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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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Soudough in wikipedia
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Soudough in wikipedia
> At 07:11 PM 8/3/2004, amateur wrote: > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourdough > Seems quite accurate. A bit sparse maybe ... If it would be only that - quite inaccurate with rye - gluing agents are pentosans which are sugars and not starches. Main reason for lowering pH with rye is suppressing alpha-amylase enzyme activity which liquifies starch and makes the bread flow away. Also that yeast as leavening agent is useless with rye is incorrect - works fine, just does not sour it and tastes flat, see the http://samartha.net/SD/tests/baking/ There is mo "Sourdough bread has a very distinctive taste, due mainly to the lactic acid produced by the lactobacilli." Mainly from acidity? This is probably a procedure and taste preference. How about sugars, alcohols and other fermentation products - amino acids, enzymes? On the above referenced test, the bread make with yeast and lactic acid was totally bland and not worth eating, so acid and yeast alone don't do the trick either. The assumption that lactic acid is the determining factor is incorrect as well. A large determining factor for taste in the literature appears to be the acetic acid in the right proportion. "The yeast and bacteria in the culture will cause a wheat based dough ... to leaven or rise." 1/2 the truth - rye based doughs rise very well. "In a typical wheat flour dough the rise is approximately 50% due to the yeast and 50% due to the lactobacteria." True in cases where LB's involved are heterofermentative - either obligat or facultative and in the right environment. To make a general statement like this is incorrect. Samartha |
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Soudough in wikipedia
> At 07:11 PM 8/3/2004, amateur wrote: > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourdough > Seems quite accurate. A bit sparse maybe ... If it would be only that - quite inaccurate with rye - gluing agents are pentosans which are sugars and not starches. Main reason for lowering pH with rye is suppressing alpha-amylase enzyme activity which liquifies starch and makes the bread flow away. Also that yeast as leavening agent is useless with rye is incorrect - works fine, just does not sour it and tastes flat, see the http://samartha.net/SD/tests/baking/ There is mo "Sourdough bread has a very distinctive taste, due mainly to the lactic acid produced by the lactobacilli." Mainly from acidity? This is probably a procedure and taste preference. How about sugars, alcohols and other fermentation products - amino acids, enzymes? On the above referenced test, the bread make with yeast and lactic acid was totally bland and not worth eating, so acid and yeast alone don't do the trick either. The assumption that lactic acid is the determining factor is incorrect as well. A large determining factor for taste in the literature appears to be the acetic acid in the right proportion. "The yeast and bacteria in the culture will cause a wheat based dough ... to leaven or rise." 1/2 the truth - rye based doughs rise very well. "In a typical wheat flour dough the rise is approximately 50% due to the yeast and 50% due to the lactobacteria." True in cases where LB's involved are heterofermentative - either obligat or facultative and in the right environment. To make a general statement like this is incorrect. Samartha |
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Soudough in wikipedia
Sounds like you could make a few contributions to the wiki. That's the
point of it, after all. Samartha wrote: > > > > At 07:11 PM 8/3/2004, amateur wrote: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourdough > > > Seems quite accurate. A bit sparse maybe ... > > If it would be only that - quite inaccurate with rye - gluing agents > are pentosans which are sugars and not starches. Main reason for > lowering pH with rye is suppressing alpha-amylase enzyme activity which > liquifies starch and makes the bread flow away. > > Also that yeast as leavening agent is useless with rye is incorrect - > works fine, just does not sour it and tastes flat, see the > > http://samartha.net/SD/tests/baking/ > > There is mo > > "Sourdough bread has a very distinctive taste, due mainly to the lactic > acid produced by the lactobacilli." > > Mainly from acidity? This is probably a procedure and taste preference. > How about sugars, alcohols and other fermentation products - amino > acids, enzymes? > > On the above referenced test, the bread make with yeast and lactic acid > was totally bland and not worth eating, so acid and yeast alone don't do > the trick either. > > The assumption that lactic acid is the determining factor is incorrect > as well. A large determining factor for taste in the literature appears > to be the acetic acid in the right proportion. > > "The yeast and bacteria in the culture will cause a wheat based dough > ... to leaven or rise." > > 1/2 the truth - rye based doughs rise very well. > > "In a typical wheat flour dough the rise is approximately 50% due to the > yeast and 50% due to the lactobacteria." > > True in cases where LB's involved are heterofermentative - either > obligat or facultative and in the right environment. To make a general > statement like this is incorrect. > > Samartha > |
