INGREDIENTS
400 gms strong white bread flour (I'm using Wright's Canadian : 13% protein)
100 gms Caputo Nuvola (a Tipo '0' flour from Italy)
385 gms tepid filtered water
30 gms active starter (fed last night. 1:1:1 spelt flour)
2 tablespoons olive oil
5 gms diastatic malt
11 gms of flaked sea salt (Dave uses Smoked Flake Salt for added flavour, so I am as well)
![]() |
| Ready to go... |
METHOD
1. Mix together the flours and diastatic malt.
2. In a separate bowl, mix the starter with the water.
3. Add the olive oil to the starter / water mix.
4. Gradually mix in the flours / malt.
5. Autolyse for 1 hour
6. Add the salt and mix thoroughly.
![]() |
| I wouldn't be without my spirtle |
![]() |
| It produces a lovely dough with which to work |
![]() |
| 30 minute intervals (one per spoon.....to aid a failing memory) for 4 sets of stretch and fold. I substituted a coil fold for the last stretch and fold sequence. Please Click Next for Part 2 ↚ |
8. Allow to continue to bulk ferment. My kitchen was 20⁰C, so bulk fermentation (from the end of the stretch and fold sequences) took 6 hours
9. Place the dough into the fridge at 5⁰C, overnight.
![]() |
| The bottom line is my starting point. The top line is where I was after 6 hours and the final level is after 14 hours cold proofing at 5⁰C |
10. Remove from the fridge and divide into bannetons.
10. Rest for 2 hours.
11. Preheat the oven to 220⁰C and reduce to 200⁰C for baking.
12. Bake on a pizza stone on a middle shelf and mist the oven or provide steam as appropriate.
13. Bake until golden brown and hollow when tapped underneath.
14. Cool on a rack
Happy baking.....
NOTES
- Maldon Smoked Flaked Sea Salt must be unique. The crystals are irregularly-shaped pyramids. It's produced near Maldon, a town on the Blackwater Estuary in Essex, England. The salt is smoked over oak to give it its distinctive flavour. Maldon, itself, was first recorded back in 913 AD in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and is also famous for being the site of a famous battle on 11th August 991AD when Byrhtnoth, the Saxon Warrior was slain by Viking raiders. It's a fine example of hubris. Byrhtnoth exaggerates his boast to his men, thus showing an excess of either pride or courage which leads to his eventual downfall.
- Caputo Nuvola flour is a Tipo 0 flour from Italy. It's milled by Mulino Caputo in Naples, Italy and has an inherent lightness that makes it superb for Italian bakes and pizza doughs.
- Diastatic Malt Powder is made from finely-ground malted barley and is used to soften the crumb and also to darken the crust. Never use more than 0.5% - 1% in a bake, otherwise the bread may well become sticky.
Please join our facebook group for more recipes and tipsClick Here to join









Post a Comment