Adventures in Sourdough
Yesterday I made my first ever sourdough loaf. I don’t know if it’s because I made everything from wholemeal spelt flour but it was absolutely delicious! It didn’t taste at all sour and the crust on the outside was crunchy and divine!
I was missing bread and looked back through the notes my nutritionist gave me and she said that sourdough was ok! I thought I would make it from scratch to be totally sure it had no sugar in it. I used to get it from Gails Bread shop which listed all the ingredients. This is a good option if you live in London.
The first time you make sourdough you either have to make or buy a “starter” which replaces your yeast. I made mine, it took about 14 days to make, after a couple of days, every day you have to throw half away and add more ingredients so it’s a bit of a commitment and you end up eating a lot of sour pancakes! I found the Shipton Mill website gave amazing advice for this. Once you have your starter you don’t need to make it again but you need to refresh it once a week.
I found the recipe for the bread had to come from many sources as I was making my bread from wholemeal spelt and I didn’t want to use sugar, orange juice or honey. It also depends on the temperature of you house, your oven, your equipment and the sleepiness of your starter. I didn’t realise until afterwards how important the final fold was. I looked at a number of you tube videos and this was the best at explaining it. Go to 8:30 minutes in https://youtu.be/be57uXRf5xo.
Makes 1 loaf
733g wholemeal spelt flour
431 warm water
10g salt
127g sourdough starter
(50g wholemeal spelt flour if you want to top up your starter)
- Refresh the starter 12 hours before you start cooking so that it’s active.
- Add the starter and water to the food processor bowl, stir.
- Add the flour and mix with a dough hook on the food processor. I couldn’t find my dough hook but I had something that had plastic “blades” instead of metal ones and that worked fine. Mix until it forms a dough and the edges of the dough naturally move away from the sides.
- Leave to prove for 30 minutes.
- Meanwhile if you want to top up your starter its 50g wholemeal spelt flour, 76g warm water
- Add the salt and mix for 2 minutes in the food processor. You don’t want to overknead as you’re using spelt instead of flour so the gluten is more likely to break up.
- Put the dough on the table and briefly knead whilst feeling the consistency. It should be sticky but not sloppy. It shouldn’t leave a residue on the work surface as you knead. Add more flour if needs be.
- Oil a glass bowl and place in there with clingfilm over the top. Take a photo of the side and the top so you can see when it’s doubled in size.
- Leave in a warm dark place for 5 hours. I used my airing cupboard.
- Knead for 3 minutes. Again, you don’t want to overknead. When it feels like an elastic band that’s lost its elastic, stop immediately.
- Line a bread tin with a tin liner. I used a non stick silocone liner. You can get these from John Lewis or Lakeland.
- Go to 8:30 minutes in https://youtu.be/be57uXRf5xo to see how to fold the dough.
- Place in the tin and cover with a tea towel. Let it rise again for 3 hours, keep an eye on it, it should almost reach the top of the tin liner.
- 20 minutes before the 3 hours is up, preheat the oven to 220C.
- Spray about 10 squirts of water in the oven to increase the humidity. Bake for 30 minutes.
- Leave to cool on a cooling rack before serving.
- Serve with no added sugar peanut butter, homemade chicken liver pate, hummus or just plain butter.


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