I am currently writing a book on sourdough. It's a deep dive on why you should do things, not just a collection of recipes. It will allow you to bake the perfect bread at home with your flour and your setup. The book is completely free because I believe it's essential information. The first 30 pages have been written, you can get it for free here: thbrco.io/book. Happy to hear your feedback. And to you nerds, you can see the source code here: github.com/hendricius/the-sourdough-framework
Thank you so much for the protein diagram. No one ever mentioned that about protein on flour. No wonder my 65% hydration was so difficult to work with, the flour had only 10% protein
I’m from the U.S. and wouldn’t think twice if I heard him speak. Sounds like he’s lived in the U.S. for 20-30 years Meanwhile I know maybe 3 german words
Your camera perspectives and clean audio are great for learning. I am using your videos extensively to help me create better bread, and I feel very confident your tips are working!!
Great video! One thing about the fermentation time. 6-12 hours might be fine for European weather, where ambient temperature is around 22 C; but where I live, under the Tropics where average temperature is 30-33 C, fermentation happens twice as fast. More than 3 hours and the yeast starts destroying the gluten networks. So ambient temperature is an important factor when trying to build the dough structure.
These were great tips. I will try a couple of them tomorrow. What I am finding is that using any flour on my hands during the stretch and fold or on my counter does not give me the bread texture that I love. I only use a small amount of water every time I work with the dough. For me personally it works out so much better. I am however going to add the water slowly when baking tomorrow and see if that makes a difference for me. Thank you again for the great advice!
The best video. He covers every problem I have when making dough. I mean, who can love kneading, when it requires a 15 minutes straight of struggling? Love ❤
Ich bin nur durch den Algorithmus auf dich gestoßen (ergo das ist mein erstes Video). Sau stark, wie simple und informationsreich du die Hilfen erklärst. du hast einen neuen Subscriber👍🏽
Wow, excellent tips! I've been working with high hydration doughs lately, and they are a battle, your tips will certainly help. I'll also be remembering these for my pizza doughs this summer.
Finally I’m starting to understand bakers percentages and feeling like experimenting with my hydration. I just really kneed to work on my conversions for kilos to grams lol
You’re a bread nerd! I love the content and information. I have been baking some baguette type of bread, the Mexican variation of it called bolillo. I always failed in the kneading technique even when I followed the recipes but with your info I was able to do it perfectly! Thanks 🙏🏽
Thank you Hendrik. One more awesome video added to my download collection! This one is a real gem! I still don't know how you do it, but you somehow read people's minds, and show us what we've been wondering about in silence. Thank you my friend. You never cease to amaze me!😊 🤩😛
Your a life saver ive tried and tried and still wondering why my dough is soo sticky it frustrates me, note to myself choose wisely on the toturials on youtube and pay more close attention to videos like this
Thank you for this video! I make a pretty good loaf of sourdough bread, but with your tips from this video I will move to a better sourdough loaf. I have learned so much from you!
Just found your channel and your book! Smarter, not harder! As a Dane, I like this 😂 Living in Sicily though, and they like everything to go sloooow 😅 Okay, my dough is really sticky, can’t get it to be a ball 😳 I’m having a hard time using the table and making the ball, cause it sticks to my hands and table! Obviously not good at it yet as well. Does it matter what surface it is? Mine is a kitchen island with a wooden top. If it doesn’t matter, should I just keep trying? My hydration is 80, I use my machine for 3 minutes and take the rest by hand. But here I also use water on my hands… is it too much 🤔 I do have a nice window frame though… Many questions! Tomorrow I’ll make an experiment with lower hydration, I’ll add the water bit by bit and try more with the ball making! I’m so overwhelmed with all that is not working for me right now and it seems to get worse for each try 😂 Vielen Dank 😅 Freya
Excellent video. I enjoy making bread, rolls mainly. They usually look great but dough a little bit dense, lack the nice air bubbles. Most recipes I follow suggest lot shorter rising times of around 40 minutes.
Thank you very much for this video. I have learned a lot. Sometimes my bread is very good, sometimes it's not. I realized that occasionally I make some of the mistakes you listed, especially with water. I think I will do much better from now ;-)
I have noticed that wheat helps with gluten and yes I come back to it 15 minutes later twice, to fold over until it gets the consistency I like 👍🏽 after time I end up braiding and scoop and pull for tension…just love bread making..always find new things to perfect it into my style 😃🙏🏽🙋🏻♀️👍🏽
Guten Tag aus Venezuela, It is a great and straightforward video. Thank you very much. In my very first attempt applying your indications, I improved my little baguettes and I am sure I will be making them even better in the next occasion. It is key to work dough by understanding it. Thank you again!
I think we should all try to include a play on words in our comments like C did the day before yeasterday. A poor effort but the best I could come up with quickly. You are always informative and I just might start a sourdough culture. Made focaccia yesterday but put toooo much confitted (spelt right?) garlic on top and had to fight it to remove it from the baking pan. Keep up the good work for us novices. Sue in a rather cool England. 🤣
Thank you for sharing your passion for baking. I was wondering, what kind of mount / camera do you use for filming your hands folding the dough. Thanks!
I think that last tip was the best. Didn't realize why my dough balls end up looking bad and still being sticky. I'd imagine this would help them proof more vertically than horizontal. Unless that's just a normal thing. Idk. Somethings wrong with my dough
Something many bakers do, cause we learn it in school, when making rye bread. Use 20-30% rye, the rest wheat. It gives you somewhat of a gluten network while still having a decent rye flavor.
