โDec-06-2020 10:45 AM
โDec-08-2020 06:32 AM
โDec-08-2020 06:00 AM
Vintage465 wrote:
Here is the recipe. It comes from "The Scout's Outdoor Cookbook".
2-1/2 cups flour
2-1/2 cups water
1/2 package of dry yeast
1 teaspoon sugar
They just say to stir all this stuff together. Cover with a wet towel for 24 hrs. Then remove the towel, stir it up to break down the bubbles and cover loosely with plastic wrap. Stir it every day or so keep thing mixed up. Use it after 5-7 days.
Now having said all that, this makes a pretty..."liquid starter" which kind of fits with the recipes in The Scouts Cookbook. So if you feed it The way they say which is to add equal parts flour and water and a teaspoon of sugar. I've found that a more traditional consistency is a little more muddy by adding a 1/4 cup of water and a 1/3 cup of flour it starts to bring it into the realm of what most "bread starters" are like.
If I am going to make dough in the morning, I feed the starter every 3-4 hours the day before. Yes you will start to run out of space in you starter vessel...but here is the coolest thing. Take a ladle and scoop some out and "make a pancake" right in a hot skillet and sprinkle your favorite seasoning on it for an amazing flat bread! Black pepper, salt and Italian seasoning is what I use. When you feed it every few hours it really starts to build momentum so when you feed it the night before it will be super powerful the following morning.
About the yeast in the initial starter....Most starter recipes don't use any commercial yeast. This one does. I didn't really know enough about starters when I made this, but I'd say by now, after 8 months of feeding this dude, there is only a microbe of the initial commercial starting yeast left in it. Below are some pics of what my starter looks like when it is ready to rock and roll. When you pour it out to use it or make flat bread, it will have an amazing network of bubbles associated with it.
โDec-07-2020 06:28 AM
โDec-06-2020 01:50 PM
โDec-06-2020 12:48 PM
Vintage465 wrote:
I've been getting into using sourdough starters a bit lately. This may seen extreme, but as a preface to getting battered by posts, let me say this. We have always by necessity cooked nearly everything from scratch for our son due to his extreme allergic reactions. So, for the most part, packaged, canned and prepared foods have been out of the question. Though, lately with the large organic and vegan movement, more "prepared food choices" exist. Anyway........back to sourdough. With an active starter, if you combine:
2 cups flour
1 cup active starter
3/4 cup room temp water
1-1/2 teaspoon salt
1-1/2 teaspoon sugar
Knead for 10 minutes
Allow it to double(and it will double if the starter is active)
Remove and put on a floured cutting board and deflate it.
Spread it out gently with your hands and use a biscuit cutter of your choice and cut out all you can, seems like I got 12. Put them in a greased 8x8 pan and let them either go overnight in the fridge, covered to ferment or let them rise for 2 hours and put them in the oven @ 350 for 20 minutes. Makes as good a sourdough roll as I've ever tasted. Since there is only 10 minutes of kneading and you punch them out with a biscuit cutter, the texture is like ciabbatta bread. I pretty much take a jar of starter with me camping every time now for biscuits, pancakes, rolls etc.