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Soudough in wikipedia
Sounds like you could make a few contributions to the wiki. That's the
point of it, after all. Samartha wrote: > > > > At 07:11 PM 8/3/2004, amateur wrote: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourdough > > > Seems quite accurate. A bit sparse maybe ... > > If it would be only that - quite inaccurate with rye - gluing agents > are pentosans which are sugars and not starches. Main reason for > lowering pH with rye is suppressing alpha-amylase enzyme activity which > liquifies starch and makes the bread flow away. > > Also that yeast as leavening agent is useless with rye is incorrect - > works fine, just does not sour it and tastes flat, see the > > http://samartha.net/SD/tests/baking/ > > There is mo > > "Sourdough bread has a very distinctive taste, due mainly to the lactic > acid produced by the lactobacilli." > > Mainly from acidity? This is probably a procedure and taste preference. > How about sugars, alcohols and other fermentation products - amino > acids, enzymes? > > On the above referenced test, the bread make with yeast and lactic acid > was totally bland and not worth eating, so acid and yeast alone don't do > the trick either. > > The assumption that lactic acid is the determining factor is incorrect > as well. A large determining factor for taste in the literature appears > to be the acetic acid in the right proportion. > > "The yeast and bacteria in the culture will cause a wheat based dough > ... to leaven or rise." > > 1/2 the truth - rye based doughs rise very well. > > "In a typical wheat flour dough the rise is approximately 50% due to the > yeast and 50% due to the lactobacteria." > > True in cases where LB's involved are heterofermentative - either > obligat or facultative and in the right environment. To make a general > statement like this is incorrect. > > Samartha > |
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Soudough in wikipedia
At 10:56 AM 8/4/2004, Hans Fugal wrote:
>Sounds like you could make a few contributions to the wiki. That's the >point of it, after all. I intentionally refrained from that because it would have been a dispute or a censorship and that's not what the wikipedia Enclyzobedia is about - definitely not a discussion forum - and since it would not have been a contribution, chances are that it would have been thrown out. Or - I write something and DA comes along and "corrects" it so that sourdough is actually not sour, just for the fun of it. If you got energy for it, go for it, I don't. Samartha remove "-nospam" when replying, and it's in my email address |
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Soudough in wikipedia
"Samartha" > wrote in message=20 news:mailman.1091679917.6276.rec.food.sourdough@ww w.mountainbitwarrior.co= m... > ... I write something and DA comes along and "corrects" it so=20 > that sourdough is actually not sour, just for the fun of it ... Would I quarrel? One may sour their stuff for months and eat it right out of the crock, just for the fun of it, for all I care! --- DA |
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Soudough in wikipedia
"Samartha" > wrote in message=20 news:mailman.1091679917.6276.rec.food.sourdough@ww w.mountainbitwarrior.co= m... > ... I write something and DA comes along and "corrects" it so=20 > that sourdough is actually not sour, just for the fun of it ... Would I quarrel? One may sour their stuff for months and eat it right out of the crock, just for the fun of it, for all I care! --- DA |
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Soudough in wikipedia
Samartha wrote:
> > At 07:11 PM 8/3/2004, amateur wrote: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourdough > > > Seems quite accurate. A bit sparse maybe ... > > If it would be only that - quite inaccurate with rye - gluing agents > are pentosans which are sugars and not starches. So fix it. That's the nice thing about Wikipedia. Someone like you can fix everyone else's mistakes. David |
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Soudough in wikipedia
Samartha wrote:
> > At 07:11 PM 8/3/2004, amateur wrote: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourdough > > > Seems quite accurate. A bit sparse maybe ... > > If it would be only that - quite inaccurate with rye - gluing agents > are pentosans which are sugars and not starches. So fix it. That's the nice thing about Wikipedia. Someone like you can fix everyone else's mistakes. David |
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