I might be confused. Do I add my yeast into the dry flour and then begin adding my water slowly? Or do I add some water first, then after stirring around with my hands, do I then add the yeast? Sorry, but I am still needing this clarified. Thanks very much! I enjoyed the video and would like to improve my bread baking skills! And this video seems really inspiring!
There are two types of yeast. I use instant dried yeast which goes into the flour, the other type goes into water and you wait 10 minutes for it to ferment, with the yeast that goes into the flour make sure not to put salt on top of the yeast because you will kill the yeast, hope this helps.
Vielen Dank. On behalf of the (many?) home bakers living in the tropical/subtropical regions of the world, I would really appreciate a video on baking in a humid and warm environment. Summers in Europe and North America are like winters here.
It's part of my troubleshooting section in the book already. Last chapters in: thbrco.io/book. If you have more questions please send me an email! Thanks a lot!
Crap I screwed up the water adding part today I'm afraid, my dough can't be lifted from the counter and is horribly sticky, although the hydration is "only" ~70% which isn't that high for 12% protein bread... I've put that in the fridge to work it tomorrow! Thanks for the video, very useful!
Nice one, goes beyond the basic "start with 10-15% less water" recommendation. I think your viewers might also appreciate to hear about the importance of temperature: Lower temperatures decrease the water-binding capacity of flour, so it's best to store it at room-temperature. I have one question for you: When you perform the window-test for the different hydration levels with 100g of flour each, do you still knead every test-dough as usual?
Hi there. Ioved these tips and all make sense, but I couldn't quite execute them. When you place the dough on the counter to roll it, round it and smooth it to make it less sticky at what point in the bulk fermentation is this, or is it before? Your dough looks to be well through fermentation, which is fine but then isn't there a danger of de gassing the dough? Also, When adding the water slowly I find it tricky. Once the dough has formed a ball and I leave for 20 mins it doesn't easily absorb more water, so I end up with a squelchy mess. Any insight you can give here would be very appreciated. Thanks. Lee
Hi Lee! I make the dough round before the bulk fermentation! Regarding the water - yes, it creates a bit of a mess. But it sounds like you have added water in too big steps.
I understand that mixing the water into the flour gradually is optimal but I mix my water with my starter in the bowl first and then add my flour. It's been so much easier that way. I'm going to try and figure out how to make all of this work! Because I, too, am lazy!
@@zacharymichael4673 I do that with all of the ingredients. Because it includes the starter it's called "fermentalyse ", although you likely already knew that.
@@simplybeautifulsourdough8920 Guess you could always mix the starter and water separately and add that mix to the flour? Maybe I'll give that a go and see how it does.
@@zacharymichael4673 That's actually a good point. I always mix the starter and water, then add the flour and salt. But I can do it the way you suggest and combine the best of both worlds. 🙂
awesome channel and awesome video man, i'm just a some amateur, curious guy from İstanbul-Turkey and really just wanna say you're doing amazing job in here, there are 2 favorite channel for myself, one of it is you and the other is "ChainBaker" both of you guys are amazing :)
I'd recommend no autolyse. Just use less starter/yeast. You get the same effect. The key is to have a slow fermentation. You get the benefits from the autolyse too just by having a slower process.
I have 2 questions: 1.Is it not preferable to wait 20 minutes between adding starter and salt? I don't understand why some bakers insist on that. 2.When converting a liquid starter to a stiff starter, do you put it right away into the fridge after feeding on day 2 and 3? When i follow your chart, it looks as if you don't put in the fridge the 1 st day, but then the 2d and 3d day and then before you bake, you leave it outside? I keep mine in the fridge now that it is ready, then before baking, I feed it and wait till i see it gained in size and shows bubbles, but it seems to take really long. I have it in my fermenting station on high temperature at the moment to speed it up. I have listened to one of your videos where Karl de Smedt mentioned that you should not let it rise longer than 6 hours, but mine would not be ready yet. What do I do wrong? Can one keep it at a high temperature? Thanks for helping me out on this. I am so thankful for the videos you post and watch all of them. Thanks so much. Greetings from Luxembourg.
Hi claudine ...... what is hi temperature? Please specify ........ The yeast in the starter multiplies best at 28degrees celsius. Then follow the 12h ... 6h .... 3h feeding rule. That gives you a strong starter. Cheers chris
Dang son! It really helped, i made a killer pizzas today thanks to your tips! I've been trying to make highly hydrated doughs before, but it ended as a disaster. Now i had my revange XD
15 vs 50: Maybe you might add text on the screen to accompany the vocals so nobody will get confused. I've been enjoying your videos even though I'm presently on a 1-9 record for successes over attempts. I will keep trying. Also, what brand of flour are you using? All the flour I've found is just at 3g for protein; the flour you are using is 13g, that is just beastly compared to what I have come by locally.
