To prevent burning the bottom of a loaf in a Dutch oven I put a cookie sheet on the rack below the Dutch oven to block the direct heat. Not my idea, just passing it on. It works for me.
That’s the key for me too. Even thought about using an additional sheet pan on the top to retain as much steam as possible when doing open bakes, like for baguettes that won’t fit in a bread pan
Jack, thanks for the mention. On the question of burning the top of the bread, I put a shelf as close to the top element as possible and put a baking sheet on it. This diffuses the direct heat and prevents burning. As I bake multiple loaves at a time, I am not fancy about turning the oven off and then waiting for it to reheat. This cured my burning problem and the bread still browns well.
I had to move my oven rack to the next to the bottom level. My bread now comes out great. (I have a vintage gas stove.) And I read a recipe recently that said to bake the loaf on the lower rack level. Worth a try.
To those having trouble with bottom of loaves burning in Dutch Ovens or baking stones. I was told by someone on TH-cam last year to try putting foil over the center of the lowest rack leaving about 3-4 inches without foil on each side. I also have put a small circle of parchment under the bottom of loaves when baking. This has absolutely worked for me. Thought I’d share in case it may help.
Regarding the question of how long can you leave your dough in its baneton in the fridge, I saw a video where they made 6 or 7 doughs at the same time and baked one a day for a week. The result was they were all great loaves but the flavour seemed to get better the longer they sat in the fridge. So the answer is there is definitely no rush. Yay!
I've been grinding my wheat and finall got a really great loaf of bread yesterday. I've not gone 100% whole wheat yet but letting it rest much longer has brought about a much softer loaf! Thank you for the perfect advice. 😊
Hi Jack. I’ve watched this video twice, second time taking notes😊 it’s pity that there are so few likes, it is very informative video! Thank you for giving us such a valuable tips🌺
It seems there is often a time in most people’s sourdough journey where suddenly loaves start failing, and there seems no obvious reason why. I’ve seen this often when watching various TH-cam channels and reading through comments, many by those who are not novices. I had a run of about 4 loaves one Winter that were difficult to shape and didn’t spring, even though I had done nothing differently from many dozens previously. In retrospect it had to be over proving, but I think because it was Winter, and we have no heating in our kitchen, I was almost stubbornly refusing to accept that it could be. Now, with a lot more experience, I am better at getting a feel for the dough during the stretch and fold process, and can usually tell when enough is enough, and another stretch and fold would not be a benefit, and potentially detrimental. I still don’t know exactly why those few loaves over proved; possibly the starter was exceptionally active around then, which accelerated the entire process, again I really don’t know. It is a 50+ year old starter, so maybe just a mid life crises 😉. Practice is important to build experience, and with experience you get to know when a dough feels right, and that feeling is more important than sticking to exact recipes, timings etc, especially when you are dealing with living organisms. These days I usually do 3 to 4 stretch and folds, as opposed to early on doing 5-6. I Also stopped autolysing a long time ago, as I personally found it made no difference to my finished loaves whatsoever. The fact it removes one sticky step was just a bonus. I still get the occasional loaf I’m not happy with, and I have no doubt that I will get the occasional failure going forwards, but practice is definitely key to getting a feel for what works for you in your own environment.
Loved this, Jack. I’ve been on a sourdough mission since 2020 with probably 10% success. I had one absolute triumph along the way so I know it’s possible I just need to figure out how to recreate it. I make notes during each bake but somehow lost them. Lesson learnt. I made a new starter which seems a lot happier than my old one and I’m persevering. I prepared a sourdough loaf while listening to your video which was really fun. I could listen to you chat about bread all day. 😌 Keep up the amazing work.
I don't make sourdough loaves but this info also applies to my rustic loaf-pan breads. Folding builds structure. Yeast need enough time but not too much time. Cuts help direct expansion. Too much heat can stop expansion in one place so that the expansion happens elsewhere. Tools make a difference. Fingers need to learn the feel of a nice dough! Thanks Jack!!!
Hey Jack. Thanks for another fantastic video! I’m still on the never ending quest for a successful sourdough. My biggest problem is getting tension in the skin as when folding and shaping, the dough sticks to everything and tears, breaking the tension. I will persist and never give up! 🤣. (I’ve been making sourdough for 3 years now!! The loaves always get eaten by husband and sons though, so no real problem!!). Keep up the fantastic work- and if you need to practice having people back in the classroom, myself and my wonderful friends will more than happily volunteer!!!!! 🤣🤣. Take care. 😁😁😁
Hi jack, you live down the road to my Nan! And i’m sure you know my Mum too. I love watching your videos, they’re so calming and plus i like baking so i want to try and attempt sourdough bread soon.
I really would like to try sourdough but my kitchen is very cold-even when central heating is on and kitchen rad up full. I struggle to guess/when to know ive left any loaf to prove enough
Thanks Jack for all the excellent information. Yup I’m still watching so much to learn. I have to say to everyone that if I never made any mistakes in my baking and bread baking experiences I would have learned nothing. Some have been so bad I am left laughing. But each one is a lesson that has made me better at what I love doing.
