Guest guest Posted November 9, 2004 Report Share Posted November 9, 2004 You don't really need sugar in your starter. The yeast will eat the goodies in the flour and do fine. In fact, your starter will be more sour without the sugar. It will take longer to get going, but fret not, it will make good starter. Once you have used up most of your starter, replentish it by adding equal measurements of plain water and plain flour. Stir vigorously for a bit and let the container sit on your countertop loosely covered (to keep bugs and curious children out) until it starts bubbling like lava from a volcano (my son's description! LOL!). At that point you can put the lid on tight and park the whole jar in the back of the fridge until you want it again. Take it out a couple of hours before you want to use it so it can warm up; otherwise your first bread rising will take forever and your pancakes might not get fluffy. -- Ann You spend your life fighting dirt, and when you die they bury you in it. hayakawa@... North Bend, Oregon, USA > Hello! I was intrigued by someone posting about making whole wheat sourdough > bread so I looked up a starter recipe. Here's my question... Can Splenda be > used in place of the sugar that is called for in the recipe? Splenda is made > FROM sugar, but will the yeast eat it? > > Here's a recipe I found... (I've never made a sourdough bread starter - just > made it in the bread machine from a mix.) > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2004 Report Share Posted November 9, 2004 Does anyone have the actual recipe for the bread, after you get the starter made? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2004 Report Share Posted November 9, 2004 Oh my my my!!!! I have never attempted to make bread before and looking at all this, I may never! This all sounds soooooooooo CONFUSING and time consuming and HARD!!!!! Kris Re: Question on Whole Wheat Sourdough Starter You don't really need sugar in your starter. The yeast will eat the goodies in the flour and do fine. In fact, your starter will be more sour without the sugar. It will take longer to get going, but fret not, it will make good starter. Once you have used up most of your starter, replentish it by adding equal measurements of plain water and plain flour. Stir vigorously for a bit and let the container sit on your countertop loosely covered (to keep bugs and curious children out) until it starts bubbling like lava from a volcano (my son's description! LOL!). At that point you can put the lid on tight and park the whole jar in the back of the fridge until you want it again. Take it out a couple of hours before you want to use it so it can warm up; otherwise your first bread rising will take forever and your pancakes might not get fluffy. -- Ann You spend your life fighting dirt, and when you die they bury you in it. hayakawa@... North Bend, Oregon, USA > Hello! I was intrigued by someone posting about making whole wheat sourdough > bread so I looked up a starter recipe. Here's my question... Can Splenda be > used in place of the sugar that is called for in the recipe? Splenda is made > FROM sugar, but will the yeast eat it? > > Here's a recipe I found... (I've never made a sourdough bread starter - just > made it in the bread machine from a mix.) > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 10, 2004 Report Share Posted November 10, 2004 > Oh my my my!!!! I have never attempted to make bread before and looking at > all this, I may never! This all sounds soooooooooo CONFUSING and time > consuming and HARD!!!!! > > Kris NOT!! Bread is easy. You dissolve the yeast in a little warm water, add all the wet ingredients, then the dry ingredients except the flour. You put in half the flour and mix it in well, then add the rest of the flour in 1-cup increments. Turn the dough out onto a well-floured countertop and knead until it's smooth. Pour a bit of olive oil in the bowl and put the dough back in. Turn it over a couple of times until it's coated with oil. Cover the whole thing with a dish towel and let it sit until it's double in size. Dump it out onto the well-floured counter and knead again. Divide the dough into 2 lumps and shape each one into a loaf. Put them into greased bread pans, cover with the towel you used before and let them sit and rise until close to double in size. Turn the oven on to 350* and bake the loaves for about an hour or until golden brown. When they are done they will have pulled away from the sides of the pans a bit. Take the loaves out of the pans pretty quick and let them cool on a rack. Or turn them sideways and sit them across the tops of the pans. If you let them cool in the pans the sides and bottoms will get soggy. Slap any hands that want to eat the bread before it cools completely. -- Ann You spend your life fighting dirt, and when you die they bury you in it. hayakawa@... North Bend, Oregon, USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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