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Bulgur Bread

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
  1. Culure Activation Stage 1, followed by 6 or 12 hour proof
  2. Mix the liquid culture with the flour, bulgur, and water in a large mixing bowl. This is the working culture.
  3. Proof 12 hours at room temperature (68°-72°) or 6 hours in a proofing box at 85°
  4. Culture Activation Stage 2, followed by 4 or 8 hour proof.
  5. Add flour and water. Mix and knead until smooth.
  6. Proof 8 hours at room temperature or 4 hours in the proofing box. After proofing, this is the fully active culture.
  7. Final Bread preparation, kneading, rising, and baking. Includes 2½ to 3 hour proof.
  8. Punch down. Dissolve the salt in the remaining water. Add to the dough and mix well.
  9. Reserve some of the flour for flouring the board. Mix and spoon knead the remaining flour into the dough.
  10. When too stiff to mix by hand, transfer to the floured board and knead in the remaining flour.
  11. 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).
  12. 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

thumb_classic_sourdoughs.png

Classic Sourdoughs, A Home Baker's Handbook, Ed Wood,

  • Ingredient listing and procedure steps modified for clarity

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