Hi Jack, a friend bakes sourdough twice a week and it comes out perfect. I decided to have a go and made a starter which came out good. I made the sourdough but needed it for about 10 minutes then popped it in the fridge overnight before baking. The dough did not rise and when baked it was spongy and gooey inside. What went wrong as this method came from my friend?
Great video. Had I not come across the scraping method never would have continued with sourdough - just couldn't stand the discard (or sit through, ha ha). Now I save about 50 grams and leave it in the fridge until I am close to ready to bake, then build it up. Fed while watching this video. Have preached the scrapings method far and wide and also referred to your page/videos. I make King Arthur's basic loaf 90% using the stretch and fold method and have no problems. Bakes are sometimes different, but always edible. Thanks so much for giving me a way to continue sourdough baking without going against my 'no waste' tendencies.
Jack, the reason starters bubble for several days at first is the initial bacteria that form "set up" the environment needed for the lactobacillus to grow. If people keep feeding it, it will be fine. A new starter's not actually ready for a couple weeks. 👍🏻
Jack! I have the cure for the burnt bottom! Some ovens (especially gas ovens) have too much direct heat on the bottom. The fix it one of two things: #1: Get an "air-bake" cookie sheet and put that under your Dutch Oven, or baking stone. That way, the D.O. or the stone will not get hotter than the ambient heat of the oven. Or: #2: put any cooking sheet one level under the D.O. or stone.
Thank you so much Jack for a fantastic video. Thank you for showing my sourdough bread and providing very helpful suggestions which I will definitely try. You are the best baker and teacher. I had so much fun watching this video and I am still smiling.
Come from a family of grandma bakers. As a male young child I took an interest, and an the last of the family to carry to carry on. One thing I have not tried in a very long time, and thought you might like to explore is American frontier sour dough flap jack pan cakes. Mom and I used to make those the night before back in the 1960s, and they were good! Dare you to test your skill on this one! Good luck with the egg. We made sour dough English muffins as well, so is only fair.
Thanks Jack, I think I have my answer to the problem with my first loaf. It spread and didn’t spring. I feel I over proved it. I will try less time next time.
Oh I’m excited to see this, and see it’s so long! I didn’t send in a question but maybe you’ll answer it from someone else- I’m new to sourdough and 3/4 of my loaves have failed to get an ear. Instead, where I slit my loaves kind of crusted over and remained flush with the rest of the top crust. In two of the loaves, the crust surface actually burst along the bottom, rather than the top. The texture of these loaves was very dense compared to the one that did get an ear (but they still made nice crisp breads- thanks for that suggestion in your book). I wondered if I slit my loaves too far ahead of putting them in the oven- I think I did the slit maybe 10 minutes before. Or perhaps I didn’t generate enough steam to keep the crust soft during the initial rise in the oven? If anyone else has experienced this, I’m happy to hear tips. Thanks!
Jack might like to comment, but I had these problems when I started. I only do the slit immediately before putting it in the oven - this ensures it doesn’t get a chance to come back together. Also, as Jack has said, the angle of cut is important - it needs to be more or completely horizontal rather than vertical. Good luck.
Today i had similar results as that at 20:00 mark. Starter was active (took a spoon from mother in the fridge, fed it 50g/50g and it doubled in size the next day), mixed, stretched and folded 3 times and fermentation was about 6-7h in 24degC and then shaped and went to fridge for almost 16hrs (whole evening and overnight). That should be plenty for fermentation and proofing.
Hi Jack. Your sourdough recipe was not my problem. I tried using a baking stone but the bottom crust was always undercooked. My Dutch oven gave me a great loaf but unfortunately the lower bottom sides are not crusty but is soft. My solution was to buy a custom piece of steel 1/2 inch thick (12.7 mm) and use it as my baking surface. It weighs about 25 lbs (11.3 kg). My loaves have turned out perfect...I use a steam bath using hot stones to keep the steam. My starter is like yours...all I do is keep the excess and use it for another bake by adding 100g of whole wheat and 100g of water. Stick it in the microwave over night and use it I the morning.
You remind me so much of my youngest son. He's now in the US Marine Corps so I don't get to see him very often. He looks just a little like you, but it's more the expressions on your face as you talk that remind me of him so very much. I've seen your channel recommended so many times. I was using a modified scrapings method in that I would feed the scrapings right after mixing up my loaf. I would pop it into the fridge. When it had raised just a little over the rubber band, I would set it on the counter overnight. By morning, it was ready to go. Then I tried refrigerating only the scrapings. Now, to be fair it was a longer than usual when I took it out to feed it. But it had a foul smell & even had a spot of mold on 1 edge. I got another starter going, but the loaf turned out horrible. So I searched out your channel to learn some more about making sourdough. And, bonus! You remind me of my son.
Like Cheryl from Vancouver Island I have a dense hard to slice bottom crust. I don't use "proper" equipment. No Steam. No baking stone, No dutch oven. I still like the taste of the bread. Lately I have been using a heavy cookie sheet and allowing the oven to reach 450 F and remain there for 1/2 hour before beginning the bake. I actually got a tiny ear on that bake. Although the breads always taste good to me, the look of the breads continue to improve. Like Jack says there is not really a substitute for experience. Besides the whole process is fun:>
Wish I’d watched this sooner. The first question rung true with me. Followed your exact instructions but the dough was just too wet and sticky for me to be able to fold it. Love your channel mate, thanks for all the help.
