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Same Day Sourdough (78% Hydration)

September 24, 20244 min read

Same Day Sourdough (78%)

“You can start this loaf in the morning and eat it for dinner!”


I would love more FREE recipes and tips straight to my IN BOX!

While I prefer my more complicated recipe, there are times when I just don't have 2 days to make sourdough. If I'm ever out of sourdough, or I find out at the last minute I'm having dinner guests, I can whip up this loaf in time for dinner. It doesn't need a fancy score like this one, but it's an easy dough to manage so if you want to do a tougher score, you can!

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Prep Time: 15 min plus stretch and folds (2 hours) and bulk ferment time (4-6 hours)

Cook Time: 30-40 min

Servings: 1 loaf

Ingredients

  • 150 g Starter

  • 375 g Water

  • 500 g Bread Flour

  • 12 g Salt

Preparation Steps

1. To a large mixing bowl, add the ripe, bubbly starter. Pour the water over the starter and mix with a dough whisk until a uniform consistency is obtained.

2. Weigh out your bread flour and salt. Use the dough whisk to combine it most of the way. Then, with wet hands, mix completely until no grains of salt are felt.

3. Let dough rest for 1 hour. Use this time to prepare any inclusions you will want to add.

4.
Do your first set of stretch and folds. (S&F #1)

5. Let the dough rest another 30 minutes. Do a second set of stretch and folds. (S&F #2) If you are planning to add inclusions, laminate the dough instead, pulling and stretching as for as you can. Then add your inclusions. Press the inclusions into the dough. Fold the right 1/3 of the dough in just past center. Fold the left side of the dough over the top. Roll the dough up and place it back in your bowl.

6. Let the dough rest another 30 minutes. Perform another set of stretch and folds. (S&F #3)

7. Let rest another 30 minutes. Perform the final set of stretch and folds. (S&F #4) All totaled you are doing 3 sets of stretch and folds and a lamination step. (Or 4 sets of stretch and fold if you are not doing lamination.)

8. Take the temperature of your dough. Bulk ferment in a warm place (74-78º F) for another 2-4 hours. Time will vary, so go more by dough temperature and % rise. (For more details, refer to the Bulk Fermentation guide of TheSourdoughJourney.com)

Dough Temp     % Rise Time

80º F (27º C)         30% 3.5-5.5 h

75º F (24º C)         50% 5-7 h

70º F (21º C)         75% 8-12 h

65º F (18º C)       100% 12-16 h

9. Shape your loaf as a batard or a boule.

10. Place the shaped loaf in your Banneton and cold retard for 2 hours in your refrigerator.

11. When you are ready to bake, preheat your oven, with your Dutch Oven inside, to 500º F. While the oven is preheating, freeze your dough. This will make scoring easier and will give more temperature difference when you put it into the hot oven to help with oven spring.

12. Dust your dough with Thai Rice Flour, score and bake.

13. Bake at 500º F with the lid on for 18 minutes.

14. Turn the temperature down to 450º F and bake another 12 minutes (for a boule) covered. (11 minutes for a batard)

15. Remove the lid and bake another 4 minutes uncovered at 450º F.

16. The internal temperature of your dough should be 200º F when fully baked.

17. Remove your bread from the oven and cool on a cooling rack for 2 hours before slicing.

NOTE
To bake a 1/2 loaf (mini loaf):
Preheat your oven to 500º F with your 3.5 QT Dutch Oven inside. (a mini Dutch oven)
Turn the oven down to 475º when you put your bread in.
Bake at 475º F for 15 minutes, covered.
Bake at 450º F for 7 minutes, covered.
Bake at 450º F for 3 minutes, uncovered.

* This is a Sourdough Living original recipe.


NOTE: You can purchase a reusable Bread Mat from Rosehill Sourdough. I chose not to get one through Amazon because a few of the reviews stated that the color came off on their loaf.


Bulk Ferment Guide from Tom Cucuzza of TheSourdoughJourney.com.

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Nancy was gifted a sourdough starter for Christmas one year and was immediately hooked. She loves trying new recipes, new techniques, and experimenting with flavors and scoring.

Nancy Busch

Nancy was gifted a sourdough starter for Christmas one year and was immediately hooked. She loves trying new recipes, new techniques, and experimenting with flavors and scoring.

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