Sake Lees Yeast - Liquid Bread Starter
- 60 grams Sake lees
- 180 grams Water
- 2 tsp Liquid yeast (I used raisin yeast)
- 1 large, 1 small Empty jars
- 1 Bread flour (for the starter)
- Break up the sake lees to fit into a sterilized jar and add the liquid yeast and water that's been boiled and cooled.
- Adjust the amount of sake lees and water to fit the jar.
- The following day, the sake lees should be settled at the bottom of the jar and be forming bubbles.
- After 4 or 5 days, the fermentation will slow, and the sake lees will start to float.
- This is the time to make the sponge dough (bread starter).
- Although it may be hard to see, there should be dregs at the bottom of the jar.
- (For reference) This is what the dregs in raisin yeast looks like (the white substance are the dregs).
- To make sponge dough, sterilize a large jar, a tea strainer, spoon, and chopsticks with boiling water.
- Strain the liquid yeast into the jar through the tea strainer, pressing it in the strainer with a spoon.
- This is the strained mixture!
- Discard the sake lees left in the tea strainer.
- Weigh the yeast liquid at this point.
- Add the same amount of bread flour as the amount of liquid yeast from Step 7, then mix with chopsticks until it's no longer floury.
- Cover the jar with a paper towel, fix it on with a rubber band, then put another rubber band around the jar to mark the height of the mixture, so that you know how much it has risen.
- After 3 to 4 hours, it should rise 2 to 3 times in height.
- Once it rises, close the lid and store it in the refrigerator.
- Steps 6 to 10 can be done in one day.
- After repeating this three times (over 3 days), you will get sponge dough.
- On the right is raisin yeast sponge dough.
- The consistency of the raisin yeast sponge dough is rough and thick.
- Sake lees yeast makes a finer and more watery sponge dough.
lees, water, yeast, empty jars, bread flour
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/148657-sake-lees-yeast-liquid-bread-starter (may not work)