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"Ed Bechtel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > I am happy with the loaf, but it is no Iggy's Francessca. Also, inorder to get > this bread close to a loaf shape everything was done is short order (5 hours) > while the SD yeasts were still active and at the expense of flavor. > Improvements are always sought. > > Thanks, You are working with WheatMontana which is a high protein flour, why don't you try 1/2 of the total flour and water as a preferment. I would think there would still be enough gluten strength in the preferment to support the loaf, but you should have a flavor gain from the preferment. Or, try letting the formed loaf just begin to move and overnight it in the refrigerator. Begin preheating your oven before you take the loaf from the refrigerator. Preheat for an hour as high as your oven will go. Take the loaf from the refrigerator and let it begin to warm. It doesn't have to reach room temperature.(maybe 30-40 minutes) You should have had volume gain overnight, so you want to put the loaf in the oven just as it begins to lose the ultra-chill and starts to feel --I don't know how to describe it--maybe lively? Definitely not flabby or poofy. I discovered the other day that you can transfer dough to the peel by lifting the parchment with the dough on it and the dough will adjust it's shape to the movement but not deflate. Leave the parchment under the dough on the peel and get it in the oven that way, there is much less jostling with parchment(I think) than with corn meal or rice flour. Turn your oven down to 450F once you get the loaf placed. You should have great oven spring and minimal horizontal slump. Janet
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