To the folks seeing their new starter "fail" after 3-4 days of initial success, discard some and press on and Jack advises. I believe this may be from following his excellent "No Discard" method to a T, which does not discuss discards. That video is excellent, but... Starting from scratch with 25g Flour and 25g Water and simply repeating for several consecutive days will initially work. But by day 4 or 5, you can no longer simply add 25/25g. You need to discard most of it, then crack on.
Yeah, I think Jack missed on this answer. He was answering correctly for an active starter, but I think these questions were about establishing a new starter. Very different. The reality is that many, maybe most people experience what looks like an active starter that "dies" after 4 to 6 days. But The first burst of activity is just a natural step. It often requires 2 weeks to get the PH of the starter low enough to activate the yeasts that are naturally in the flour. But most starter recipes say 3 to 5 days! Why?
Same problem here. Does it mean discard most and keep just a little bit in the jar. And then feed it daily 25g water and 25g flour method? Or do I need to feed it more than 25g daily?
In reference to the tap water vs bottled, I do the same here in Florida, use only bottled water. I moved to FL from NJ and noticed my coffee tasted weird. Same coffee beans, coffee maker, but weird flavor. From that point I started using bottled water only. Had to get a 5 gal tank delivery service because tap water in FL is awful. They use a lot of chlorine due to high humidity levels is what I'm told. Bagels here taste like styrofoam. I don't know if water in NJ or NYC is the same as it was 10 years ago, but it was definitely better than it is here. I even started making my own bagels because I couldn't find a good bagel place. Even though water is being boiled, I still take from 5gal tank water vs tap. Definitely a noticeable difference.
Hi Jack! Thank you for your videos!! Question…I feed my starter at 1:3:3 and store in the frig, but each recipe calls for different feeding ratios, can I just use mine in any recipe or must I change the feeding for each recipe. Thank you!
I’ve heard that chlorinated water can be left on the counter top to “gas off”, meaning that the chlorine is no longer in the water. I would do this over night before you bake the bread. Chlorine is added to water to kill of bacteria. This will kill off the yeast as well as far as I am aware.
Im a little late to the party...but..made my first two sourdough loaves over the weekend. I have lots of work ahead. Mine seemed under done..BUT...I thini i know where my mistake was.. i used a whole wheat for a starter(100%) which Im sure is just fine(?) It tripled in its overnight rise at roughly 80°F. I used 620g water, 16g salt and 900g flour...BUT..BUUT I used a combo of whole wheat(400g) and unbleached all purpose (500g). Bread was very dense.. Is this because I used whole wheat AND white flour with the -620g- of water? Im thinking..gets me in trouble all the time) that i should have increased my water?? I know, I know..first mistake was veering fromthe path of the recipe..from your video "sourdough loaf for beginners". You used 100% of one kind flour( unbleached All Purpose). Is this where I made my mistake..? Please help. . . . Edited...i saw "Josephines problem...mine could have been also that ut was too cool..69°/70°F in my kitchen..PLUS maybe the lack of H2O with whole wheat..since if im correct whole wheat requires more moisture(?) Crisps/crackers sounds like a good idea for mine then..with the hummus!🤌🏻
Funny thing, I just started watching your videos in the last week or so, but during this one I noticed you blinking quite a bit in the video. I thought does he have a concussion? It will be five years for me since my accident, blinking and words getting stuck in my brain makes me stutter in a way. Many of my symptoms did not show up in the first few months and they changed frequently. I happened upon the one where you were injured on the skateboard. So I was correct in my thinking that you may be suffering from concussion symptoms. I hope you are doing well and continue to heal. Thanks for all your knowledgeable baking lessons.
I have a brilliant yoghurt machine by Kuving that will ferment anything at a constant temperature for up to 60 hours, very helpful for timing the levaine.
Jack I think you might have misunderstood the question on starters 'dying'. Most starters will have activity in the first couple of days when they are new and then subsides despite daily feeds. I suspect your emailers might have been feeding when you seemed to assume they had not. That first bloom is bacteria which settles down as the microbes in the new starter 'do battle'. People perceive this as it failing, all you need to do is keep to the daily feed and it will establish itself.
I have a question. Baked my first sourdough bread. It was tasty and nice. Made it with rye and wheat flour. One thing disappointed me. It didn't smell much. I want bread to fill the kitchen with a wonderful smell. That's part of the experience but it didn't happen.
Hi Jack. Question: why does my starter look more liquidly than yours? Yours looks much thicker and I am trying to figure out what I am doing differently.
Hi Jack, my sourdough came out and rose but it did not have oven spring, the texture is gummy and the crust is chewy not crispy. It 's defficult to be sliced. What have I done wrong? Should the sourdough bread be gummy? When I said gummy, I mean more gummy than my homemade normal bread which I made from commercial yeast.
