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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Mon, 17 Oct 2016 16:45:28 -0600, Janet B >
wrote: > The dough can be shaped and baked the day it's mixed, or > refrigerated in a lidded container (not airtight) or loosely covered > bowl for up to 14 days. During my own breadmaking days (several decades ago) it was my experience that yeast doughs kept for more than five days or so developed a (not entirely unpleasant) "winy" taste and odor. -- Bob The joint that time is out of www.kanyak.com |
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On Tue, 18 Oct 2016 07:24:14 +0300, Opinicus
> wrote: >On Mon, 17 Oct 2016 16:45:28 -0600, Janet B > >wrote: > >> The dough can be shaped and baked the day it's mixed, or >> refrigerated in a lidded container (not airtight) or loosely covered >> bowl for up to 14 days. > >During my own breadmaking days (several decades ago) it was my >experience that yeast doughs kept for more than five days or so >developed a (not entirely unpleasant) "winy" taste and odor. The refrigeration encourages the development of organisms other than just the yeast that add to the flavor profile of the finished bread. Janet US |
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On 2016-10-18, Janet B > wrote:
> On Tue, 18 Oct 2016 07:24:14 +0300, Opinicus >>During my own breadmaking days (several decades ago) it was my >>experience that yeast doughs kept for more than five days or so >>developed a (not entirely unpleasant) "winy" taste and odor. > The refrigeration encourages the development of organisms other than > just the yeast that add to the flavor profile of the finished bread. Isn't that what sourdough is? nb |
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On 18 Oct 2016 16:05:50 GMT, notbob > wrote:
>On 2016-10-18, Janet B > wrote: > >> On Tue, 18 Oct 2016 07:24:14 +0300, Opinicus > >>>During my own breadmaking days (several decades ago) it was my >>>experience that yeast doughs kept for more than five days or so >>>developed a (not entirely unpleasant) "winy" taste and odor. > >> The refrigeration encourages the development of organisms other than >> just the yeast that add to the flavor profile of the finished bread. > >Isn't that what sourdough is? > >nb Bob Sourdough captures wild yeast, encourages their growth and uses the wild yeast to raise bread. Sourdough requires nurturing. You have to keep it fed to remain active. Or refrigerate the starter and re-activate it when you want to make bread. This recipe is basically the method and recipe devised by Jeff Hertzberg and put forth in his book in 2007. Quite a few well known bakers tinkered with different approaches to refrigerated dough. This recipe is about as low tech, labor intensive and convenient as it gets. The method requires only mixing. No kneading is required and is actually detrimental to getting a good final oven spring. Wheat flour in a mixed dough will develop gluten on its own. As to flavor, the dough will develop some of the overtones of sourdough over time in the refrigerator. To my taste, this approach gives a bread with a nutty background flavor more than a sour flavor. The steam is necessary. Please don't try the old saw of throwing ice cubes into a tray in the oven. That doesn't even make sense. It isn't necessary to open the oven and spritz the dough as it bakes. This approach is just dead simple. HTH Janet US |
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"Opinicus" wrote in message
l.which.is.quite.invalid... On Mon, 17 Oct 2016 16:45:28 -0600, Janet B > wrote: > The dough can be shaped and baked the day it's mixed, or > refrigerated in a lidded container (not airtight) or loosely covered > bowl for up to 14 days. During my own breadmaking days (several decades ago) it was my experience that yeast doughs kept for more than five days or so developed a (not entirely unpleasant) "winy" taste and odor. Bob =============== I've been making a very similar 'no knead' bread for several months now, it has become a favourite here. I have left the dough in the fridge for up to a week without problems. Whenever I bake a loaf I make up the dough at the same time. I have dough in the fridge atm and we are away for a couple/few weeks. I will know when I get back ![]() sourdough ![]() -- http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
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On Tue, 18 Oct 2016 07:24:14 +0300, Opinicus
> wrote: >On Mon, 17 Oct 2016 16:45:28 -0600, Janet B > >wrote: > >> The dough can be shaped and baked the day it's mixed, or >> refrigerated in a lidded container (not airtight) or loosely covered >> bowl for up to 14 days. > >During my own breadmaking days (several decades ago) it was my >experience that yeast doughs kept for more than five days or so >developed a (not entirely unpleasant) "winy" taste and odor. "Winy" precisely, yeast causes the dough to ferment and produces alcohol. |
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