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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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I have just received my copy of HANDBOOK OF DOUGH FERMENTATINS. (NY :
Marcel Dekker, c.2003) and dekker.com. At $170.00 I'm sure it's not within everybodies reach. But, it sure am good! Chapter 6, "Commercial Starters in the United States" is by T. Frank Sugihara. OK, purists out there, "Commercial" means to use flour and water to get your starter going, not some behemoth landing on your genetic structure. Brief tips, as I've only had the book 2 days: Use some cooked yeast in your starter, the bread bugs need vitamin B in "quantity". Take yeast 1-2 tsp., 1/4 tsp. sugar, add 1/2 C. of water (di-hydrogen oxide). Allow to ferment 90 minutes. Bring it to a boil. Allow to sit, covered on countertop, overnight. Strain off the water and use it as part of the water for the starter. Leave the yeast residue behind. San Francisco style bread prefers a starter development temperature of around 72 degrees F. More interestingly, according to the work, it would be impossible for Ed Wood's San Francisco dried starters to work. Or for anybody eles's as well. Freeze drying kills the yeasts, the "fluidized bed" to make yeast, kills the bacteria. So, it's unlikely that purchasing starter will help. However, the Lesaffre Co. (France) has patented a process to keep both LAB and yeast alive for use. We have tried some of their products. As I mentioned in one of my previous posts, the yeast, S. Chevalieri has been used due to it's "high flavoring potential" and is a strain "isolated from spontaneous breadmaking sourdoughs". |
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