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Garden Herb Sourdough

Gardens are burgeoning with greenery so it is a good time for a straightforward sourdough loaf using garden herbs. This loaf is fairly light containing mostly white flour with some rye and spelt flour for more complex flavours. I used a selection of herbs currently in our garden: parsley, coriander, sorrel, chives, rosemary and a good helping of nasturtium leaves which have a mild peppery flavour. You can any herbs that you have, just make sure that you take out any woody bits before finely chopping them all up.

You need 150g of white sourdough starter which you should make before starting this recipe (read this article to see how to look after your starter). To your stored starter, add 80g flour and 70g water, stir and leave at room temperature for at least 24 and not more than 48 hours. You can now return all but the 150g to your storage pot.

I’ve baked this one in a La Cloche Baking Dome, just arrived at BakeryBits. The La Cloche baking dome is made from stoneware and designed to fit inside a standard domestic oven to mimic a wood-fired oven: the oven dome traps the steam and maintains an even baking temperature to give you moist bread with a golden, even and crackly crust.

Ingredients:

  • 150g white sourdough starter
  • 400g strong white flour
  • 100g spelt flour
  • 100g rye flour
  • 360g luke-warm water
  • 10g fine sea salt
  • 30g poppy seeds
  • 75g finely chopped mixed herbs
  • grated cheese for topping (e.g. cheddar or red leicester)

Method:

In a bowl, use a dough whisk to mix the warm water and sourdough starter to make a lump-free liquid. To this, add all of the remaining ingredients (except the cheese), and mix together until roughly combined then leave for about 10 minutes to allow the flour to take up some of the liquid. Following Dan Lepard‘s low-knead method, scrape all of the bowl contents out onto a lightly floured surface, knead the dough for 10 seconds and then put back into the bowl for another 10 minutes, knead for 10 seconds and repeat. Leave for 30 minutes and then knead for 10 seconds again. The dough should be becoming easier to handle now with most of the liquid absorbed. Repeat after another 30 minutes and then after 1 hour.

Tip the dough from the bowl, knead and shape to form a cob, with the top-most part of the dough stretched smooth and the seam tucked underneath. Dust a 1kg proving basket with rye (or rice or potato) flour and leave for about two hours, or until doubled in volume.

If you are using a La Cloche for the first time, the base should be lightly oiled. Heat your oven to 220°C. I like to place the empty La Cloche into the oven so that it is hot when the dough is inserted to give better oven spring. When the oven is up to temperature, remove the La Cloche, gently tip your proved dough onto the centre of the base of the dome’s base and score a cross using a grignette. Into the gaps cut by the grignette, sprinkle a generous amount of grated cheese. Replace the La Cloche dome and return to the oven. Bake for 40-50 minutes after which remove the dome and bake for a further 10 minutes by which time the loaf should be evenly golden brown with a blistered crust. Put the loaf onto a cooling rack to cool.

 

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19 Responses to “Garden Herb Sourdough”

  • Darren:

    Hi there, I’ve tried the loaf today and I think there may be something wrong with my starter. It’s been going for a couple of weeks but, as this is the second loaf that I’ve made that hasn’t risen, something is evidently wrong! The starter is bubbling slightly – and smells pretty strong, but nothing seems to happen. Temperatures are warm enough in the house, so I’m thinking it may be the water that’s gone into it. We can only use bottled water here (in Riyadh) and I suppose it must have chlorine to some degree in it. Can you confirm how dense the loaf should be, because mine is extremely dense! Thanks,

  • Ruth – 20C is OK although optimum is higher than that for the yeasts and bacteria to thrive at about the same level – 28-30C if you can manage it.

  • ruth:

    Hi Patrick. Thanks for that. It’s a comfort to know that I’m on the right track. So just one last question! What temperature does it need to be kept at when I add the flour and water I need for the recipe. My room temperature is 19 – 22 degrees C, much lower than the temperature I used to get the starter going. Is this OK? Ruth

  • Hi Ruth- it sounds like it is working! The dark liquid is a normal product of the microbiological action on the flour in the starter. If, to the starter you now add flour and water in the ratio 5:4 in order to build a quantity for making some bread then in a few hours you should see evidence of activity and in 12 hours lots of activity.
    Patrick

  • ruth:

    I really want to master making sourdough and I’m on my third attempt at getting my started up and going using the San Fancisco starter.
    Here’s what happens: for the first 2 days every time I add more flour/water mix I end up with a nice head of froth on the starter, which I assume is the desired effect. From day 3 it doesn’t froth up anymore. What I get instead is a liquid with an alcohol layer on top with a faint sour smell – it definetly doesn’t smell off. I’ve kept going and I’m on day 5 now. The sour smell isn’t getting stronger. What can I be doing wrong?
    I’ve made sure that the temperature is right; the flour is organic; the water has no chlorine; it’s been fed at the right times and with the right mix of flour/water. Any advice would be helpful at this point.

