This bread I used to make with my befriended Korean baker Yoo. He has a beautiful small bakery in the town of Imsil and is one of the few who bakes sourdough bread in Korea. He solely uses Korean flour (and even partially from his own harvest!), which has quite a unique flavor and also has quite a different structure from what we have here in Europa. Therefore, I experimented with the recipe to create the following bread that resembles the one we baked together in Korea.
I find it easy to enjoy making this bread: it’s a pleasant dough to work with, the overnight final fermentation makes everything very relaxed for me and the resulting bread is of the kind I just keep eating. The overnight fermentation gives the bread a lot of flavor and beautiful crust and the addition of 20% whole grain wheat flour gives it bit of a bite too.
Recipe
Overall formula (for 12 breads of ~ 350gr)
Hydration: 70%
Pre-fermented flour: 17,5%
Total time: 24 – 28hrs
Ingredient | Weight | Percentage |
Wheat flour | 1960 gr | 78,4% |
Whole grain wheat flour | 500 gr | 20% |
Whole grain rye flour (from mature SD culture) | 40gr | 1,6% |
Water | 1751ml | 70% |
Salt | 40 gr | 1,6% |
Total | 4291 gr | 171,6% |
Pre-ferment
- Make the following pre-ferment with 100 hydration and let it ferment for 8 hours at ~ 24°C/76F) or overnight at room temperature (~ 20°C/68F). Make sure to cover it so it doesn’t lose any water by evaporation.
Ingredient | Weight | Percentage |
Wheat flour | 438 gr | 100% |
Water | 438 gr | 100% |
Mature sourdough culture (rye basis, 100%) | 44gr | 10% |
Total | 920 gr | 210% |
- The pre-ferment should look like the one on the following picture. If there are few bubbles you can let it little longer. If it fermented too long or too warm you’ll see that it has collapsed (markings on the walls of the bowl that the dough had risen and subsequently collapsed)
- If you are happy with your pre-ferment you can make the final dough. Aim for a temperature of the final dough of ~ 24°C. Mix the following ingredients and knead by hand for about 10mins.
Ingredient | Weight |
Wheat flour | 1563 gr |
While grain wheat flour | 500gr |
Water | 1313ml |
Salt | 40gr |
Pre-ferment | 875gr |
Total | 4291gr |
- The next step is the bulk fermentation. For this bread it takes about 2½ hours and benefits from 2 stretch and folds (at 50 min intervals).
- After the bulk fermentation divide in the dough in 12 pieces of ~ 350gr and pre-shape them for a round loaf.
- After a 10 min bench rest, shape them as a round loaf and give them a tiny bit of a rectangular shape. The latter you can accomplish by instead of pulling and rotating 90°, rotating 180°. But only in the very last seconds of the shaping.
- Place the shaped dough in bakers linen and transfer to fridge for final fermentation. My fridge is about 5,5°C and 12hrs is fine. If yours is warmer, a shorter fermentation might be better, and vice versa, if yours is cooler you can leave it longer.
- Transfer to baking sheets and score them with a single stroke.
- Bake at 220°C/432F for about 25 mins with steam. Let the steam escape after 18 mins.
A lump of dough of 8,4 kg after bulk fermentation The pieces of dough after final fermentation, 350gr – a little too close to each other 500gr pieces of dough, nicely separated Pieces of 350gr dough on baking sheets. Irregular shapes. Pieces of 500gr dough on baking sheets, more regular shapes Loaves with nice oven spring, 350gr A 500gr loaf sliced with nice open crumb
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