I love your energy! You have great videos! but... this one is my personal hobby horse: The majority of starters take more than 2 weeks to establish. Now you might say "Hang on, I get puff in 3 days? What is he on about?" There is one of 2 things happening if you are getting an active starter in 3 to 5 days: #1: you cross-contaminated your starter. I get it, you are not a scientist, you are just a fun guy helping people bake. No big deal... sorta... Anyway... #2: The starter is getting that initial bacterial bloom, and then will die down in a day or two. This is where people panic, and the source of a bunch of the questions. It can be a week of what looks like a "dead" starter, but what is actually happening is that it is a little tiny "bacteria fight club" going on. Normally, the starter is dropping the PH lower and lower each day. When it gets low enough, the yeasts in the flour kick on. SO...... I have a challenge for you: Pick a non-baking friend who is game for an experiment. Give them instructions for making a starter, but don't even go to his house; don't send him any of your equipment; don't send him any of your ingredients. No chance for cross-contamination this way. You can give your friend as much remote coaching as you wish. How long until it is a reliable starter?
Sorry, I got bubbles in three days when I made my starter, though not a complete rise. No one near me bakes sourdough, so cross contamination? However, I have only ever made a starter from scratch once - it is still with me. Does high temperature and humidity matter? I have both where I live.
QUESTION: Thanks Jack, you answered my question but I did a poor job of asking it. Let me try again… I’m a pandemic baker, but I bake a lot of bread only with yeast. I’ve never gotten a successful sourdough starter. After a few days of feeding it, it shows lots of bubbles, but then eventually, after maybe five or six days, it shows no activity at all, even when I feed it daily like I was doing during the first few days. I keep it in a closed jar on the kitchen counter. Any ideas? Thanks!
I knew what you meant. A successful baker, just not with SD. I would encourage you to throw out most of the starter after 4-5 days, then continue to feed once a day. You want to be adding more fresh flour to a smaller amount of starter. Eventually, you will see lots of air bubbles and will be able to create bread. Also, if you have any rye flour, that seems to be more robust. I keep a small mason jar in the fridge, take it out and feed it the night before I want to mix up a couple of loaves.
I had the same problem. Even 2-3 weeks in. My savior was the suggestion of giving the starter a feeding of milk kefir and flour instead of water and flour. It was just what it needed. I’ve not looked back since. There are some TH-cam videos regarding this method of getting a starter going. It just so happens that I make milk kefir. I’m sure you can get a store bought milk kefir unflavored and no additives that you can try.
i think this means the good bacteria is fighting off the bad bacteria! it may plateau for a few days but continue with feeding and don’t use it for baking unless the starter is at least 14 days old
Same problem here. Does it mean discard most and keep just a little bit in the jar. And then feed it daily 25g water and 25g flour method? Or do I need to feed it more than 25g daily?
This isn't a sourdough question but I need help. I have been baking for quite a while now but I still have two problems. 1/ I bake a loaf with 645 grms of flour and 368 grms of water and @ 200 degrees but it's cooked in 23 mins. Any longer and it's overdone. Most recipes say 30 - 40 mins but if I left it that long it would be burnt. It was the same in my old oven so I am puzzled. 2/ It comes out of the oven with a beautiful crust but by the time it has cooled it's soft and raggy - Any ideas please???
Hi Clare - Thanks for getting back to me. As I said above this is not a sourdough question, I bake a granary loaf and have used the recipe for a couple of years ( since lockdown ) and have had good results but cannot possibly bake for 30 - 40 mins as it would be well overdone. It makes a good loaf in 23 mins so I just cant understand the times I see on other recipes. I get a lovely crust when it comes out of the oven but when it cools it's soft.
@@davidjennings9253 The temperature inside the bread should be between 95 and 100 degrees depending on what type of bread it is. Put it at the bottom of the oven if it gets burnt on the top. 40 minutes is what I usually bake it for. With rye you want the temperature in the bread to be about 97 degrees or even 100.
Regarding the burnt ear. I heard someone (can't remember who's video) advise "flirt with burnt". I can't get that out of my mind now. I have actually put my bread back in the oven until I got that slight burn. I love it. Looks like a true artisan loaf. At least to me.
Sorry boss, I'm gonna be late to work. Jack just posted an hour long sourdough video.
To prevent burning the bottom of a loaf in a Dutch oven I put a cookie sheet on the rack below the Dutch oven to block the direct heat. Not my idea, just passing it on. It works for me.
thanks
Is that an electric oven?
I do this also, Cookie tray on the bottom shelf in an electric oven beneath my baking pans and the Dutch oven.
That’s the key for me too. Even thought about using an additional sheet pan on the top to retain as much steam as possible when doing open bakes, like for baguettes that won’t fit in a bread pan
Your struggle to accept enthusiastic compliments (and pronounce the word “intellectualize”) is very relatable! It made me smile.
Jack, thanks for the mention. On the question of burning the top of the bread, I put a shelf as close to the top element as possible and put a baking sheet on it. This diffuses the direct heat and prevents burning. As I bake multiple loaves at a time, I am not fancy about turning the oven off and then waiting for it to reheat. This cured my burning problem and the bread still browns well.
I had to move my oven rack to the next to the bottom level. My bread now comes out great. (I have a vintage gas stove.) And I read a recipe recently that said to bake the loaf on the lower rack level. Worth a try.
To those having trouble with bottom of loaves burning in Dutch Ovens or baking stones. I was told by someone on TH-cam last year to try putting foil over the center of the lowest rack leaving about 3-4 inches without foil on each side. I also have put a small circle of parchment under the bottom of loaves when baking. This has absolutely worked for me. Thought I’d share in case it may help.
