Continuing with my practice recipe.

50% whole wheat

50% wheat flour 550

30% sourdough

I’m still deeply focused on understanding the interaction between dough temperature, volume increase, and bulk fermentation time. The result is really good and I’m very happy with it, but judging fermentation still often feels like guessing.

This time I slightly reduced the hydration to 80% (79.6% to be exact πŸ˜…). A very soft dough with potentially open crumb doesn’t help me if I can’t handle it gently because everything sticks.

I was able to control the dough temperature better again and reached my target of 28 Β°C. That allowed me to end bulk fermentation after about 4.5 hours at roughly a 70% volume increase.

This time I did one coil fold about halfway through bulk fermentation to build a bit more strength and structure in the dough.

I did about 8H of Cold retard and baked with 250C open on baking steel with steam.

What I find especially interesting is how different the crumb structure of the two loaves turned out. Basically, I tried to do everything exactly the same. The only real differences are the weight (not divided evenly) and the score, which was probably slightly sealed on one loaf.

I’d be really interested in your thoughts on why the loaves turned out so differently – if you made it this far πŸ˜…

by timtim2409

7 Comments

  1. bicep123

    You could probably push the hydration 5% further considering you used 50% wholewheat.

  2. moist_mistress

    Would you mind sharing a recipe? I tried half whole wheat flour and mine turned out so dense.

  3. TryRevolutionary2939

    My guy, you did that! Lovely loaves

  4. Bloopyhead

    Great results.

    My fave: white flour and 25 pct white rye. simple. Tasty. Yum.

  5. spageddy_lee

    Both crumbs are perfect IMO.

    I am trying to get better at what you said about soft dough and handling it gently.

    I can get a nice crumb up to about 76% h20 then it starts to degas a little too easily pre shaping for my skill level with that particular step.