Quest for the Lacy Crumb
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I began with my usual one hour autolyse. Once ready, I incorporated my levain, which had peaked at double its volume, and mixed on speed 1. After that, I added the remaining water and salt, kneading on speed 2. l've noticed that using this method promotes nucleation-essentially creating a higher number of alveoli.
However, to achieve that delicate, lacy crumb, these alveoli need to be balanced with proper fermentation. I push the bulk fermentation further than usual, targeting roughly a 70% rise in volume. Think of it like inflating numerous small balloons: to get a lacy effect, they must be properly filled with gas; otherwise, the crumb turns out denser, resembling sandwich bread. I preshape the dough very lightly and allow it to bench rest for 45-50 minutes. This relaxes the dough and helps elongate the alveoli. Finally, I shape with minimal tension and retard at 4°C for about 18 hours.
by AnStar24
11 Comments
Very beautiful!
What hydration?
This is my dream 😍😍
Recipe? That looks like 80% hydration min.
Gorgeous bread !
Looks delicious! I’m a finer crumb guy though, I like a tighter crumb personally
I’m a newbie to the sourdough world and this looks so amazing. I wish someone could come teach me to make bread that looks this good!!!
Amazing crumb! Do you do any folds after you mix in the salt?
Just refusing to drop that hydration.
Wow it looks like a quasón
Beautiful open crumb. I have not achieved this yet