I've been making bread for 2 years and I have struggled. Thank you so much for your upbeat positive outlook in making others better at your craft !
Regarding the question of how long can you leave your dough in its baneton in the fridge, I saw a video where they made 6 or 7 doughs at the same time and baked one a day for a week. The result was they were all great loaves but the flavour seemed to get better the longer they sat in the fridge. So the answer is there is definitely no rush. Yay!
I've been grinding my wheat and finall got a really great loaf of bread yesterday. I've not gone 100% whole wheat yet but letting it rest much longer has brought about a much softer loaf! Thank you for the perfect advice. 😊
Thanks for taking time out of your busy schedule to teach. We can all learn from each others' sourdough experiences.
Hi Jack. I’ve watched this video twice, second time taking notes😊 it’s pity that there are so few likes, it is very informative video! Thank you for giving us such a valuable tips🌺
It seems there is often a time in most people’s sourdough journey where suddenly loaves start failing, and there seems no obvious reason why. I’ve seen this often when watching various TH-cam channels and reading through comments, many by those who are not novices. I had a run of about 4 loaves one Winter that were difficult to shape and didn’t spring, even though I had done nothing differently from many dozens previously. In retrospect it had to be over proving, but I think because it was Winter, and we have no heating in our kitchen, I was almost stubbornly refusing to accept that it could be. Now, with a lot more experience, I am better at getting a feel for the dough during the stretch and fold process, and can usually tell when enough is enough, and another stretch and fold would not be a benefit, and potentially detrimental. I still don’t know exactly why those few loaves over proved; possibly the starter was exceptionally active around then, which accelerated the entire process, again I really don’t know. It is a 50+ year old starter, so maybe just a mid life crises 😉. Practice is important to build experience, and with experience you get to know when a dough feels right, and that feeling is more important than sticking to exact recipes, timings etc, especially when you are dealing with living organisms. These days I usually do 3 to 4 stretch and folds, as opposed to early on doing 5-6. I Also stopped autolysing a long time ago, as I personally found it made no difference to my finished loaves whatsoever. The fact it removes one sticky step was just a bonus. I still get the occasional loaf I’m not happy with, and I have no doubt that I will get the occasional failure going forwards, but practice is definitely key to getting a feel for what works for you in your own environment.
Loved this, Jack. I’ve been on a sourdough mission since 2020 with probably 10% success. I had one absolute triumph along the way so I know it’s possible I just need to figure out how to recreate it. I make notes during each bake but somehow lost them. Lesson learnt.
I made a new starter which seems a lot happier than my old one and I’m persevering. I prepared a sourdough loaf while listening to your video which was really fun. I could listen to you chat about bread all day. 😌 Keep up the amazing work.
I can listen to you forever! Easy learning and fun😊
I don't make sourdough loaves but this info also applies to my rustic loaf-pan breads. Folding builds structure. Yeast need enough time but not too much time. Cuts help direct expansion. Too much heat can stop expansion in one place so that the expansion happens elsewhere. Tools make a difference. Fingers need to learn the feel of a nice dough! Thanks Jack!!!
Hey Jack. Thanks for another fantastic video! I’m still on the never ending quest for a successful sourdough. My biggest problem is getting tension in the skin as when folding and shaping, the dough sticks to everything and tears, breaking the tension. I will persist and never give up! 🤣. (I’ve been making sourdough for 3 years now!! The loaves always get eaten by husband and sons though, so no real problem!!).
Keep up the fantastic work- and if you need to practice having people back in the classroom, myself and my wonderful friends will more than happily volunteer!!!!! 🤣🤣. Take care. 😁😁😁
Hi jack, you live down the road to my Nan! And i’m sure you know my Mum too. I love watching your videos, they’re so calming and plus i like baking so i want to try and attempt sourdough bread soon.
Thanks, Jack. Long but informative. Well worth watching in full.
I really would like to try sourdough but my kitchen is very cold-even when central heating is on and kitchen rad up full. I struggle to guess/when to know ive left any loaf to prove enough
Thanks Jack for all the excellent information. Yup I’m still watching so much to learn. I have to say to everyone that if I never made any mistakes in my baking and bread baking experiences I would have learned nothing. Some have been so bad I am left laughing. But each one is a lesson that has made me better at what I love doing.
Hi Jack, a friend bakes sourdough twice a week and it comes out perfect. I decided to have a go and made a starter which came out good. I made the sourdough but needed it for about 10 minutes then popped it in the fridge overnight before baking. The dough did not rise and when baked it was spongy and gooey inside. What went wrong as this method came from my friend?
Still here, to the end. Did enjoy it and learned so much.
Great video. Had I not come across the scraping method never would have continued with sourdough - just couldn't stand the discard (or sit through, ha ha). Now I save about 50 grams and leave it in the fridge until I am close to ready to bake, then build it up. Fed while watching this video. Have preached the scrapings method far and wide and also referred to your page/videos. I make King Arthur's basic loaf 90% using the stretch and fold method and have no problems. Bakes are sometimes different, but always edible. Thanks so much for giving me a way to continue sourdough baking without going against my 'no waste' tendencies.
