Buy the t-shirt: fdgk.net/buy-science-doesnt-care-tshirt :D
@chuckymcdeel98692 жыл бұрын
Hey Sonny love this episode. Bought the shirt. Now I am looking for your hat because I love that trademark on the front for lack of a better term. If you have a minute I'd appreciate any info. Thanks, love you man.
@Foodgeek2 жыл бұрын
It's from the channel I talk about. Simple sourdough, but it looks like their shop is closed temporarily 😊 simpelsurdej.dk/
@chuckymcdeel98692 жыл бұрын
Thanks Sune. Sorry, autocorrect took over. Love the food you make.
@domenicomonteleone30552 жыл бұрын
@@Foodgeek Sune this was a very big eye opener the method that I wanted to know more about the oven need to come to temperature you need to do more videos why not make a bread that needs alot of Hydration with wheat and grains bye 👋 from 🇨🇦 #YSW
@johnfrnswth2 жыл бұрын
Good one is try put bread in cold oven turn on at normal temp see if it heating as it bakes what does to bread vs normal heated way!
@kiddycow Жыл бұрын
Rarely comment on youtube. But your turning off the oven approach really changed my sourdough baking game after baking for 2 years. Thank you so much.
@staceyhelley38062 жыл бұрын
Dude! I didn't realize you were only proofing to 25% before putting the dough in the fridge. I just tried that along with this oven off method and I got amazingly tall oven spring. I'm gonna keeping playing with these two techniques. Thank you!
@marcygrote3800 Жыл бұрын
?
@alejandrogarcia-sw4ic11 ай бұрын
I though the shaping was out of the fridge. he didnt specify how long he is shaping it but I guess in fridge it would take whole night the fermentation.
@fabiors1010 ай бұрын
@@marcygrote3800I find amazing these people that just put a question mark under a comment, expecting people to decipher what kind of question they're asking on their own head.
@kimhanback13022 ай бұрын
@@fabiors10it's like we watched two different videos.
@norakaszubaАй бұрын
You just helped me with your comment. I am making a King Arthur Whole Wheat high hydration sourdough bread, and when I prepared it last time, I was confused by their rising schedule. Because of this, I kept it on the counter longer doing stretch and folds, and it did not rise well when baking it. It resembled a UFO. Now I understand because of your comment, so thank you! Along with your help and turning the oven off, maybe I will have better luck.
@keithepstein28123 жыл бұрын
Nice experiment, Sune. Through trial and error, I've concluded the dutch oven method always works best for me. I've tried turning the oven down to various temps down to as low as 325F after the first 20 minutes, and settled on 425 F as the optimal temp after the first 20 minutes. So for me (YMMV), 500F for the first 20 mins with lid on, 425F for the next 5-10 mins with lid on, 425F for the final 15-20 minutes with lid off. I use parchment paper under my dough in the dutch oven, which eliminates the burnt flour and allows me to drop an ice cube behind the parchment paper on the side to bump up the oven spring. I'm using Bob's Red Mill Artisan Bread Flour with good and consistent results. My starter is 1/2 bread flour and 1/2 dark rye. I continue to love your experiment and technique videos.
@keithepstein28123 жыл бұрын
I'd like to see an experiment where you test temperature and moisture as the two key variables, everything else being equal. For example, if you raise the moisture level in the dutch oven by adding an ice cube or heavily spraying the surface with water before putting the lid on, would temperature have an effect on oven spring and crumb? I would expect the higher the temperature, the more moisture you need to add to keep the surface gelatinized enough to allow for expansion.
@daneekaplan42843 жыл бұрын
it certainly seems to be the simplest technique with a great outcome. I’m not sure I want to deal with changing tempers up and down and adding steam for only a little payback.
@algorillarithm55723 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your comments Keith. For the last few bakes I have dropped ice cubes behind the parchment paper too . Great results indeed. I also lower the temp for the last half bake. This was a great experiment by Sune. I bake two loaves at a time . One goes into a dutch oven, and one on a stone with a repurposed deep cover/hood from an electric frying pan which always gave me the best results. Now both are producing very good consistent results. side note: they say never change your starter feed too quickly. They are right. I radically changed my starter feed to make two starters , one rye and one wheat , and they both stalled. I'm finally getting them back to full strength. Just a caution to anyone who is thinking about changing their starter over.