My dough rises well with my sourdough starter. After 3.5 hours it reaches the top of my wooden banneton. But as soon as i remove it, it loses it shape and collapses. It also sticks to my banneton while i dust the thing heavily with a mix of Rice and patent White flour. The dough feels quite sticky. I bake it in a so called cloche. I follow a recipe from a dutch bread bake book. For one Loaf it says 65gr flour, 20gr starter and 65 gr tepid water. Leave that for 10 to 12 hours (overnight) and then mix with the other ingredients. 425 patent flour, 25 gr whole wheat flour, 270-300 grams water, the mix from the night before and 9 gr salt. I mix everything with a kitchen machine except the salt for 3 minutes. Then let it stand for 20 minutes, add the salt and mix for an additionel five minutes. Then i put it in oiled bowl and do two stretch and folds after 45 minutes qnd 90 minutes. Then leave it for 3 hours. After that i pre-shape it, let it stand for 20 minutes and shape it into a boule. Then i put it in the banneton and let it rise for 3.5 hours. After that i remove it and then what happens i mentioned earlier. It sticks and collapses. I'm getting a bit frustated now . What is maybe important to mention is that i keep my starter always in the oven with the oven light on (except when the oven is needed for other cooking of course). I also use keep the mixture made the night before in the oven with the light on during the night and also let the proofing and rising happen in the oven with the light on. It gaves a nice warm consistent temperature (to my mind at least). Also when i bake the failed dough there are definetely air bubbles, espescially under the crust. But it just doesn't keep its shape. Also today i used the minimum recommended time for profing and rising 1.5 hours and 2 respectively. Sadly the result was the same, a bread that collapses as soon as it is taken out of the banneton and also sticks quite a bit too said banneton. Can aanbody help me out and tell me what i'm doing wrong and how i should change/improve it? Some help woud be appreciated. Kind regards, A increasingly frustrated Dutch wannabe home baker.
My initial thought is that the dough is definitely overproofed, but this seems to be proven wrong by you testing the minimum proofing time. How long does it typically take your starter to reach peak? You typically want to adjust your times according to the activity of your starter and the ambient temperature. As my starter peaks in about 6-7 hours for your ratio, for example, leaving it for 10 to 12 hours before use would mean that it would have been way past peak and not at all at full potential by the time I would start baking. Also, I always hear the tip about proofing in the oven with the light on, but I find that that can get too hot in my experience. Have you tried testing the temperature of the oven after an hour or so with the light on?
@@aweehee thank you both for your quick replies. What do you mean exactly with how long does it take for my starter to reach peak strength? I normally feed my starter around 5 or 6 am, so its has some time to feed/get more active and then make the starter mix (65gr patent flour, 20 gr starter, 65 gr water) around 10 or 11 am, just before going to bed. in the recipe it says the mixture should be prepared 10 to 12 hours in advance and i always stick to that.
@@anonymousanonymous9370 basically, you want to use your starter when it reaches its maximum volume. This is around the time it loses its dome shape at the top and is a bit flat or slightly indented. Of course, you can use it a little before or a little after peak, but typically you want to aim for this point. Feeding your starter when it's at this point also helps keep your starter healthy. If you have time, it's useful to at least once observe your starter every hour or so after feeding so you know its behavior. Is it hot where you are right now? Because starters are so different, you have to make adjustments to sourdough recipes depending on your situation. What flour are you using, by the way?
@@aweehee my starter is based on biological whole grain flour from a mill. at the moment it varies a bit between 10 and 25-ish degrees here in the Netherlands. we had the occasional hot day, but generallie it's between 10 and 20 degrees celsius here at the moment.
Thanks for the video, my English not perfect 🤧 but I wanna ask a thing. If the dough is too sticky and after 6 hours is not very elastic and shrinks... What are the possibile mistake? Thanks
Can your tips be used to make poolish? since another utuber showed his poolish but 99% i tried it was never even close to becoming what he showed. My poolish and subsequent dough becomes wayyy to sticky.
Yes! Just use 20% on the flour as poolish. So for 500gs of flour make 100gs of poolish. Buut - personally, I think poolish is overrated. I'd recommend to just use a tiny bit of yeast instead.
After this the process of "bulk fermentation" starts. Whenever I see the dough flattens out I apply a stretch and fold to the dough. After the 6-12 hours you then proceed to shape your dough. Afterwards you proof it to then bake it. Hope that helps.
@@the_bread_code I think I’m still confused. So what you were doing the minute marker of four minutes and 13 seconds this was at the beginning, and then you proof the dough from anywhere 6 to 12 hours, then after that you proof it again? So you’re proofing it twice?
Just with 2 wetted hands. I go under it and quickly move it to the container. It should work without a problem. Else you might have used too much water for your flour or you didn't knead enough.
@@the_bread_code thanks for the quick response! Yes I've been testing very high hydration pizza doughs ( 75-80% hydration using 00 flour) and I'm struggling with transferring the dough from one place to another without deforming it, even if I manage to form a ball successfully. I've tried increasing kneading time with no success.
Hello M. 80% hydration is too much. Please believe me. In Napoli they use 68% water and no oil. The best method is : thursday morning mix the 00 flour with 60 % hydration and only 2gram of yeast. Let sit at room temp. During afternoon or on evening of thursday you add the remaining water in which also your salt is. Knead that for 6 min. Put in covered container and put in fridge. It is in fridge all day friday. Take out on saturday after breakfast. Form into separate balls portion of 240grams. Put those balls on bake tray, cover it and let sit in cool room in cellar basement till evening. Take to kitchen at 6pm for 8pm dinner. Enjoy. Chris.
This is why I don't understand why many videos show the flour going into the water, better to do water to flour little by little, the golden rule of cooking is you can add but not take out.