Your explanation on making the levain up to 11:24 was so helpful. Thank you!
Jack, the reason starters bubble for several days at first is the initial bacteria that form "set up" the environment needed for the lactobacillus to grow. If people keep feeding it, it will be fine. A new starter's not actually ready for a couple weeks. 👍🏻
Jack! I have the cure for the burnt bottom! Some ovens (especially gas ovens) have too much direct heat on the bottom. The fix it one of two things: #1: Get an "air-bake" cookie sheet and put that under your Dutch Oven, or baking stone. That way, the D.O. or the stone will not get hotter than the ambient heat of the oven. Or: #2: put any cooking sheet one level under the D.O. or stone.
Fabulous video!! Great advice. Had to watch to the end
Thank you so much Jack for a fantastic video. Thank you for showing my sourdough bread and providing very helpful suggestions which I will definitely try. You are the best baker and teacher. I had so much fun watching this video and I am still smiling.
Come from a family of grandma bakers. As a male young child I took an interest, and an the last of the family to carry to carry on. One thing I have not tried in a very long time, and thought you might like to explore is American frontier sour dough flap jack pan cakes. Mom and I used to make those the night before back in the 1960s, and they were good! Dare you to test your skill on this one! Good luck with the egg. We made sour dough English muffins as well, so is only fair.
Thanks Jack, I think I have my answer to the problem with my first loaf. It spread and didn’t spring. I feel I over proved it. I will try less time next time.
That was a terrific watch. Many thanks.
Oh I’m excited to see this, and see it’s so long! I didn’t send in a question but maybe you’ll answer it from someone else- I’m new to sourdough and 3/4 of my loaves have failed to get an ear. Instead, where I slit my loaves kind of crusted over and remained flush with the rest of the top crust. In two of the loaves, the crust surface actually burst along the bottom, rather than the top. The texture of these loaves was very dense compared to the one that did get an ear (but they still made nice crisp breads- thanks for that suggestion in your book).
I wondered if I slit my loaves too far ahead of putting them in the oven- I think I did the slit maybe 10 minutes before. Or perhaps I didn’t generate enough steam to keep the crust soft during the initial rise in the oven?
If anyone else has experienced this, I’m happy to hear tips. Thanks!
Yes!! Jean and Peter had a very similar problem at 34:15- so glad I’m not alone!
Jack might like to comment, but I had these problems when I started. I only do the slit immediately before putting it in the oven - this ensures it doesn’t get a chance to come back together. Also, as Jack has said, the angle of cut is important - it needs to be more or completely horizontal rather than vertical. Good luck.
Today i had similar results as that at 20:00 mark. Starter was active (took a spoon from mother in the fridge, fed it 50g/50g and it doubled in size the next day), mixed, stretched and folded 3 times and fermentation was about 6-7h in 24degC and then shaped and went to fridge for almost 16hrs (whole evening and overnight). That should be plenty for fermentation and proofing.
Hi Jack. Your sourdough recipe was not my problem. I tried using a baking stone but the bottom crust was always undercooked. My Dutch oven gave me a great loaf but unfortunately the lower bottom sides are not crusty but is soft. My solution was to buy a custom piece of steel 1/2 inch thick (12.7 mm) and use it as my baking surface. It weighs about 25 lbs (11.3 kg). My loaves have turned out perfect...I use a steam bath using hot stones to keep the steam.
My starter is like yours...all I do is keep the excess and use it for another bake by adding 100g of whole wheat and 100g of water. Stick it in the microwave over night and use it I the morning.
I leave the water loosely covered overnight to allow chlorine to escape.
I use a water filter jug. It seems to remove or neutralize the chlorine.
Putting the water in a fridge will also remove the chlorine from tap water more quickly.
You remind me so much of my youngest son. He's now in the US Marine Corps so I don't get to see him very often. He looks just a little like you, but it's more the expressions on your face as you talk that remind me of him so very much. I've seen your channel recommended so many times. I was using a modified scrapings method in that I would feed the scrapings right after mixing up my loaf. I would pop it into the fridge. When it had raised just a little over the rubber band, I would set it on the counter overnight. By morning, it was ready to go. Then I tried refrigerating only the scrapings. Now, to be fair it was a longer than usual when I took it out to feed it. But it had a foul smell & even had a spot of mold on 1 edge. I got another starter going, but the loaf turned out horrible. So I searched out your channel to learn some more about making sourdough. And, bonus! You remind me of my son.
Your best video yet! Thank you!
Really enjoyed this. Lots to learn from.
This is such a great video series. Sorry to see it's over.
Like Cheryl from Vancouver Island I have a dense hard to slice bottom crust. I don't use "proper" equipment. No Steam. No baking stone, No dutch oven. I still like the taste of the bread. Lately I have been using a heavy cookie sheet and allowing the oven to reach 450 F and remain there for 1/2 hour before beginning the bake. I actually got a tiny ear on that bake. Although the breads always taste good to me, the look of the breads continue to improve. Like Jack says there is not really a substitute for experience. Besides the whole process is fun:>
Wish I’d watched this sooner. The first question rung true with me. Followed your exact instructions but the dough was just too wet and sticky for me to be able to fold it.
