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Sourdough (rec.food.sourdough) Discussing the hobby or craft of baking with sourdough. We are not just a recipe group, Our charter is to discuss the care, feeding, and breeding of yeasts and lactobacilli that make up sourdough cultures. |
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Hi Jeff:
If you ever get bored or have the initiative perhaps you could re-borrow a portion of the start you gave to your friend. Since she is close, perhaps one grown to its second (or third) stage and nearly ready for bread making (plus another mother). It would be interesting to see if you get tangy bread from it following your normal recipe. Moreover, how long the new mother continues to be so after coming home with you. {I have heard that cultures can drift, too. In contrast, I have heard that they are stable and do not change -- many are hundreds and some purported to be thousands of years old. Finally, I have heard that there is a small probability that the indigenous microbiology is heartier in certain conditions than that in some cultures and thus can get a foothold. I have read mention of evolution where the culture adapts to its food source and environmental conditions. I don't know what is true. Yet, I have also heard (and believe) that the techniques of the baker and the environmental variables, temperature, humidity, proofing times, etc. are hugely responsible.} Ray ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jeff Miller" > To: "'A ported usenet news group'" > Sent: Monday, September 11, 2006 10:42 PM Subject: yeast/bacteria balance > My understanding has always been that no matter where the culutre came > from, > within a couple of months, your local microflora will take over in your > starter. If that's true, then that would explain why your cultures change > their flavor characteristics. > > Is this true? Or am I repeating a sourdough urban legend here? > > Sure seems true. My starter has always had a very, very mild flavor unless > I > work the Dickens out of it by keeping it stiff and doing two long, slow > bulk > rises before the final proof. However, when I gave some to a friend of > mine > who lives just 6 miles away (though it's not near the river, like me, but > is > instead at a higher elevation near a wetland), within three months, she > had > super tangy bread. And I know she's not doing anything differently from > me. > I taught her how to make bread, myself. > > > > > -- > Jeff Miller > > _______________________________________________ > rec.food.sourdough mailing list > > http://www.otherwhen.com/mailman/lis...food.sourdough > > To unsubscribe send a mail to > and then reply to the confirmation request. |
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yeast/bacteria balance | Sourdough | |||
yeast/bacteria balance | Sourdough | |||
yeast/bacteria balance | Sourdough | |||
yeast/bacteria balance | Sourdough | |||
yeast/bacteria balance | Sourdough |