I have a question. What would happen if I tried making bread using all of my saved discard and only enough flour and water to get the correct ratio? Thinking of doing an experiment and I thought of you because you are always experimenting with different techniques. Let me know what you think. Thanks
For 1/2 cup starter half cup water full cup flour starter mix i regenerate and mix all residual starter with three cups water to seven cups flour and yield two loaves per day. I am trying two cups water to four cups flour plus all residual starter, will see what happens.
Hey, ich fliege bald in die USA und möchte meinen Sauerteig mitnehmen. Da du Bread Pitt ja auch schon auf Reisen genommen hast, wollte ich fragen ob es irgendwelche Komplikationen bei der Einfuhr geben kann? (Laut der TSA darf man Brot mitnehmen aber Border Control sagt Bakterien Kulturen gehen nicht...)
Can a ‘00’ at 13% handle more water than non-00, and if so, how much? Or, are the percentages you state for ‘00’, and general mill should be a lower percentage of water?
Typically the more outside of the grain you have inside the flour more water your flour can soak up. The percentages are for a 0 or 00 flour. So for whole wheat you might have to add even more water compared to what I have shown.
Hey B. 1.always use good flour. Not the cheapest one. 2.go for 60% hydration. 3.next time try 65% hydration on your pizza. 4. Also 70% hydration is nice ....but not for beginners. 5.use less yeast n let it rise for 4 hours. Then make pizza portion 230gram dough balls n let those sit for 4 hours. Then stretch em out for pizza. Cheers chris.
A recent video by Adam Ragusea contradicts some of the statements made in this video with respect to pizza dough. Not to say that they are wrong. Just saying that more discussion and experimentation should be performed to support the conclusions.
@@the_bread_code "What oil, sugar and yeast do in pizza dough (in varying amounts)". I like the experiments he does. Follow scientific method relatively well.
Oh my! I just checked the protein on my Gold Medal flour, online it says it's 13% but on the package it says 3%!!! My heart is sunken and I'm lightweight pissed!!! That is sooo low!!!wtf that must be why my dough is so sticky😭😭😭😭
I am currently writing a book on sourdough. It's a deep dive on why you should do things, not just a collection of recipes. It will allow you to bake the perfect bread at home with your flour and your setup. The book is completely free because I believe it's essential information. The first 30 pages have been written, you can get it for free here: thbrco.io/book. Happy to hear your feedback. And to you nerds, you can see the source code here: github.com/hendricius/the-sourdough-framework
😅😅😅😅😅😊
Your English is better than a lot of Americans 😊 P.S. I'm American
Thank you so much for the protein diagram. No one ever mentioned that about protein on flour. No wonder my 65% hydration was so difficult to work with, the flour had only 10% protein
Never apologize for your German English. Your speech is clear and easily understood. Your speech is near native English speaker!
I’m from the U.S. and wouldn’t think twice if I heard him speak. Sounds like he’s lived in the U.S. for 20-30 years
Meanwhile I know maybe 3 german words
love the accent!
Your camera perspectives and clean audio are great for learning. I am using your videos extensively to help me create better bread, and I feel very confident your tips are working!!
Great video! One thing about the fermentation time. 6-12 hours might be fine for European weather, where ambient temperature is around 22 C; but where I live, under the Tropics where average temperature is 30-33 C, fermentation happens twice as fast. More than 3 hours and the yeast starts destroying the gluten networks. So ambient temperature is an important factor when trying to build the dough structure.
Great comment. In that case use less yeast or less sourdough. I have a full chapter on this in my free book if you are interested 🤗
@@the_bread_code Hi from Australia, how do I get a copy of your book please?
@@waynebar1 You can find it here: thbrco.io/book
Every amateur bread baker's essential pointers in this one! Thank you!
That last tip just saved my current batch. Thank you so much 🎉
Thank you for the table relating protein % to range of hydration. It makes it much easier to make the adjustments.
These were great tips. I will try a couple of them tomorrow. What I am finding is that using any flour on my hands during the stretch and fold or on my counter does not give me the bread texture that I love. I only use a small amount of water every time I work with the dough. For me personally it works out so much better.
I am however going to add the water slowly when baking tomorrow and see if that makes a difference for me. Thank you again for the great advice!
Vielen dank!
After my 7th failure today, I decided to give up on sourdough. You saved my day (and the sourdough baking dreams I had!)
Don't give up. It takes time to develop the intuition. Took me a dozen loaves I think
The best video. He covers every problem I have when making dough. I mean, who can love kneading, when it requires a 15 minutes straight of struggling?
Love ❤
Ich bin nur durch den Algorithmus auf dich gestoßen (ergo das ist mein erstes Video).
Sau stark, wie simple und informationsreich du die Hilfen erklärst.
du hast einen neuen Subscriber👍🏽
Danke 🤗
Wow, excellent tips! I've been working with high hydration doughs lately, and they are a battle, your tips will certainly help. I'll also be remembering these for my pizza doughs this summer.
Finally I’m starting to understand bakers percentages and feeling like experimenting with my hydration. I just really kneed to work on my conversions for kilos to grams lol
Thanks Henrik great video like all that you do!🙏🙏🙏
You’re a bread nerd!
I love the content and information. I have been baking some baguette type of bread, the Mexican variation of it called bolillo. I always failed in the kneading technique even when I followed the recipes but with your info I was able to do it perfectly! Thanks 🙏🏽
You are Klasse! Your channel is great and has helped me so much, vielen Dank. Und sprachlich, you are on point. Keep going please!
It's a very, very interesting video! Thank you so much!
