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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 activated Carl's Oregon Trail starter last week, had it 30C for 3 days,
moved it into the oven and used that to jump-start the culture after feeding (i.e. I turned the coil on for 30 seconds then turned the oven off, the temp rose to perhaps 35C which then declined before the starter ever got too warm. It's going very strong, I followed the brochure's advice to add a few potato flakes (~1/8), and toss in about 5cc of sugar for about a half liter of feeding mixture. Now it's only a room temperature, I don't zap it, and my work schedule allows me to feed it every 12 hours. My problem is it doesn't taste sour. I tasted the starter itself and there is no tang at all. Is this something that develops with maturity or did something happen to the Lactobacillus in it? Also, since most of my bread recipes use milk or allow for it, I decided to test the starter with a feeder containing milk. I mixed in some dry and whole milk along with water and flour and sugar, and it didn't proof. The mother culture fermented nicely while the test milk culture stayed flat. But today it had risen somewhat, but was not noticably active. I would have thought the Lactobacillus would have thrived on it, did it affect the yeast in some way? Also, what's the limit for salt? My favorite bread recipe using ordinary yeast uses 1.5tsp salt per 3 cups flour (7.5cc/750cc) yields good results, is that proportion of salt in sourdough too much? |
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