Tartine's Country Bread
- 1000 grams white-bread flour
- 1000 grams whole-wheat flour
- 200 grams leaven
- 900 grams white-bread flour
- 100 grams whole-wheat flour, plus more for dusting
- 20 grams fine sea salt
- 100 grams rice flour
- Make the starter: Combine 1,000 grams white-bread flour with 1,000 grams whole-wheat flour.
- Put 100 grams of warm water (about 80 degrees) in a small jar or container and add 100 grams of the flour mix.
- Use your fingers to mix until thoroughly combined and the mixture is the consistency of thick batter.
- Cover with a towel and let sit at room temperature until mixture begins to bubble and puff, 2 to 3 days.
- When starter begins to show signs of activity, begin regular feedings.
- Keep the starter at room temperature, and at the same time each day discard 80 percent of the starter and feed remaining starter with equal parts warm water and white-wheat flour mix (50 grams of each is fine).
- When starter begins to rise and fall predictably and takes on a slightly sour smell, its ready; this should take about 1 week.
- (Reserve remaining flour mix for leaven.)
- Make the leaven: The night before baking, discard all but 1 tablespoon of the mature starter.
- Mix the remaining starter with 200 grams of warm water and stir with your hand to disperse.
- Add 200 grams of the white-wheat flour mix and combine well.
- Cover with a towel and let rest at room temperature for 12 hours or until aerated and puffed in appearance.
- To test for readiness, drop a tablespoon of leaven into a bowl of room-temperature water; if it floats its ready to use.
- If it doesnt, allow more time to ferment.
- Make the dough: In a large bowl, combine 200 grams of leaven with 700 grams of warm water and stir to disperse.
- (Reserve remaining leaven for future loaves; see note below.)
- Add 900 grams of white-bread flour and 100 grams of whole-wheat flour to bowl and use your hands to mix until no traces of dry flour remain.
- The dough will be sticky and ragged.
- Cover bowl with a towel and let dough rest for 25 to 40 minutes at room temperature.
- Add 20 grams fine sea salt and 50 grams warm water.
- Use hands to integrate salt and water into dough thoroughly.
- The dough will begin to pull apart, but continue mixing; it will come back together.
- Cover dough with a towel and transfer to a warm environment, 75 to 80 degrees ideally (like near a window in a sunny room, or inside a turned-off oven).
- Let dough rise for 30 minutes.
- Fold dough by dipping hand in water, taking hold of the underside of the dough at one quadrant and stretching it up over the rest of the dough.
- Repeat this action 3 more times, rotating bowl a quarter turn for each fold.
- Do this every half-hour for 2 1/2 hours more (3 hours total).
- The dough should be billowy and increase in volume 20 to 30 percent.
- If not, continue to let rise and fold for up to an hour more.
- Transfer dough to a work surface and dust top with flour.
- Use a dough scraper to cut dough into 2 equal pieces and flip them over so floured sides are face down.
- Fold the cut side of each piece up onto itself so the flour on the surface remains entirely on the outside of the loaf; this will become the crust.
- Work dough into taut rounds.
- Place the dough rounds on a work surface, cover with a towel, and let rest 30 minutes.
- Mix 100 grams whole-wheat flour and 100 grams rice flours.
- Line two 10- to 12-inch bread-proofing baskets or mixing bowls with towels.
- Use some of the flour mixture to generously flour towels (reserve remaining mixture).
- Dust rounds with whole-wheat flour.
- Use a dough scraper to flip them over onto a work surface so floured sides are facing down.
- Take one round, and starting at the side closest to you, pull the bottom 2 corners of the dough down toward you, then fold them up into the middle third of the dough.
- Repeat this action on the right and left sides, pulling the edges out and folding them in over the center.
- Finally, lift the top corners up and fold down over previous folds.
- (Imagine folding a piece of paper in on itself from all 4 sides.)
- Roll dough over so the folded side becomes the bottom of the loaf.
- Shape into a smooth, taut ball.
- Repeat with other round.
- Transfer rounds, seam-side up, to prepared baskets.
- Cover with a towel and return dough to the 75- to 80-degree environment for 3 to 4 hours.
- (Or let dough rise for 10 to 12 hours in the refrigerator.
- Bring back to room temperature before baking.)
- About 30 minutes before baking, place a Dutch oven or lidded cast-iron pot in the oven and heat it to 500 degrees.
- Dust tops of dough, still in their baskets, with whole-wheat/rice-flour mixture.
- Very carefully remove heated pot from oven and gently turn 1 loaf into pan seam-side down.
- Use a lame (a bakers blade) or razor blade to score the top of the bread a few times to allow for expansion, cover and transfer to oven.
- Reduce temperature to 450 degrees and cook for 20 minutes.
- Carefully remove lid (steam may release) and cook for 20 more minutes or until crust is a rich, golden brown color.
- Transfer bread to a wire rack to cool for at least 15 minutes before slicing.
- The bottom of the loaf should sound hollow when tapped.
- Increase oven temperature to 500 degrees, clean out pot and repeat this process with the second loaf.
whitebread, flour, leaven, flour, salt, rice flour
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1016277 (may not work)