Thank you Hendrik. One more awesome video added to my download collection! This one is a real gem!
I still don't know how you do it, but you somehow read people's minds, and show us what we've been wondering about in silence.
Thank you my friend. You never cease to amaze me!😊 🤩😛
Sank you!
just found this channel......you are doing great work
Sank you
Thank you for these precious tips and advise. 🙏💗
Your a life saver ive tried and tried and still wondering why my dough is soo sticky it frustrates me, note to myself choose wisely on the toturials on youtube and pay more close attention to videos like this
Oh, I so love your little preparation bowls!❤
Thank you for this video! I make a pretty good loaf of sourdough bread, but with your tips from this video I will move to a better sourdough loaf. I have learned so much from you!
Just found your channel and your book! Smarter, not harder! As a Dane, I like this 😂 Living in Sicily though, and they like everything to go sloooow 😅
Okay, my dough is really sticky, can’t get it to be a ball 😳 I’m having a hard time using the table and making the ball, cause it sticks to my hands and table! Obviously not good at it yet as well. Does it matter what surface it is? Mine is a kitchen island with a wooden top. If it doesn’t matter, should I just keep trying?
My hydration is 80, I use my machine for 3 minutes and take the rest by hand. But here I also use water on my hands… is it too much 🤔 I do have a nice window frame though…
Many questions! Tomorrow I’ll make an experiment with lower hydration, I’ll add the water bit by bit and try more with the ball making!
I’m so overwhelmed with all that is not working for me right now and it seems to get worse for each try 😂
Vielen Dank 😅
Freya
You are amazing! I have learnt so much from you and love the science you add. Danke sehr! From Canada.
Excellent video. I enjoy making bread, rolls mainly. They usually look great but dough a little bit dense, lack the nice air bubbles. Most recipes I follow suggest lot shorter rising times of around 40 minutes.
Try to reduce the yeast a lot and then everything will be more airy due to the longer slower fermentation 👍
@@the_bread_code Thank you, will try that.
Thank you very much for this video. I have learned a lot. Sometimes my bread is very good, sometimes it's not. I realized that occasionally I make some of the mistakes you listed, especially with water. I think I will do much better from now ;-)
Glad it was helpful!
That's amazing, learned so much and can't wait to try it :) thanks for this video!
Thank you so much for this. This really helped me.
Best sourdough geek on TH-cam, even as an experienced baker I'm always learning something from him
Thank you!
I have noticed that wheat helps with gluten and yes I come back to it 15 minutes later twice, to fold over until it gets the consistency I like 👍🏽 after time I end up braiding and scoop and pull for tension…just love bread making..always find new things to perfect it into my style 😃🙏🏽🙋🏻♀️👍🏽
“Wheat helps with gluten” ?? Does anyone here have any idea
Another gem! Great tips! Having to adjust my bread game to Northern California
Guten Tag aus Venezuela,
It is a great and straightforward video. Thank you very much.
In my very first attempt applying your indications, I improved my little baguettes and I am sure I will be making them even better in the next occasion.
It is key to work dough by understanding it.
Thank you again!
I think we should all try to include a play on words in our comments like C did the day before yeasterday. A poor effort but the best I could come up with quickly. You are always informative and I just might start a sourdough culture. Made focaccia yesterday but put toooo much confitted (spelt right?) garlic on top and had to fight it to remove it from the baking pan. Keep up the good work for us novices. Sue in a rather cool England. 🤣
LOOOL. Yeasterday. Good one!
Great information! You have some of the most informative bread baking videos. Thank you
Thanks very much. I have been trying to work my dough in the bowl and could not get the smooth dome. I will try your method.
thank you!
Thank you for sharing your passion for baking. I was wondering, what kind of mount / camera do you use for filming your hands folding the dough. Thanks!
My pleasure! It's just my iPhone which sits in my cupboard haha. Sometimes it falls on the dough 🤣
0:48 just wondering where those tiny bowls are from? They are very nice 😄
Thanks! I bought them in Portugal on a market :-)
The Bread Man - Thank you! Great info.
I wish you could come to my house and i watch you make a loaf. Hehehe. Thank you Sir. 🙋🏼♀️❤
I love your directions.
Wouldn’t that be fun?
😂 thanks. That would be fun indeed. Where in the world are you?
@@the_bread_code in Kentucky in USA too far i suspect.
ich lade dich auch recht herzlich in die Pyrenäen ein...you are very welcome in the pyrenees, too😉
@@geegaw1535 A bit too far yep 😅
I think that last tip was the best. Didn't realize why my dough balls end up looking bad and still being sticky. I'd imagine this would help them proof more vertically than horizontal. Unless that's just a normal thing. Idk. Somethings wrong with my dough
Something many bakers do, cause we learn it in school, when making rye bread. Use 20-30% rye, the rest wheat. It gives you somewhat of a gluten network while still having a decent rye flavor.
Thank you.
It's a great information for me.
great video! thanks so much
I might be confused. Do I add my yeast into the dry flour and then begin adding my water slowly? Or do I add some water first, then after stirring around with my hands, do I then add the yeast? Sorry, but I am still needing this clarified. Thanks very much! I enjoyed the video and would like to improve my bread baking skills! And this video seems really inspiring!
There are two types of yeast. I use instant dried yeast which goes into the flour, the other type goes into water and you wait 10 minutes for it to ferment, with the yeast that goes into the flour make sure not to put salt on top of the yeast because you will kill the yeast, hope this helps.
