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Sourdough baking…it all begins with starter

Starter

With just a tiny bit of your time and very few supplies you can create a sourdough starter that can be passed down for generations! How cool is that?

Sourdough cultures contain communities of living organisms, with a history unique to each individual starter, and bakers can feel an obligation to maintain them. The different yeasts present in the air in any region also enter sourdough, causing starters to change depending on location. So your sourdough is uniquely yours!

All it takes is unbleached or all purpose flour and filtered water to create your starter. If you don’t have a filtering system for your water, just boil the water for 15 minutes on a slow boil to remove the chlorine, allowing the water to completely cool before using, alternately you can draw up a container of tap water and let it sit out for 24 hours so the chlorine will evaporate. You may also use whole wheat or rye flour. Make sure to feed at the same time each day. I recommend using a digital food scale to weigh your ingredients in grams instead of ounces because it is more accurate to me.

Day 1: Start out with 50 grams of water and 50 grams of flour. Mix well. Place in a jar with lid and allow to sit in a warm place for 24 hours. You will notice at this point that your starter consists of 1/2 water and 1/2 flour.

Day 2: 24 hours later, remove1/2 or 50 grams of your starter. This is your sourdough discard.

You should store the discard you keep in the refrigerator if you are not going to make something with it. Many people say to throw out the discard for the first 7-14 days, but I began to bake with mine and soon as I started seeing a lot of bubbles forming in it, which was around day 7 I think. Take the remaining 50 grams of starter, add 50 grams of flour and 50 grams of water. Mix well and put in jar with lid and sit on counter in a warm place for 24 hours. You have now fed your starter. As far as warm places go, I have placed my jar of starter in the oven with the oven light on for warmth. Make sure no one turns on your oven if you do this because some people have had quite a disaster when that happens!

Day 3: Stir starter and take out 50 grams to feed, the remainder will be added to your discard jar and you may use to bake or place in the refrigerator. To the 50 grams of starter you removed add 50 grams flour and 50 grams water. Mix well, place in jar with lid and sit in a warm place for 24 hours. You may begin to see some bubbles forming(a few) in the starter, and that is great! It means your starter is growing and beginning to come alive!

Day 4-7 you will continue to take out 50 grams of starter to feed, return remainder to discard jar to refrigerate or begin to bake discard recipes. Feed the 50 grams of starter as you did on day 3, place in jar with lid in a warm place. By day 7, you should surely be seeing some bubbles and activity in your starter. You will notice bubbles forming on the top and sides.

How exciting!! It’s alive!!! You have every right to be smiling at this point. You have persevered instead of giving up, like some people, and throwing it out. Soon you will have that active starter you want!

Beginning on Day 8-14: Take 50 grams of starter from your jar. Today you will increase your feeding a bit. You will add to your 50 grams starter, 75 grams water, 100 grams flour. Mix well and sit in warm place to grow. Continue to feed in this manner every 24 hours until you have a starter that is covered with bubbles on the sides and top. By the 14th day your starter should be bubbly and ready to produce delicious baked products. Enjoy!

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Sourdough Chocolate Chip Pecan Cookies!

Crunchy and delicious…

Who doesn’t love chocolate chip cookies? Add pecans to the mix and I am in heaven! In all my years of baking, I have found my cookies were never exactly how I wanted my cookies to be. They were either too thick and cake-like or they were too chewy and doughy.

Less than perfect…not what I was trying to accomplish!

My search for the perfect chocolate chip cookie led me to create my own recipe! I spent yesterday creating the recipe and last night was spent baking , testing and perfecting my recipe. The first batch was less than perfect…not quite sweet enough and too cake-like!

Adjustments were made and the results was amazing!

So I adjusted my recipe and baked again! The second batch was exactly what I have been searching for!! So crunchy…so thin and delicious!!

End results… a perfect, thin and crunchy sourdough cookie!!

I have posted my recipe on the recipe page..

For all of you that love thin, crunchy cookies, I have shared my recipe on the recipe page. While I don’t prefer a huge amount of chocolate chips in my cookies, you may and in that case I think you would be safe to add up to a cup more. I also added chopped pecans to mine, but this could be substituted for toffee brittle or another type of nuts. They also freeze after baking, really well. I froze some and got them out this morning to test them. I packaged mine 3 to a bag in sandwich bags, got all the air out and zipped them shut. Then I placed all the sandwich bags in a Ziplock gallon freezer bag and zipped it shut. Now when we want a cookie we can just take out a sandwich bag and zip the rest back up in the freezer! With the cost of groceries I am all about no waste!! I hope you will enjoy my recipe! Happy sourdough baking!!

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Sourdough baking…loving it!

I don’t know how I survived all those years without it in my life!

I have been busy today baking kolaches and working on new recipes to try. If you love sourdough as much as I do.. then I am sure you have been busy, and you understand! And of course I have to feed my starter.

I have found out through trial and error that not all recipes turn out right. Therefore, if it is something that I love…like biscotti…I am determined to create a recipe that works for me. I have accomplished my mission for today! Not only did I create the recipe, I baked and tested the recipe(yummy!). And the great news is that you can actually bite it without breaking a tooth from it being rock hard! If you read my earlier blog post about biscotti then you know what I mean!! They are crunchy but biteable! The real icing on the cake, so to speak, is that they are absolutely delicious!

I have posted my recipe on the recipe page. They freeze well too. I usually package mine individually in sandwich bags, squeezing all the air out before sealing, then I place all the sandwich bags in a gallon freezer bag and zip them up. When I want one I just remove a bag with one and zip up the rest. Thaw and enjoy! I don’t recommend heating in the microwave!!

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Another Sourdough Baking Success!

Sourdough Sausage Kolache

These just came out of my oven and I have got to say they are absolutely delicious! I have had sausage kolaches from bakeries that were no match to these!

I love link sausage anyway and coming from Alabama, we have the best sausage ever made, and they are made in Conecuh county , Al., called Conecuh Sausage. This sausage comes in numerous flavors having six different varieties and one specialty variety that comes out around Thanksgiving. I am sure any of them would be off the chart delicious in this recipe. The variety I had on hand was the Hickory Smoked Conecuh Sausage and I can tell you right now they are awesome!! If Conecuh sausage is not available in your neck of the woods, they do ship!

The sourdough with the Conecuh sausage is a match made in heaven! They are seriously that good, y’all!!

So find you a good recipe for Sourdough Kolaches (I found my recipe online) and make you some! You won’t be sorry…unless you eat so many that you have to buy new pants, but that is a story for another day!! LOL

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