Bulgur Bread
In this recipe, the bulgur is added as a portion of the flour rather than an ingredient. This produces a long fermentation of the bulgur granules and a somewhat different consistency than if the bulgur is added at the end.
Ingredients
|
Culture Activation Stage 1 |
| 2 cups |
sourdough starter |
| 1 cup |
flour |
| 1 cup |
medium-grind bulgur |
| 1 cup |
water |
|
Culture Activation Stage 2 |
| 1 cup |
flour |
| 1/2 cup |
water |
|
Final preparation |
| 1 1/2 teaspoons |
salt |
| 1/2 cups |
water |
| 2 3/4 cups |
flour |
Instructions
- Yield:
- 2 medium sized loaves
- Prep time:
- 1 hour
- Cook time:
- 45 minutes
- Ready in:
- 14 hours and 15 minutes
- Recipe Type:
- Bread
- Culure Activation Stage 1, followed by 6 or 12 hour proof
- Mix the liquid culture with the flour, bulgur, and water in a large mixing bowl. This is the working culture.
- Proof 12 hours at room temperature (68°-72°) or 6 hours in a proofing box at 85°
- Culture Activation Stage 2, followed by 4 or 8 hour proof.
- Add flour and water. Mix and knead until smooth.
- Proof 8 hours at room temperature or 4 hours in the proofing box. After proofing, this is the fully active culture.
- Final Bread preparation, kneading, rising, and baking. Includes 2½ to 3 hour proof.
- Punch down. Dissolve the salt in the remaining water. Add to the dough and mix well.
- Reserve some of the flour for flouring the board. Mix and spoon knead the remaining flour into the dough.
- When too stiff to mix by hand, transfer to the floured board and knead in the remaining flour.
- Form 2 pan loaves, and proof at the same temperature used above until the dough rises about 1 inch above the pan tops (2½ to 3 hours).
- Bake in a preheated oven at 375° for 40 to 45 minutes. Remove from the pans and cool on wire racks.
Tips for Success
- Cooking Tips
- Bulgur soaks up a lot of water, which makes it difficult to achieve a good dough consistency. Be prepared to add a little more water as you mix this dough, as exact amounts are hard to provide.
- Ingredient Tips
Reviews
|
Actually needed lots more flour just to get a consistency that was moderately doughy, still was very wet even after adding 1/4 cup of flour (on a half recipe). Bread is very good. Great breakfast type bread |
Leslie 09/10/2005 |
Source Information
Classic Sourdoughs, A Home Baker's Handbook, Ed Wood,
- Ingredient listing and procedure steps modified for clarity