Breadmaking
is an ancient art, recently proved more ancient that previously thought. It’s a complete mystery to me how it happened
in the first place—there are so many steps to this process. I mean, who thought that would work? They say now that bread predated agriculture-- so folks just went out and found wheat, ground it up, mixed it with
water, added yeast, got it nice and oveny, and called it dinner.
Now that I
grow my own yeasty things, it’s even more mystifying. Someone made flour, got it wet a.k.a. super goopy and sticky, then just
left it until they noticed it smelled funny and was getting larger. Then they were like, perfect, lets cook that
mess til it has a crust and put soup in it.
I mean, I make kombucha, which is ostensibly weirder because there is a
slimy thick membrane growing on it, but still. Hats off to the visionary who knew in her bones this was a good, edible idea.
Baking with yeast has always intimidated me. You have to
buy a packet of this mustardy looking stuff that is alive, and then there are
all these steps and waiting and kneeding and whatever. I tried to make cinnamon rolls once, and we
can call that a failure. Zero out of ten
would make again.
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| My cinnamon rolls were like that. |
On the farm
the girls made bread all the time and I was happy to eat it, but kept out of
the kitchen during the whole process. No
thank you, voodoo ladies, I will keep to my messy art projects and leave the
witchcraft to you. Except for beerbread, which is basically made out of beer and butter and is delicious and deliciously easy to make.
But now I do
my own fermenting witchcraft, and I got…curious.
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| Yeasts are eukaryotic, single-celled microorganisms classified as members of the fungus kingdom. |
I mean, what
even is yeast. And what is dry yeast? I know
there is living yeast in many containers and communities in my kitchen, but how
does that get dehydrated down to a powder while still not dying? There are different strains of yeast…right? Do they do different things? What is champagne yeast and how is it
different than baking yeast and why can I use either to start a ferment if I
don’t feel like harvesting wild yeast? And
what even is wild yeast?!?
So I’m
thinking about all this, and also about my peach bug situation.
Because I
know you care about my life, Reader, you know I
have a ginger bug. Ginger bug is what you call the ferment that
happens when you add ginger and sugar to some water every day, and yeast
happens (but what is it tho) and it gets bubbly. It is used to make ginger beer, or really any
other natural soda—you mix up a sweet flavored whatever, add some of the liquid
from the bug, and let it sit in an airtight container for a couple of
days. The yeasts eat the sugars and poop
out a little alcohol and a lot of carbonation, and when it gets where you want
it to be, you put it in the fridge. I
have played with a couple of flavors, even though they all start with the
ginger bug.
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| Science!!! |
Then one day
I started thinking, why ginger? Is it
just the flavor? If you’re fermenting
pickles, you can do it with any veggie…will other things work?
So I decided
to make a peach bug. I did the same thing
as with the ginger bug, I added some peach and sugar every day. I even put some ginger bug in there to begin
with, to get the party started. And it
worked! I have a new happy ferment
colony on the kitchen counter! I even
made peach soda out of it. It was lovely.
But not
lovely enough. Peaches cost more than ginger,
and while the soda is good, it’s not good enough to keep me buying
peaches. The bug is alive and thriving,
so I don’t want to kill it. I made it
(and paid for all those peaches), so I don’t want to waste it. It needs to be tended every day like the ginger
bug….but I don’t want to bother about it.
I am industrious enough to do all these projects but now I am doing all
these projects and it is becoming a hassle to keep up with them all. So what do I do with my peach ferment?
I make Bad
Bread.
As mentioned in my last post, Bad Bread is sourdough unlimited by the confines of the
scientific exactitude that good bread really requires. I like to think of it as artisanal, closer in
nature to whatever our breadmaking ancestors were doing before they actually
knew how to make bread, a process which in today’s world is easily understood,
accessed, and duplicated.
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| Ima do it anyway. |
But that’s
how you make good bread, and I was making Bad Bread.
I looked up
all the recipes and they were like, sourdough needs a starter and you need
yeast. “Don’t tell me what to do,” I
thought, and went to eye my ingredients.
I have peach
bug a-plenty, and theoretically that is full of the same yeast (WHY IS IT THE
SAME YEAST, HOW DOES ANYONE KNOW THAT, WHO IS THE YEAST PSYCHIC, DO YOU OFFER
CLASSES??). How much peach bug is
equivalent to the amount of dry yeast that other, less brave, more interested-in-the-quality-of-their-final-product
souls might use? Meh, I don’t know.