Yes , yeast in dry flour then slowly add the water. Just the salt should be added late ..... during the last 2 minutes of mixing.
Cheers chris
thank you from America!!!!! We don't get this taught in anywhere!😊😮 Not even from Chefs!❤
Ganz toll erklärt 👍👍 Danke 🙏💕
Love your videos ...very informative 🙏
Vielen Dank. On behalf of the (many?) home bakers living in the tropical/subtropical regions of the world, I would really appreciate a video on baking in a humid and warm environment. Summers in Europe and North America are like winters here.
It's part of my troubleshooting section in the book already. Last chapters in: thbrco.io/book. If you have more questions please send me an email! Thanks a lot!
Please make a video for us hot weather like India. I'm struggling with my dough . Please post video on 11 to 12% wheat flour bread
Crap I screwed up the water adding part today I'm afraid, my dough can't be lifted from the counter and is horribly sticky, although the hydration is "only" ~70% which isn't that high for 12% protein bread... I've put that in the fridge to work it tomorrow! Thanks for the video, very useful!
Great video, great tips ! Love it, keep it up !
Nice one, goes beyond the basic "start with 10-15% less water" recommendation.
I think your viewers might also appreciate to hear about the importance of temperature: Lower temperatures decrease the water-binding capacity of flour, so it's best to store it at room-temperature.
I have one question for you: When you perform the window-test for the different hydration levels with 100g of flour each, do you still knead every test-dough as usual?
Thanks! I just mix everything losely together until I see that I have no chunks of flour left.
Your videos are so helpful. Thank you.
From Pune, India.
This mans' dough has such a strong windowpane effect that people order windows from him.
A window out of gluten. Yes sir.
If you have stiff sourdough, do you add it directly to your mixture?
Yes 🤗
Could similar results from the bassinage method be achieved by adding flour slowly?
Nope. The relatively dry mix allows to develop the gluten network quickly. Then you can mix in more water.
@@the_bread_code Ahh I see
Hi there. Ioved these tips and all make sense, but I couldn't quite execute them. When you place the dough on the counter to roll it, round it and smooth it to make it less sticky at what point in the bulk fermentation is this, or is it before? Your dough looks to be well through fermentation, which is fine but then isn't there a danger of de gassing the dough? Also, When adding the water slowly I find it tricky. Once the dough has formed a ball and I leave for 20 mins it doesn't easily absorb more water, so I end up with a squelchy mess. Any insight you can give here would be very appreciated. Thanks. Lee
Hi Lee! I make the dough round before the bulk fermentation! Regarding the water - yes, it creates a bit of a mess. But it sounds like you have added water in too big steps.
I understand that mixing the water into the flour gradually is optimal but I mix my water with my starter in the bowl first and then add my flour. It's been so much easier that way. I'm going to try and figure out how to make all of this work! Because I, too, am lazy!
Agreed. It makes things a bit easier 🤗
You can autolyse it. Just mix it together and let it sit for about an hour before you start the kneading process.
@@zacharymichael4673 I do that with all of the ingredients. Because it includes the starter it's called "fermentalyse ", although you likely already knew that.
@@simplybeautifulsourdough8920 Guess you could always mix the starter and water separately and add that mix to the flour? Maybe I'll give that a go and see how it does.
@@zacharymichael4673 That's actually a good point. I always mix the starter and water, then add the flour and salt. But I can do it the way you suggest and combine the best of both worlds. 🙂
awesome channel and awesome video man, i'm just a some amateur, curious guy from İstanbul-Turkey and really just wanna say you're doing amazing job in here, there are 2 favorite channel for myself, one of it is you and the other is "ChainBaker" both of you guys are amazing :)
Thank you!!!!
This is so helpful. Thanks
Thanks Hendrik for your great videos. so if your doing autolease do you still add water slowly ?
I'd recommend no autolyse. Just use less starter/yeast. You get the same effect. The key is to have a slow fermentation. You get the benefits from the autolyse too just by having a slower process.
Thank You 🥖
You’re welcome 😊
first!! Your videos are very cool :)
Thank you
I have 2 questions:
1.Is it not preferable to wait 20 minutes between adding starter and salt? I don't understand why some bakers insist on that.
2.When converting a liquid starter to a stiff starter, do you put it right away into the fridge after feeding on day 2 and 3? When i follow your chart, it looks as if you don't put in the fridge the 1 st day, but then the 2d and 3d day and then before you bake, you leave it outside?
I keep mine in the fridge now that it is ready, then before baking, I feed it and wait till i see it gained in size and shows bubbles, but it seems to take really long. I have it in my fermenting station on high temperature at the moment to speed it up. I have listened to one of your videos where Karl de Smedt mentioned that you should not let it rise longer than 6 hours, but mine would not be ready yet. What do I do wrong? Can one keep it at a high temperature?
Thanks for helping me out on this.
I am so thankful for the videos you post and watch all of them. Thanks so much. Greetings from Luxembourg.
Hi claudine ...... what is hi temperature? Please specify ........
The yeast in the starter multiplies best at 28degrees celsius.
Then follow the 12h ... 6h .... 3h feeding rule.
That gives you a strong starter.
Cheers chris
Dang son! It really helped, i made a killer pizzas today thanks to your tips! I've been trying to make highly hydrated doughs before, but it ended as a disaster. Now i had my revange XD
4:30 I was dozing off but I was awaken by what sounded like the lick for a second lmao
Gluten tag! I loved the German English!