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
Doing this turning off oven trick made us pretty anxious the first time 🤣 Just do it and leave the house for 20min
@markeetaroane33 жыл бұрын
Hi Keith, I use the Dutch oven method as well, but the bottom of my bread burns. I've used cornmeal, and parchment paper. Any tips? Thank you if advance.
@simplybeautifulsourdough89203 жыл бұрын
Because you made two with the oven off, I'm thinking there's something to it. I'm going to try this on breads where huge oven spring won't destroy my design. The other thought I had was that making this video must have taken you hours and hours! Thank you for all the work you put into these experiments.
@ViciousBabushka3 жыл бұрын
I tried this method this morning (I also let my shaped loaves rise overnight in the fridge) and IT TOTALLY WORKS! Thank you Food Geek! 😀
@MrNO1HERE2 жыл бұрын
gave this a shot with my most recent bake. did one turning the oven off and one leaving it on and I'm totally adopting this method now.
@emmyvanderheijden2 жыл бұрын
Tried it and I can verify the results from Sune. Works great! Best oven spring I ever had, every time. I find steam left every time I open my dutch oven now, compared to oven on, where I never found steam left. My theory now is, that my oven, even on 'top+bottom' heat (so no fan), still extracts air from the oven, and that way removes my steam from my dutch oven. This is delayed by turning the oven off. I turn it off for 30 min and turn it on for the last 20. Great additional tip, for those who bake a double batch like me: if you put the second bread in the oven directly after removing the first bread, you can turn off the oven for about 50 minutes and have a half-baked bread! I put that in the fridge in a bag to bake off after I finish the first bread from the batch. Oven spring is not as good as the first bread, but hey: free half-bake energy-wise
@overlanderlite16002 жыл бұрын
I tried turning it off, and boom! Best oven spring I’ve ever achieved! Great stuff! Thank you. 🙏
@alfontana62423 жыл бұрын
Yesterday I tried this method. My dough, one loaf, was 75% hydration flour (650 g), starter 50/50 Hydration (150g), salt (17 g) water (469g). Bulk proof 6.5 hours at 80 F, in Frig (39 F) for 16 hrs. Oven pre heated at 525 F for one hour with dutch oven with cover. I scored dough with my sciccors 5 cuts horizontal. Placed dough with parchment paper in hot pot placed cover on placed in oven closed door and immediately turned oven off for 27 minutes. Opened oven turned pot 180 degrees for even cooking removed lid. Placed oven on 450 F for 40 minutes. Result the best oven spring I ever achieved with this flour which has a rather low protein content for bread flour. Beautiful open crumb, I think I now have a new way to bake bread. Thanks Sune!!!
@martinbrinkworth19343 жыл бұрын
Thanks, I'm going to give your recipe a try today. I often get poor oven spring and I think the flour is part of the problem. It's good to experiment.
@timtyndall40252 жыл бұрын
That seems like a long cook time, but it is a larger loaf🤷🏼♂️
@alfontana62422 жыл бұрын
@@timtyndall4025 When I weigh my cooked loaf its normally 2 lbs 9 ounces give or take an ounce or two. I like my bread a little on the dark side.
@timtyndall40252 жыл бұрын
@@alfontana6242 a 2 and 1/2 lb loaf is ridiculously large for me. We have 3 people in my home, we barely go through half of that for 3-4 days, before it’s too stale. But that’s almost 3 times the regular bake time! At least for me.
@alfontana62422 жыл бұрын
@@timtyndall4025 We have friends that we usually give them half the loaf.
@TooBuffed3 жыл бұрын
Dear Sune -- despite watching hundreds of 'how-to' videos on how to make bread, your approach and presentation allowed me to finally become successful. I specifically cherish your 'experiments', mainly because I hate the 'limits' of recipes, pursuing practicality and taste as the end result. Thus, while I try to follow overall 'baker' percentages, my variables constantly change to reach the preferred taste. Here are some of them: 1. adding apple cider vinegar to water 2. autolyzing overnight (water and wh flour) 3. colder temperature (during the whole process) ~65F -- room temperature or colder like in a traditional village. 4. retardation in the fridge, week or longer. 5. milling own flour from wheat and rye berries. 6. water (mineral, filtered, sprinkled with pineapple juice) Congratulations on making this process simple and attainable to all new bakers. Thank you for all you do!
