Thursday, January 27, 2011

Banish the Blowout | Wild Yeast

Banish the Blowout | Wild Yeast

In general, a blowout happens when the crust sets before the inside has finished expanding. This can happen on the top, bottom, or side of the loaf. One or a combination of factors can be the culprit:

* Underproofing. Too much stretch left in the dough when it goes into the oven allows it to continue to expand past the point when the crust is set. Proofing time as stated in a recipe should always be used as a guideline, not an absolute time. If your room temperature and/or dough temperature differ significantly from those suggested in the recipe, the proofing time will, too. Most breads are well proofed when the indentation left by a fingertip springs back slowly, about halfway.
* No or insufficient scoring. In addition to making your loaves look pretty, scoring provides controlled locations for expansion. As we know often happens with other things, damming the floodgates can, paradoxically, lead to all hell breaking loose. The loaf in the photo above obviously wasn’t scored.
* Insufficient steam at the beginning of the bake. Steam delays the setting of the crust, allowing it to expand along with the interior of the loaf. The bread above also suffered from too little steam, another tipoff of which is the dullness of the crust. Here is some information on steaming your bread.
* Uneven oven temperature, or the loaves too crowded in the oven. This creates cool spots on the surface of the loaves, which are then perfect escape hatches for expanding dough. If you see blowouts on the sides where the loaves are closest together, this is almost certainly the cause.

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Many thanks to WildYeastblog.com!!!!

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