15 vs 50: Maybe you might add text on the screen to accompany the vocals so nobody will get confused. I've been enjoying your videos even though I'm presently on a 1-9 record for successes over attempts. I will keep trying. Also, what brand of flour are you using? All the flour I've found is just at 3g for protein; the flour you are using is 13g, that is just beastly compared to what I have come by locally.
Genius.
literally everything i was doing wrong.. thanks for the tips
My dough rises well with my sourdough starter. After 3.5 hours it reaches the top of my wooden banneton. But as soon as i remove it, it loses it shape and collapses. It also sticks to my banneton while i dust the thing heavily with a mix of Rice and patent White flour. The dough feels quite sticky. I bake it in a so called cloche. I follow a recipe from a dutch bread bake book. For one Loaf it says 65gr flour, 20gr starter and 65 gr tepid water. Leave that for 10 to 12 hours (overnight) and then mix with the other ingredients. 425 patent flour, 25 gr whole wheat flour, 270-300 grams water, the mix from the night before and 9 gr salt. I mix everything with a kitchen machine except the salt for 3 minutes. Then let it stand for 20 minutes, add the salt and mix for an additionel five minutes. Then i put it in oiled bowl and do two stretch and folds after 45 minutes qnd 90 minutes. Then leave it for 3 hours. After that i pre-shape it, let it stand for 20 minutes and shape it into a boule. Then i put it in the banneton and let it rise for 3.5 hours. After that i remove it and then what happens i mentioned earlier. It sticks and collapses. I'm getting a bit frustated now . What is maybe important to mention is that i keep my starter always in the oven with the oven light on (except when the oven is needed for other cooking of course). I also use keep the mixture made the night before in the oven with the light on during the night and also let the proofing and rising happen in the oven with the light on. It gaves a nice warm consistent temperature (to my mind at least). Also when i bake the failed dough there are definetely air bubbles, espescially under the crust. But it just doesn't keep its shape. Also today i used the minimum recommended time for profing and rising 1.5 hours and 2 respectively. Sadly the result was the same, a bread that collapses as soon as it is taken out of the banneton and also sticks quite a bit too said banneton. Can aanbody help me out and tell me what i'm doing wrong and how i should change/improve it? Some help woud be appreciated.
Kind regards,
A increasingly frustrated Dutch wannabe home baker.
My initial thought is that the dough is definitely overproofed, but this seems to be proven wrong by you testing the minimum proofing time. How long does it typically take your starter to reach peak? You typically want to adjust your times according to the activity of your starter and the ambient temperature. As my starter peaks in about 6-7 hours for your ratio, for example, leaving it for 10 to 12 hours before use would mean that it would have been way past peak and not at all at full potential by the time I would start baking. Also, I always hear the tip about proofing in the oven with the light on, but I find that that can get too hot in my experience. Have you tried testing the temperature of the oven after an hour or so with the light on?
Agreed with Angela. Probably too long fermentation. Please check this: www.the-bread-code.io/tutorial/2022/04/14/debugging-your-crumb.html
@@aweehee thank you both for your quick replies. What do you mean exactly with how long does it take for my starter to reach peak strength? I normally
feed my starter around 5 or 6 am, so its has some time to feed/get more active and then make the starter mix (65gr patent flour, 20 gr starter, 65 gr water) around 10 or 11 am, just before going to bed. in the recipe it says the mixture should be prepared 10 to 12 hours in advance and i always stick to that.
@@anonymousanonymous9370 basically, you want to use your starter when it reaches its maximum volume. This is around the time it loses its dome shape at the top and is a bit flat or slightly indented. Of course, you can use it a little before or a little after peak, but typically you want to aim for this point. Feeding your starter when it's at this point also helps keep your starter healthy. If you have time, it's useful to at least once observe your starter every hour or so after feeding so you know its behavior. Is it hot where you are right now? Because starters are so different, you have to make adjustments to sourdough recipes depending on your situation. What flour are you using, by the way?
@@aweehee my starter is based on biological whole grain flour from a mill. at the moment it varies a bit between 10 and 25-ish degrees here in the Netherlands. we had the occasional hot day, but generallie it's between 10 and 20 degrees celsius here at the moment.
Thanks for the video, my English not perfect 🤧 but I wanna ask a thing.
If the dough is too sticky and after 6 hours is not very elastic and shrinks... What are the possibile mistake? Thanks
Maybe if you used a sourdough, it could have overfermented by then. It happens quite often if something is off with the fermentation. Hope it helps.
Can your tips be used to make poolish? since another utuber showed his poolish but 99% i tried it was never even close to becoming what he showed. My poolish and subsequent dough becomes wayyy to sticky.
Yes! Just use 20% on the flour as poolish. So for 500gs of flour make 100gs of poolish. Buut - personally, I think poolish is overrated. I'd recommend to just use a tiny bit of yeast instead.
That's a really wet dough for pizza. How many percentage should I use for notmal pizza? Not sourdough tho. Stll can't figure out how to make sourdough
I recommend 50-60%
@@the_bread_code Thank you.
I’m confused, doesn’t take much ha ha. At minute marker 4: 13 seconds, is this what you’re doing before letting it proof 6 to 12 hours?
After this the process of "bulk fermentation" starts. Whenever I see the dough flattens out I apply a stretch and fold to the dough. After the 6-12 hours you then proceed to shape your dough. Afterwards you proof it to then bake it. Hope that helps.