Love your channel mate, thanks for all the help.
To the folks seeing their new starter "fail" after 3-4 days of initial success, discard some and press on and Jack advises. I believe this may be from following his excellent "No Discard" method to a T, which does not discuss discards. That video is excellent, but... Starting from scratch with 25g Flour and 25g Water and simply repeating for several consecutive days will initially work. But by day 4 or 5, you can no longer simply add 25/25g. You need to discard most of it, then crack on.
Yeah, I think Jack missed on this answer. He was answering correctly for an active starter, but I think these questions were about establishing a new starter. Very different. The reality is that many, maybe most people experience what looks like an active starter that "dies" after 4 to 6 days. But The first burst of activity is just a natural step. It often requires 2 weeks to get the PH of the starter low enough to activate the yeasts that are naturally in the flour. But most starter recipes say 3 to 5 days! Why?
Same problem here. Does it mean discard most and keep just a little bit in the jar. And then feed it daily 25g water and 25g flour method? Or do I need to feed it more than 25g daily?
In reference to the tap water vs bottled, I do the same here in Florida, use only bottled water. I moved to FL from NJ and noticed my coffee tasted weird. Same coffee beans, coffee maker, but weird flavor. From that point I started using bottled water only. Had to get a 5 gal tank delivery service because tap water in FL is awful. They use a lot of chlorine due to high humidity levels is what I'm told. Bagels here taste like styrofoam. I don't know if water in NJ or NYC is the same as it was 10 years ago, but it was definitely better than it is here. I even started making my own bagels because I couldn't find a good bagel place. Even though water is being boiled, I still take from 5gal tank water vs tap. Definitely a noticeable difference.
All this was really helpful!
Hi Jack! Thank you for your videos!! Question…I feed my starter at 1:3:3 and store in the frig, but each recipe calls for different feeding ratios, can I just use mine in any recipe or must I change the feeding for each recipe. Thank you!
I’ve heard that chlorinated water can be left on the counter top to “gas off”, meaning that the chlorine is no longer in the water. I would do this over night before you bake the bread. Chlorine is added to water to kill of bacteria. This will kill off the yeast as well as far as I am aware.
Im a little late to the party...but..made my first two sourdough loaves over the weekend. I have lots of work ahead. Mine seemed under done..BUT...I thini i know where my mistake was.. i used a whole wheat for a starter(100%) which Im sure is just fine(?) It tripled in its overnight rise at roughly 80°F. I used 620g water, 16g salt and 900g flour...BUT..BUUT I used a combo of whole wheat(400g) and unbleached all purpose (500g). Bread was very dense.. Is this because I used whole wheat AND white flour with the -620g- of water? Im thinking..gets me in trouble all the time) that i should have increased my water?? I know, I know..first mistake was veering fromthe path of the recipe..from your video "sourdough loaf for beginners". You used 100% of one kind flour( unbleached All Purpose). Is this where I made my mistake..? Please help.
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Edited...i saw "Josephines problem...mine could have been also that ut was too cool..69°/70°F in my kitchen..PLUS maybe the lack of H2O with whole wheat..since if im correct whole wheat requires more moisture(?)
Crisps/crackers sounds like a good idea for mine then..with the hummus!🤌🏻
Love you Jack. What a nightmare ride youve taken us on. Loving every lesson 😂
Funny thing, I just started watching your videos in the last week or so, but during this one I noticed you blinking quite a bit in the video. I thought does he have a concussion? It will be five years for me since my accident, blinking and words getting stuck in my brain makes me stutter in a way. Many of my symptoms did not show up in the first few months and they changed frequently. I happened upon the one where you were injured on the skateboard. So I was correct in my thinking that you may be suffering from concussion symptoms. I hope you are doing well and continue to heal. Thanks for all your knowledgeable baking lessons.
Neeta meant that she had trouble cutting slices because the crust was too hard to cut
Great video again Jack 🎉
I have a brilliant yoghurt machine by Kuving that will ferment anything at a constant temperature for up to 60 hours, very helpful for timing the levaine.
Jack I think you might have misunderstood the question on starters 'dying'. Most starters will have activity in the first couple of days when they are new and then subsides despite daily feeds. I suspect your emailers might have been feeding when you seemed to assume they had not. That first bloom is bacteria which settles down as the microbes in the new starter 'do battle'. People perceive this as it failing, all you need to do is keep to the daily feed and it will establish itself.
I have a question. Baked my first sourdough bread. It was tasty and nice. Made it with rye and wheat flour. One thing disappointed me. It didn't smell much. I want bread to fill the kitchen with a wonderful smell. That's part of the experience but it didn't happen.
Hi jack I've paused the vid to ask a specific question at 47:10 what flour did you use to get the light crumb and thin crust ?? thank you in advance.
Hi Jack. Question: why does my starter look more liquidly than yours? Yours looks much thicker and I am trying to figure out what I am doing differently.
Hi Jack, my sourdough came out and rose but it did not have oven spring, the texture is gummy and the crust is chewy not crispy. It 's defficult to be sliced. What have I done wrong? Should the sourdough bread be gummy? When I said gummy, I mean more gummy than my homemade normal bread which I made from commercial yeast.
