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Re: GF Dosa Sourdough

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Heidi wrote:

>I made some dosa-do (our name for the bean/rice kefir fermented mix).

>[...]

>Third batch, also didn't rise. So in frustration, I just ignored it for

>a few days. Then it rose ... a little. I baked it, thinking to feed it

>to the chickens.

>

>But sheesh ... it is *delicious*! I mean, we are talking gourmet

>sourdough here. [...]

Excellent timing, Heidi!

Yesterday, I started a batch of dosa batter, without any inoculant, and

this morning it hadn't risen. So, I whisked in about half a cup of GF

sourdough starter, and we went out for the afternoon. When we got home,

it had more than doubled in size - ready for dosa or whatever else!

Due to my wife's enthusiasm, we had quite a lot of batter. I had a look

at the computer to see what to do next, and lo! behold! Heidi has made a

loaf of bread with this stuff! And it just so happens that we'd just put

the oven on to bake a loaf of GF sourdough... so now it has two loaves

in there :)

Thanks for shortcutting our experiments - I wasn't going to try the loaf

idea until the weekend, but now we've got one on the way anyway!

cheers,

Ross.

--

Ross McKay, Toronto, NSW Australia

" Let the laddie play wi the knife - he'll learn "

- The Wee Book of Calvin

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So Ross, how did it turn out?

-- Heidi

>

>

> Due to my wife's enthusiasm, we had quite a lot of batter. I had a look

> at the computer to see what to do next, and lo! behold! Heidi has made a

> loaf of bread with this stuff! And it just so happens that we'd just put

> the oven on to bake a loaf of GF sourdough... so now it has two loaves

> in there :)

>

> Thanks for shortcutting our experiments - I wasn't going to try the loaf

> idea until the weekend, but now we've got one on the way anyway!

>

>

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Lana Gibbons wrote:

> Heidi,

>

> Can I have your dosa-do recipe?

>

> -Lana

>

It's not really a recipe yet, but here's what I did:

2 cups rice (I used short-grain)

1 cup beans (I used red beans, but I'm experimenting with others).

Soak in water for a day or two.

Rinse.

Pulverize in the blender with a little salt

Add some kefir beer and let them ferment for a day.

Put in the fridge or use.

To make dosas, just take the fermented batter and make it

into crepes. They spoon it on in a spiral onto a hot griddle,

but you can experiment.

To make bread, I basically just added some flour to

thicken it (rice flour, in my case: probably buckwheat

or sorghum would be better). I had problems getting it

to rise: Ross's idea of using a sourdough starter (or even

plain yeast) might work. Or maybe I let it ferment too long.

-- Heidi

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Heidi wrote:

> So Ross, how did it turn out?

Not bad, actually. I was baking the other loaf (buckwheat flour / brown

rice flour) at 250°C (480°F) to get it to be less sticky on the inside,

so the idli loaf came out with a hard, crumbly crust - but inside the

crust was a really nice, fluffy white bread. SWMBO was well pleased! We

just need to mess around with temperatures and times now.

What temperature / time did you bake your loaf at? And was it sticky on

the inside? I've found that my wholewheat and rye loaves come out of the

oven a little sticky but are fine the day after if wrapped in a

tea-towel, but my buckwheat / brown rice loaves stay sticky (but things

are improving as I raise the temp and extend the bake time). I'd really

love to get a nice GF sourdough loaf that tastes good and can be used

for bread, not just toast (albeit her loveliness does love her toast! We

went away for a few days, and she took a loaf with her to make toast in

the motel room)

Today, I'll de-hull some chickpeas I soaked overnight, and have a crack

at chickpea and rice idli batter. Will use my sourdough starter to get

it fermenting again. Also need to make dosa for breakfast :)

Oh, and what beans and rice were you using, and in what proportions? We

used the white urad dal (i.e. black urad dal with the skin removed) with

arborio rice, 2 cups urad to 5 cups rice. I think you said you used

little red beans - does that mean adzuki beans?

--

Ross McKay, Toronto, NSW Australia

" Let the laddie play wi the knife - he'll learn "

- The Wee Book of Calvin

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Heidi wrote:

>[...]

>Soak in water for a day or two.

>Rinse.

>Pulverize in the blender with a little salt

Ah, that was the other thing - our little blender really struggled

through blending the urad dal. I ended up blending the rice in our

little food processor instead. I don't think the old style of blender is

well suited to grinding urad dal!

>[...] I had problems getting it

>to rise: Ross's idea of using a sourdough starter (or even

>plain yeast) might work. Or maybe I let it ferment too long.

I was hoping that it would start fermenting nicely with just the

fenugreek, but that didn't work, so I whisked in a half cup of sourdough

starter and it really took off - more than doubled in size over eight

hours or so.

--

Ross McKay, Toronto, NSW Australia

" Let the laddie play wi the knife - he'll learn "

- The Wee Book of Calvin

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Ross McKay wrote:

>

>

> Ah, that was the other thing - our little blender really struggled

> through blending the urad dal. I ended up blending the rice in our

> little food processor instead. I don't think the old style of blender is

> well suited to grinding urad dal!

Yeah, I have a Vita-mix. Even so, it smelled like ozone.

I guess traditionally they used a grinding stone. Wouldn't

be too bad, really, it's pretty soft after the soaking. Maybe I should

get one!

>

> I was hoping that it would start fermenting nicely with just the

> fenugreek, but that didn't work, so I whisked in a half cup of sourdough

> starter and it really took off - more than doubled in size over eight

> hours or so.