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| Throw it out? What if I need it later?? |
I have whey,
because I overferment my kefir constantly so I strain it to make farmers cheese
and I can’t bring myself to throw anything away. The internet says you can
use that in place of water, and that’s more yeast right there.
I have
regular flour that’s not the bread making flour that the internet
suggests.
And I have non-iodized
salt. We’re totally doing this.
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| I am nailing it. |
The internet
says to measure baking ingredients by weight, not volume, so I get out my trusty
food scale. There was a whole adventure
there that basically centered around me thinking I was a crazy person for a
while but we can sum it all up with: the food scale is broken. It works, it shows numbers. It’s just wrong. Like way wrong.
So I go back
to doing this by volume, and measure out five and a half cups of flour. I am not precise about it, because I just went through a whole thinking-I-was-crazy adventure and I have become
frustrated. Reader, if you have ever
baked, you know that it is a scientific process and the details matter, the
quantities matter, and precision matters. I also know this. I just...didn’t care anymore—frankly that ship
sailed when I decided I could probably just invent sourdough out of the wrong
ingredients.
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| Nailing it. |
So I get it
close enough, and I add a cup of the peach bug juice. Why a cup? Because it’s a nice round number. Whatever. For the rest of the liquid I use the whey.
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| Nailing it. |
After a
while you’re supposed to start pulling the bottom dough up and stretch it over
the top like a happy gluteny blanket every 30 min or so, for like 3 hours. I am not Johnny on the spot with the 30
minutes, so I do it for longer, and in this time it is supposed to get a little
air-pocket-y and more or less start to seem like a dough ball and not a pile of
wet flour.
This does
not occur.
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| My..my yeast is perfect.... |
Undeterred,
I look up the next step—let it hang out in the fridge overnight. Well.
This just seems ridiculous; I am a little concerned (and maybe slightly
oversensitive) about my homegrown yeast which is perfectly good yeast,
thank you very much, but not doing much in the air pocket-making department at
this point. If there’s one way to shut
yeast down, it’s by getting it cold. So
insteaaaaad I do the opposite of that, and put it in the garage overnight. Just on the floor in there, with a towel over
it—it’s nice and warm in the garage, and probably there aren’t inquisitive mice
or bugs to get into it, but who really knows, I spend most of my time in the
actual house.
The next day
there are more bubbles! The yeast is
yeasting! But the dough is still…sloppy. Gloppy.
Not dough-ball-y. Idk if this is
because my flour-to-liquid ratio is off, or because my yeast isn’t doing, or
because of any of a number of other reasons why my innovative, resourceful, not-based-on-science
recipe might not be behaving like regular recipes should. I try to do that “wrap in a gluten blanket”
thing some more but at this point the dough is not having it. I look up troubleshooting websites, and they
tell me my dough might be
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| Gloriously off the map. |
overfermented.
This means my yeast has actually over-yeasted, which feels like a
particularly unkind suggestion given my sensitivity over the matter. But, the websites assure, also maybe not that—maybe lots of things;
how would one know, we are off the map here.
I put it in
the fridge at one point because dough wants to go in the oven cool, apparently. It….is not structurally sound, however. All the recipes are like, this is where you
form it into the shape you want it to bake in, with all the cunning and
charming designs you score into the top of it, so it comes out ready to dazzle
and delight! My dough is more of a free
spirit; it will not be hussied up to dance to society’s expectations.
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| This is not what sourdough should look like. But it was yummy! |
I put it in
a casserole and I bake it. Aaaaaaaand….it
was ok.
It was ok! It had a great flavor, but the consistency of
a hockey puck. People ate it....though something in it made “Andy”
have a lip-swelling allergic reaction. Maybe wild yeast is wilder than I
thought. I still have peach bug left so
I’ll probably make it again, and just warn “Andy” first.
I chalk it
up as a win.
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| Bad Bread for life. |














Thank you for giving my terrifying face explosion a full 1/24th of a column inch, baby. Love yoooouuuuuuu
ReplyDeleteThe Bad Bread was amazingly, deliciously, bad. I would like some more, please.
ReplyDeleteI made a second batch yesterday! It was still not like sourdough is supposed to be. But it was yummy!
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