Hi jack do you have video on making a nice crusty wholemeal loaf
TRUST THE BUBBLES!
my starter scrapings has mold growing on it. what do i do?
I am going to sample you into my DNB tracks alrite?
This was me receiving permission.😊
Got some dough in the oven right now!!!
Can't wait to here it Boris :-)
I love your energy! You have great videos! but... this one is my personal hobby horse: The majority of starters take more than 2 weeks to establish. Now you might say "Hang on, I get puff in 3 days? What is he on about?" There is one of 2 things happening if you are getting an active starter in 3 to 5 days: #1: you cross-contaminated your starter. I get it, you are not a scientist, you are just a fun guy helping people bake. No big deal... sorta... Anyway... #2: The starter is getting that initial bacterial bloom, and then will die down in a day or two. This is where people panic, and the source of a bunch of the questions. It can be a week of what looks like a "dead" starter, but what is actually happening is that it is a little tiny "bacteria fight club" going on. Normally, the starter is dropping the PH lower and lower each day. When it gets low enough, the yeasts in the flour kick on. SO...... I have a challenge for you: Pick a non-baking friend who is game for an experiment. Give them instructions for making a starter, but don't even go to his house; don't send him any of your equipment; don't send him any of your ingredients. No chance for cross-contamination this way. You can give your friend as much remote coaching as you wish. How long until it is a reliable starter?
Sorry, I got bubbles in three days when I made my starter, though not a complete rise. No one near me bakes sourdough, so cross contamination? However, I have only ever made a starter from scratch once - it is still with me. Does high temperature and humidity matter? I have both where I live.
@@melvynblunt it depends on a bunch of things, but mostly the flour. Did it keep rising every day?
QUESTION: Thanks Jack, you answered my question but I did a poor job of asking it. Let me try again… I’m a pandemic baker, but I bake a lot of bread only with yeast. I’ve never gotten a successful sourdough starter. After a few days of feeding it, it shows lots of bubbles, but then eventually, after maybe five or six days, it shows no activity at all, even when I feed it daily like I was doing during the first few days. I keep it in a closed jar on the kitchen counter. Any ideas? Thanks!
I knew what you meant. A successful baker, just not with SD. I would encourage you to throw out most of the starter after 4-5 days, then continue to feed once a day. You want to be adding more fresh flour to a smaller amount of starter. Eventually, you will see lots of air bubbles and will be able to create bread. Also, if you have any rye flour, that seems to be more robust. I keep a small mason jar in the fridge, take it out and feed it the night before I want to mix up a couple of loaves.
I had the same problem. Even 2-3 weeks in. My savior was the suggestion of giving the starter a feeding of milk kefir and flour instead of water and flour. It was just what it needed. I’ve not looked back since. There are some TH-cam videos regarding this method of getting a starter going. It just so happens that I make milk kefir. I’m sure you can get a store bought milk kefir unflavored and no additives that you can try.
Here’s a link to the kefir sourdough starter. th-cam.com/video/V0FYHi2Ei14/w-d-xo.htmlsi=qQh4Sya2_Ed4PacY
i think this means the good bacteria is fighting off the bad bacteria! it may plateau for a few days but continue with feeding and don’t use it for baking unless the starter is at least 14 days old
Same problem here. Does it mean discard most and keep just a little bit in the jar. And then feed it daily 25g water and 25g flour method? Or do I need to feed it more than 25g daily?
How much bread do you eat in a day
hi Jack this has nothing to do with Sourdough. but why have you not covered Tiger bread in your book? just a thought, I think you mist a trick.
This isn't a sourdough question but I need help. I have been baking for quite a while now but I still have two problems. 1/ I bake a loaf with 645 grms of flour and 368 grms of water and @ 200 degrees but it's cooked in 23 mins. Any longer and it's overdone. Most recipes say 30 - 40 mins but if I left it that long it would be burnt. It was the same in my old oven so I am puzzled. 2/ It comes out of the oven with a beautiful crust but by the time it has cooled it's soft and raggy - Any ideas please???
Hi Clare - Thanks for getting back to me. As I said above this is not a sourdough question, I bake a granary loaf and have used the recipe for a couple of years ( since lockdown ) and have had good results but cannot possibly bake for 30 - 40 mins as it would be well overdone. It makes a good loaf in 23 mins so I just cant understand the times I see on other recipes. I get a lovely crust when it comes out of the oven but when it cools it's soft.
@@davidjennings9253 The temperature inside the bread should be between 95 and 100 degrees depending on what type of bread it is. Put it at the bottom of the oven if it gets burnt on the top. 40 minutes is what I usually bake it for. With rye you want the temperature in the bread to be about 97 degrees or even 100.
Could Nick be using baskets that are too big? They look rather big. Also Jack, you play a lot of Nintendo? It sounds like it.
Missing you ❤ hope you are ok. 🤞🙏❤️🕊
Can you do a keto bread so low carb?
Yes. Just let it ferment for a couple of days.
Regarding the burnt ear. I heard someone (can't remember who's video) advise "flirt with burnt". I can't get that out of my mind now. I have actually put my bread back in the oven until I got that slight burn. I love it. Looks like a true artisan loaf. At least to me.
All the best to you :)
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