Showing posts with label sourdough starter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sourdough starter. Show all posts

Friday, November 24, 2023

Sourdough Dinner Rolls

 




1½ cup sourdough starter

½ cup warm water

2 tbsp. butter

1 egg

¼ cup sugar

3½ cups all-purpose flour

2 tsp. yeast

Combine the sourdough starter with the warm water and mix to combine.  (If you don’t have 1½ cups of starter, just add enough water to equal 2 cups of liquid).  Place ingredients in the bread machine in the following order: butter, starter mixture, egg, sugar, flour, salt, (optional herbs or spices) and finally the yeast. 

Select dough setting.  Once the bread machine has stopped, remove dough and let rest about 5 minutes.  Cut into 12-16 equal portions and roll in balls.  Place on parchment paper line cookie sheet and press to flatten just slightly.  Cover with towel to rise for about 45-60 minutes.  Preheat oven to 375ยบ.  If desired, brush tops of rolls with beaten egg or milk and cut little crosses in the tops.  Bake 12-15 minutes.  Remove, cool, serve.

Other options.

Herb Garlic Rolls: add ½ tsp. thyme, ½ tsp. garlic powder, ½ tsp. basil, and ½ tsp. oregano.

Sweet Spice Rolls: increase sugar to ½ cup and add ½ tsp. cinnamon, ½ tsp. allspice, ½ tsp. nutmeg. 

 © Crackerberries 2023


PS if you want to read more about Christmas and newsletters check out the post over on Crackerberries writings.


Saturday, April 22, 2023

Sourdough Starter - Feeding the Flock 23

 





BEER SOURDOUGH STARTER
1 cup Sam Adams Alpine lager
¾ cup all-purpose flour
2 tbsp. rice flour 
1 tbsp. whole wheat flour

Open bottle of beer 24 hours in advance of making dough and let it go flat.
Mix dry ingredients together.  Add beer and stir well to combine.
Cover with cheesecloth and then plastic wrap.  Let stand 24-48 hours, stirring every 12 hours. After the 48 hours, either refrigerate or feed.

It will be bubbly and smell strongly fermented.

You can find out how to "feed" and maintain your sourdough starter here.

I do not have the recipe for the white sourdough starter because it was given to me.  The recipes that I have found use a commercial dry sourdough starter (there must be a better way)!

I'm going to use my beer starter for the first time today.

Enjoy.




Don't forget to check out what's going on over at the Step in Time.



Sunday, March 26, 2023

Introduction - Feeding the Flock 23

 


I've recently come across this new obsession of cooking with sourdough starter.  My friend, Kathy gave me the starter back in December. At first I was keeping it on the counter, feeding it daily and using it every other day.  After the holidays, I started storing it in the fridge and using it on the weekends.  I’ve been doing a lot of experimenting and have come up with quite a few yummy recipes.  A lot of my posts  for the A-Z challenge , as I mentioned in the theme reveal will incorporate the dough starter. 

I’ve yet to try building my own sourdough starter; perhaps April 22nd with the letter S.  Once you successfully create your own sourdough starter, you will want to keep it healthy with regular feedings.  If you bake a lot you may choose to keep it on the counter at room temperature and feed it twice a day.  If you don’t bake a lot, then you would want to keep it in the refrigerator and only will feed it once a week.

 

Instructions for keeping your sourdough starter healthy.

 

Keeping dough at room temperature

½ cup sourdough starter

1 scant cup

½ cup lukewarm water

 

Stir the starter.  Spoon ½ cup into a bowl, discard or use remaining starter. Add 1 scant cup flour and ½ cup warm water to the ½ cup starter dough, mix until smooth, return to the jar/crock and cover with cheesecloth.

Repeat this process every 12 hours, feeding twice a day.  Remove the starter to bake with as soon as it is expanded and bubbly, then feed the ½ cup and revert to the normal 12-hour schedule.

Keeping dough in the refrigerator

Keeping dough at room temperature

½ cup sourdough starter

1 scant cup

½ cup lukewarm water

 

Take the starter out of the fridge.  There may be a bit of liquid (it’s a byproduct from the yeast fermenting) on top. Stir it into the starter.  Spoon ½ cup into a bowl, discard or use remaining starter. Add 1 scant cup flour and ½ cup warm water to the ½ cup starter dough, mix until smooth, return to the jar/crock and cover with cheesecloth.

Let the starter rest at room temperature for about two hours, this gives the yeast a chance to warm up and get feeding.  Then return to fridge and repeat this process at least once a week.

Cheers