I had kefir beer in it, and it bubbled a LOT for a day.

After that, it didn't. So I think a day is too long,

too much bubbling!

For your other questions:

The beans were about like pinto beans, but all red/brown. I

don't know where I got them. This batch I'm using black

beans. I should try the lentils though.

The rice was short-grain oriental rice. Sticky when you

cook it, makes good sushi, but it's not " glutinous " rice.

And yeah, I'm with you on looking for a good " perfect

recipe " ! This one was close! I think it was sticky mainly

because it didn't rise much. But it sure isn't crumbly,

which has been our major problem.

Here are some great GF tips BTW:

http://alamoceliac.org/actipstoriseornottorise.html

http://alamoceliac.org/actipsbreadbakingtips.html

-- Heidi

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Heidi wrote:

>I had kefir beer in it, and it bubbled a LOT for a day.

>After that, it didn't. So I think a day is too long,

>too much bubbling!

Yes, too much, I'm sure - ours was definitely ready for use after eight

hours of fermenting with a starter.

>[...]

>And yeah, I'm with you on looking for a good " perfect

>recipe " ! This one was close! I think it was sticky mainly

>because it didn't rise much. But it sure isn't crumbly,

>which has been our major problem.

It was only crumbly on the outside - crust like concrete, crumbly when

sawn or otherwise broken. Inside was a delightful, moist, soft bread!

>Here are some great GF tips BTW:

>

>http://alamoceliac.org/actipstoriseornottorise.html

>http://alamoceliac.org/actipsbreadbakingtips.html

Thanks, will have a read of them. Our buckwheat / brown rice bread with

xanthum and guar gum is pretty good, not crumbly at all, has a nice

crust, and tastes like a great sourdough - it's just a little sticky

when cut. I chatted with a gluten-free baker in Melbourne, and she told

me to cut back on the gums a little, raise the temperature to 250°C, and

bake for 75 minutes - seems to be almost right now (just a tiny bit

sticky). So maybe I'm nearly there with that recipe :) which means it's

time to move on to something else!

--

Ross McKay, Toronto, NSW Australia

" There is more to life than simply increasing its speed. " - Mahatma Gandhi

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Ross McKay wrote:

>

> It was only crumbly on the outside - crust like concrete, crumbly when

> sawn or otherwise broken. Inside was a delightful, moist, soft bread!

Mine had a really hard crust too, BTW. But it had sat out for 2 days

so had dried out.

Sometimes when I bake bread though, I use a pan of water

in the oven. That helps the crust alot. I got the idea from our

water smoker. I baked bread out in it once, and it had

a great crust. <http://alamoceliac.org/actipsbreadbakingtips.html>

> Thanks, will have a read of them. Our buckwheat / brown rice bread with

> xanthum and guar gum is pretty good, not crumbly at all, has a nice

> crust, and tastes like a great sourdough - it's just a little sticky

> when cut. I chatted with a gluten-free baker in Melbourne, and she told

> me to cut back on the gums a little, raise the temperature to 250°C, and

> bake for 75 minutes - seems to be almost right now (just a tiny bit

> sticky). So maybe I'm nearly there with that recipe :) which means it's

> time to move on to something else!

Y'know, I never would have dared such a high heat for so long!

I'll have to try it! I tried a " high heat turkey " once, and it really

did nicely.

I'm not against xanthan and I do use it, but you are right, it

makes it a little sticky. Also I like the idea, aesthetically, of

few ingredients. Simple is good!

I have another batch bubbling for the AM ...

-- Heidi

> --

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Heidi wrote:

>Mine had a really hard crust too, BTW. But it had sat out for 2 days

>so had dried out.

>

>Sometimes when I bake bread though, I use a pan of water

>in the oven. That helps the crust alot. I got the idea from our

>water smoker. I baked bread out in it once, and it had

>a great crust. <http://alamoceliac.org/actipsbreadbakingtips.html>

Yes, I had meant to do that this time, but forgot; it was enough that I

remembered to cover the other loaf with foil (q.v.)

>Y'know, I never would have dared such a high heat for so long!

>I'll have to try it! I tried a " high heat turkey " once, and it really

>did nicely.

Just watch that the top doesn't burn on you. My friend the GF baker told

me that GF flours need baking at higher temperatures because they have a

higher gelatinising temperature, but that " the trick is then to do this

without burning the bread " :)

I covered the top with foil, slashed to allow the loaf to breath, to

keep the direct hot blast off the loaf (fan-forced oven) and it seemed

to work OK. Should be even better with a pan of water in the oven too.

Apparently, commercial bakers' ovens have steam injection to maintain a

nice crust (or so says Silverton in her sourdough book).

If you do try it, work up in steps and check the inside of the loaf with

a skewer / cake tester. I found that my loaf needs the extra time / heat

in my oven with my ingredients and methods, but if you followed just

time and heat with different stuff you could bake a charcoal brick :)

>I'm not against xanthan and I do use it, but you are right, it

>makes it a little sticky. Also I like the idea, aesthetically, of

>few ingredients. Simple is good!

That's my next trick - make a loaf without guar or xanthum gum. But I

want to get one loaf right first! Pretty close now... and the idli

batter loaf looks promising...

>I have another batch bubbling for the AM ...

I've stuck a wheat/rye loaf on to proof, bake later, so will leave the

next idli batter until tomorrow. An extra day's soaking won't hurt the

chickpeas or rice.

--

Ross McKay, Toronto, NSW Australia

" The lawn could stand another mowing; funny, I don't even care "

- Elvis Costello

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