Chef John's Sourdough Bread

c/o https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/260540/chef-johns-sourdough-bread/

By Chef John

Making your own sourdough bread does take a while, but the amount of actual work is minimal and the bread you'll get is spectacular!

Click this link to learn how to make sourdough starter


Sourdough bread

Ingredients:

  1. Measure out starter into a bowl. Add water, salt, and bread flour. Mix until ingredients are well blended into a very sticky dough.
    Cover with aluminum foil; let rest 4 hours at 70 to 75 degrees F (22 degrees C).
  2. With wet hands, fold dough over on itself 3 or 4 times. Cover with foil and allow dough to ferment for 2 more hours.
  3. Generously dust a bread form with rice flour (see Chef's Note for banneton substitution).
  4. Scrape dough out onto a lightly floured work surface (you can use bread flour or all-purpose flour). Shape into a ball with a smooth,
    unbroken surface, using just enough flour on the surface to keep it from sticking. Transfer smooth-side down to banneton.
    Pinch together the rougher edges of the surface toward the center to smooth them and maintain the round ball shape.
  5. Cover and refrigerate 12 hours to slow the fermentation process.
  6. Remove loaf from the refrigerator and let it rise in a warm spot until the dough springs slowly back and retains a slight indentation
    when poked gently with a finger, about 3 to 5 hours.
  7. Preheat oven to 450 degrees F (230 degrees C). Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper.
  8. Dust surface of dough with flour. Gently invert banneton over the baking sheet and transfer dough onto parchment paper.
    Gently brush off excess rice flour. Score the top of the dough about 1/8-inch deep with a sharp knife to create a shallow slit running
    across the center. Mist entire surface lightly with water.
  9. Bake in the center of preheated oven until beautifully browned, 25 to 30 minutes.
  10. Transfer to a rack to cool completely (do not slice loaf while it is still warm).

Chef's Notes

If you don't have a banneton, you can simply line a similarly sized bowl with a tightly woven cotton kitchen towel and generously coat it
with rice flour. I've done that before, and it works exactly the same. The only difference is the wooden basket "breathes," unlike a metal bowl,
but I don't think that's a huge deal.

Nutrition Information:

Servings Per Recipe: 8

Calories: 204.8

Name Amount % Daily Value *
Protein 6.9g 14 %
Carbohydrates 41.2g 13 %
Dietary Fiber 1.5g 6 %
Sugars 0.4g n/a
Fat 0.9g 1 %
Saturated Fat 0.1g 1 %
Cholesterol 0.1mg n/a
Vitamin A Iu 10.5IU n/a
Niacin Equivalents 5.5mg 42 %
Folate 115.7mcg 29 %
Calcium 14.7mg 2%
Iron 2.5mg 14 %
Magnesium 15.6mg 6 %
Potassium 77.5mg 2 %
Sodium 404.8mg 16 %
Thiamin 0.4mg 40 %
Calories From Fat 8.4 n/a