wrote:

>On Thu, 03 Mar 2016 04:59:27 +1100, Bruce > wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 02 Mar 2016 09:54:34 -0800, sf > wrote:
>>
>> >On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 20:51:30 +1100, Bruce > wrote:
>> >
>> >> On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 01:43:42 -0800, sf > wrote:
>> >>
>> >> >SF sourdough was noted for its crust, which is impossible to find
>> >> >anymore - even in restaurants.
>> >>
>> >> Myth, sorry.
>> >
>> >What's a myth?

>>
>> The SF sourdough spiel.

>
>I live in San Francisco.


I didn't mean to say that the city's a myth.

--
Bruce

sf[_9_] 02-03-2016 09:56 PM

Making sourdough bread
 
On Thu, 03 Mar 2016 08:21:18 +1100, Bruce > wrote:

> On Wed, 02 Mar 2016 12:46:33 -0800, sf > wrote:
>
> >On Thu, 03 Mar 2016 04:59:27 +1100, Bruce > wrote:
> >
> >> On Wed, 02 Mar 2016 09:54:34 -0800, sf > wrote:
> >>
> >> >On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 20:51:30 +1100, Bruce > wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> On Tue, 01 Mar 2016 01:43:42 -0800, sf > wrote:
> >> >>
> >> >> >SF sourdough was noted for its crust, which is impossible to find
> >> >> >anymore - even in restaurants.
> >> >>
> >> >> Myth, sorry.
> >> >
> >> >What's a myth?
> >>
> >> The SF sourdough spiel.

> >
> >I live in San Francisco.

>
> I didn't mean to say that the city's a myth.


The crust of olden days isn't a myth.

--

sf


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