@@the_bread_code I think I’m still confused. So what you were doing the minute marker of four minutes and 13 seconds this was at the beginning, and then you proof the dough from anywhere 6 to 12 hours, then after that you proof it again? So you’re proofing it twice?
Can you clarify how you end up transferring your sticky dough ball from the counter without deforming it ? That's usually the hardest part.
Just with 2 wetted hands. I go under it and quickly move it to the container. It should work without a problem. Else you might have used too much water for your flour or you didn't knead enough.
@@the_bread_code thanks for the quick response! Yes I've been testing very high hydration pizza doughs ( 75-80% hydration using 00 flour) and I'm struggling with transferring the dough from one place to another without deforming it, even if I manage to form a ball successfully. I've tried increasing kneading time with no success.
@@mohamedabougindia2239 Maybe your flour doesn't support this hydration.
Hello M. 80% hydration is too much. Please believe me. In Napoli they use 68% water and no oil. The best method is : thursday morning mix the 00 flour with 60 % hydration and only 2gram of yeast. Let sit at room temp. During afternoon or on evening of thursday you add the remaining water in which also your salt is. Knead that for 6 min. Put in covered container and put in fridge. It is in fridge all day friday. Take out on saturday after breakfast. Form into separate balls portion of 240grams. Put those balls on bake tray, cover it and let sit in cool room in cellar basement till evening. Take to kitchen at 6pm for 8pm dinner.
Enjoy. Chris.
showed this to my cat he loved
My rye dough always produces flat breads. How can I make big bulky bread with it. My nerves are on fire.
What do you differently btw pizza dough and bread dough?
No difference. All the same!
Isnt their a resting time difference?
@@perfectalliby Nope. Generally the longer you let your dough sit, the better. There's a limit though.
This is why I don't understand why many videos show the flour going into the water, better to do water to flour little by little, the golden rule of cooking is you can add but not take out.
Correct. I feel there are so many things people do which simply make no sense.
Irgendwann werde ich es packen schauen wir mal 🙏
Autolisis vs bassinage? Next video for the Channel? 🤓🤗
I have a question. What would happen if I tried making bread using all of my saved discard and only enough flour and water to get the correct ratio? Thinking of doing an experiment and I thought of you because you are always experimenting with different techniques. Let me know what you think. Thanks
For 1/2 cup starter half cup water full cup flour starter mix i regenerate and mix all residual starter with three cups water to seven cups flour and yield two loaves per day. I am trying two cups water to four cups flour plus all residual starter, will see what happens.
Nice cooking
Hey, ich fliege bald in die USA und möchte meinen Sauerteig mitnehmen. Da du Bread Pitt ja auch schon auf Reisen genommen hast, wollte ich fragen ob es irgendwelche Komplikationen bei der Einfuhr geben kann? (Laut der TSA darf man Brot mitnehmen aber Border Control sagt Bakterien Kulturen gehen nicht...)
Can a ‘00’ at 13% handle more water than non-00, and if so, how much? Or, are the percentages you state for ‘00’, and general mill should be a lower percentage of water?
Typically the more outside of the grain you have inside the flour more water your flour can soak up. The percentages are for a 0 or 00 flour. So for whole wheat you might have to add even more water compared to what I have shown.
Please make sourdough springrolls..
I am so sad. Just threw out my biga due to sticky dough. Now I can't make Pizza for tomorrow. Wish I had seen this video beforehand.
..or pickle juice.
I like your style!
Thanks! 😃
I was adding 1 tablespoon of instant yeast to 1 cup of flour
How do you even get a sourdough starter?
I don't remember the exact name of the video, but if you search "the bread code sourdough starter", you will find his instructions for this.
3:25 isn’t it windowPAIN effect?
😂 I see what you did there. Take my up vote.
I have run into a problem a few times where the dough ends up very sticky and completely breaking apart. Not sure what I did differently. Any ideas?
Hey B. 1.always use good flour. Not the cheapest one. 2.go for 60% hydration. 3.next time try 65% hydration on your pizza. 4. Also 70% hydration is nice ....but not for beginners. 5.use less yeast n let it rise for 4 hours. Then make pizza portion 230gram dough balls n let those sit for 4 hours. Then stretch em out for pizza.
Cheers chris.
I see that ;0)
I know you 😎🤗. Hopefully we can make a pizza together one day in Los Angeles 🙏🏻
Can you make a video based on gluten free options?
In this video I show how to make a super simple gluten free bread: th-cam.com/video/sB81OLY25Jo/w-d-xo.html. Hope it helps.
You're amazing
A recent video by Adam Ragusea contradicts some of the statements made in this video with respect to pizza dough. Not to say that they are wrong. Just saying that more discussion and experimentation should be performed to support the conclusions.
Awesome. What is the video you are referring to? 😍
@@the_bread_code "What oil, sugar and yeast do in pizza dough (in varying amounts)". I like the experiments he does. Follow scientific method relatively well.
Hi gzr.
The famous pizza from Napoli only has flour water yeast n salt.
No sugar, no oil.
....that would be the pizza from Roma.
Oh my! I just checked the protein on my Gold Medal flour, online it says it's 13% but on the package it says 3%!!! My heart is sunken and I'm lightweight pissed!!! That is sooo low!!!wtf that must be why my dough is so sticky😭😭😭😭