  • Kim McBirnie:

    Love the blog- I’ve been making bread for a while but still consider myself an absolute beginner, it’s good to read your entries and get some inspiration. Not so good on the waistline I can imagine though! Looking forward to spending some time reading older posts.

  • ruth:

    I have just made the most outstanding challah and bagels in the La Cloche. Even my fiercest critics (the kids) were bowled over by them.

    I have been making my own challah and bagels for years because all the so called ‘traditional’ bakers use flour improver! The bread I have been making for years had a much nicer flavour, but the texture, particularly of the crust, was never quite right. Using the cloche was a revelation – I have no words for how good the bread was. I’m in bread heaven.

  • Alan, you can leave it in an airing cupboard, but all of the food will be exhausted fairly quickly and so the yeasts and bacteria will die-off quite rapidly. If you leave your culture in the ‘fridge then the level of microbial activity will be much lower and so the die-off will be lower too, making for easier refresh and with a wider range of the yeasts and bacteria surviving.

    Patrick

  • Alan:

    Are you all sure that the culture needs to go in the fridge? I have kept mine for many weeks in the airing cupboard without apparent harm. There quickly develops a top layer of alcohol which seems to protect the culture beneath. I have got away with feeding it every couple of months.

    Or do I now have a toxic brew??

  • ruth:

    I think I’m just going to start again and give it another go. Thanks

  • Hmm. It sounds like something may be killing it – it was going as normal so something is going on to reduce the activity. Only water and temperature come to mind. Are you using tap water? If so, do you know if it is very chlorinated (sometimes you can smell it)? Chlorine is there to kill yeasts and bacteria that it comes into contact with. Otherwise, have you kept the starter at room temperature, or reasonably warm (but not hot)? Just to check, the water that you added, this was at tap or room temperature? Very odd!

  • ruth:

    I have been feeding it every day. what do you recommend I do?

  • Ruth – glad you’re getting on well with the La Cloche. With regard to the starter sachet, if bubbling away then it was working. Did you follow through with the instructions and feed it? It may be that the flour that has been added has been consumed.

  • ruth:

    I have just had my first go at using the La Cloche yesterday using an ordinary yeasted bread recipe and it has definetly produced a better loaf than using a standard bread tin.

    The reason I didn’t use the sour dough recipe is because I’m having a little difficulty getting the starter going. I started it last week using the sachet of San Francisco starter. The first 2 days it was bubbling away. Now there are no bubbles, a liquid has formed on the top and it has only the barest smell of sour. Should I throw it away and start again? I would really appreciate your advice.

  • Oonagh Vanham:

    Gorgeous recipe! Made it today and it worked beautifully; what a marvellous kneading method for people who have loads of things to do all at one time. I am definitely a convert to this method from now on. Used my baking dome with great results. Thank you, Patrick, this recipe will become a firm favourite in this household.

  • I like this inspiring recipe.

    I will do it again this weekend. I’d like to take a picture – the pile of green herbs (before chopping) against the compact grey dough would make a great image, but everything is mixed together at once. So easy to make but less of a photo opportunity!

    I didn’t use and enclosed pot, but baked in the oven as usual.

    Using fresh herbs the flavours become quite muted, and although I only used a little of chives this was the predominant taste. This time I will not hold back on the quantity of the other stuff (oragano, parsley, rocket, rosemary, winter savory …).

    No poppy seeds – so I’m not sure of the value of this ingredient. And the cheese on top is probably not necessary unless you want ‘cheesey herb bread’ – it can look a bit messy.

    This ‘light kneeding’ is new to me, and the result was quite satisfactory.

  • Barbara – I have not tried the cake baker – I don’t know that it will bake as evenly, but you’ll have to try it!

  • A reply would be appreciated

  • I bake my bread in an Aga. I have an Aga cake tin (which sounds remarkably like your La Cloche). Could I use the cake baker?

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