This bread will be 75% hydrated and produce two full loaves
Prep Time2 daysd
Cook Time45 minutesmins
Equipment
Kitchen Scale (optional but highly recommended) – $23
Bread Banneton (optional but recommended) – $29
Glass mixing bowl – $24
Bench Knife – $10
Dutch oven / combo cooker – $43 (Required)
Ingredients
900gWhite Flour Look for flour with a high protein content
100gWhole Wheat
750gFiltered water (75%)Room temp.
200gLevain (20%)1:2:2 (starter: flour: water)
20gSalt (2%)Do not use iodised salt - suggest fine sea salt
Instructions
Levain (Start at 9am)
Let ferment for 4-5 hours
Autolyse (Start at 9am)
Combine 900g of white flour + 100g of whole wheat flour with the 700g of filtered water (reserve 50g for when you add the Levain)
Mix until all the flour is incorporated with the water, 2-3mins of stirring
Cover with a clean damp kitchen towel or plastic wrap while Levain becomes active (be sure to cover as this prevents the mixture from developing a skin on the outer layer)
Main Dough (1pm)
Add Levain to the reserved 50g of water
Now combine the Levain/Water mixture to the Autolysed dough and really get in there and mix this baby by hand until the dough is homogeneous 5-10 mins
Let rest for 20 mins
Add salt and knead in the bowl for another 2-3 mins
Cover and let rest for 1 hour at room temp (ideally somewhere between 75-80°)
Bulk Fermentation | Stretch and Folds (2:30pm)
Perform the first stretch and fold - in which, you grab a corner of your dough and pull up as much as you can before the dough breaks and fold it over back over the top. Turn the bowl and repeat the stretching and folding for the other three corners
Cover and let rest for 30 mins
Repeat another series of stretch and folds then cover and let rest for 45 mins
Repeat a third round of stretch and folds and again cover and rest for 45 mins or until the dough gets about 30-40% larger
Pre-Shaping (4:30pm)
Gently release the dough out of the bowl and onto a very minimally floured work surface
Using a bench scraper, cut the dough into two equally
form the dough into a loose ball (boule) by using the bench scraper like a snowplow, sliding the dough
Cover with the bowl and let rest for 10mins
Shaping (4:40pm)
The idea here is that we want to create some tension on the outside of the dough that keeps the boule in it's shape during the final fermentation. So lightly flour the top of your dough and use a bench scraper to flip the dough over so the floured side is now on the work surface
Now grab a corner and gently stretch it over the top of the dough, turn and repeat until a tighter ball is formed
using the bench scraper, move the dough around the work surface. As you move the dough tension should be being create on the outside of the dough
once the dough is taught, transfer to a WELL floured banneton bowl (this is where the dough will proof until you are ready to bake.
Final Fermentation (overnight)
cover your boule and place in the fridge over night. The cool temp inside your fridge will slow down the fermentation time and allow some amazing flavors to develop while not allowing the bread to be over proofed.
Bake (the next day 9am)
Preheat your oven to 500° for at least 30mins (ideally 1 hour) WITH your Dutch Oven or Combo-cooker inside with the lid on.
Carefully take the dutch oven out of the oven and flip your dough out into the scorching hot Dutch Oven
At this point you could score the loaf with a razor blade or just allow for the natural brakes in top of the bread to open up (I prefer the latter)
Reduce the heat in your oven to 450°
Place the lid on and bake for 24 mins
Remove lid and bake another 20 mins or until the loaf is dark brown (most amateurs take their loaf out to early and don't allow for the deep flavors to develop in the crust)
Tip the loaf out and allow it to cool down (for a pro tip, lean the loaf up so the weight of the loaf doesn't deflate the height you just created)