coraa: (cooking)
coraa ([personal profile] coraa) wrote2006-05-09 10:13 pm
Entry tags:

little beasties

I started some wild sourdough starter. I've never done wild-yeasted bread before, but I've made a lot of bread, so I'm prety excited about trying this.

This kind of sourdough is made by mixing water and flour and just... letting it sit. Instead of being yeasted with packaged yeast, the wild yeasts that live in the flour (and in the air, for that matter) will breed, as will lactobacilli. The yeast and lactobacilli keep one another in check, and the acidity produced both gives the final loaf its sour flavor and kills other, less desirable forms of little organism.

A well-established sourdough starter made from wild yeast is supposed to have a lovely taste, so here's hoping.

[identity profile] brisingamen.livejournal.com 2006-05-10 06:13 am (UTC)(link)
Ooh, good luck. I'll be interested to hear how it goes. I want to go back to playing with sourdough starters after my holidays, and this looks like fun.

[identity profile] ceph.livejournal.com 2006-05-10 06:15 am (UTC)(link)
"Wild Yeast" is an Ursula Vernon painting waiting to happen.

[identity profile] zalena.livejournal.com 2006-05-10 12:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I've never liked sourdough.

Where did people find non-sourdough yeast?

There are all these myths about how people were given the gift of alcohol. It seems to me that there should also be origin stories about cheese and bread.

I want to know more about the cheese goddess.

[identity profile] coraa.livejournal.com 2006-05-10 02:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I believe there was a time when people used the barm from fermeting beer to leaven bread, since it's very yeasty. Obviously that used to be wild, too. I'd expect that modern commercial yeast is a strain of that, but probably a monoculture or a very narrow range of yeast cultures, because mixed wild yeast cultures have unpredictable rising schedules and commercial bakeries that make a lot of bread in batches have trouble with upredictable rises.

I'd love to see a cheese goddess, or a bread goddess.

[identity profile] zalena.livejournal.com 2006-05-10 04:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Any of the grain goddesses (Ceres) would suffice for a bread goddess.

[identity profile] 2gouda4u.livejournal.com 2006-05-10 01:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Being the self-sacrificing sort of person that I am, I volunteer to try the resulting bread ; ) I've been sort of curious about wild sourdough starter since I read about it a few months ago, but I really don't have the patience to care for starter or make things with it (at least, not right now).

[identity profile] fairnymph.livejournal.com 2006-05-10 06:00 pm (UTC)(link)
i did this once. It turned out okay but not great. I'd like to try it again some time...