@timt43663 жыл бұрын
Love the shirt. I went straight to your merch site hoping you were selling them but no luck. I need to find one of those! Thanks for the wonderful bread experiments. I always learn something.
@drticzon3 жыл бұрын
I have a very large dutch oven, and usually place my dough on parchment paper. Before closing the lid, I dump a little less than 1/4 of a cup of ice water into the dutch oven and quickly put on the lid. The dutch oven is so big that the water pretty much turns into steam right away and the lid traps the steam. I get good oven spring....but this new method with the heat "off" is very interesting. I will try it with my next loaf (maybe tonight). I may cook for 3 minutes, than cut off the heat for the next 17 minutes. Your channel is always so interesting! Your are an inspiration to all of us.
@enigmawyoming52013 жыл бұрын
I have to say that this is one of your most useful experiments with regards to my techniques! Thanks Suni!
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
🙌🙌
@chrisspletstoser3376 ай бұрын
This was fun to watch! In my last loaf after my DO at 500 for 20 mins I took off the lid and knocked down to 450 for the last 25 but I accidently forgot to hit the start so it cooked with oven off. I realized when it wasn't as brown and kicked it up for a few til it browned well. One of the best loaves I ever made!
@safranimrod69453 жыл бұрын
Hi Sune, your basic recipe has become my default, with different variations every time I bake. I'm getting great results! Thank you very much for sharing your knowledge, from me and from my friends and family who enjoy it. Safra
@Foodgeek3 жыл бұрын
My pleasure 😊
@hhavila9 ай бұрын
Oh my goodness! I just tried this (Dutch oven, turn oven off) and I’ve gotten the best spring ever, and I’ve been making sourdough for many years! Thank you so much!
@deezstylz119 ай бұрын
So u still preheat the oven with Dutch oven then turn it off once you place loaf in? If so, preheat at 450?
@hhavila8 ай бұрын
@@deezstylz11 yes, that’s what I did. I preheated to 500 with Dutch oven, loaded the bread into it, then turned off the oven, waited 20 minutes, removed the lid, and baked for additional time (turned the oven back on to 450). It came out really nice.
@chrissquarefan86 Жыл бұрын
Oven off baking is also used for eclairs to give them more regular shape and volume so it's not surprising to see it work for bread as well.
@aylakhan78733 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the tip!!! I tried this for 3 bakes this week, got very nice oven spring, and will continue experimenting to see if I can optimize the process for my oven
@mikepapa31963 жыл бұрын
BOOM! Finally got oven spring after two and half years baking sourdough! Worked perfectly first time, thanks Sune, cheers from New Zealand
@MaryvelFriesen5 ай бұрын
What temperature do you use?
@mikepapa31965 ай бұрын
@@MaryvelFriesen Hi, all ovens differ, I heat up mine to 260degC at least then slide loaves in and turn off completely for 15mins (with water bath at bottom)then i remove water and I turn back on to190C for 26-27mins for final bake then turn off and crack oven door for another 10mins before removing loaves. All trial and error! Remember, there's no right or wrong way. Hope this helps.
@marky69692 ай бұрын
My oven goes into preheat mode when I turn it on, no matter what mode setting I choose. This ends up turning the broiler element on to preheat if I were to turn the oven back on with my loaf in and that ends up scorching the top. I would need two ovens to do the heat off heat back on method. Am I missing something here?
@mikepapa31962 ай бұрын
@@marky6969 hey if it's a hassle just ignore the on and off bit and just cook as per 'normal', all ovens are sooo different and variable. The sourdough journey is all about just doing and learning thru trial and error. Keep persevering!
@adr3psch624Ай бұрын
@@marky6969 you can use an inverted tray on top to avoid the grill to burn your crust
@anthonyfullman59188 ай бұрын
That was up there with some of the best experiments I've watched. Thanks for your time. It helps us all out a lot on our lifetime journey of mastering sourdough. In my opinion, you can never stop learning. There's always more to know and learn 😁
@contefrederic2 жыл бұрын
After watching this KZbin, I use this cold oven technique for all of my breads: whole wheat, spelt, ciabatta, sourdough. Oven spring is definitely increased in all. Saves oven time, too. Thank you.
@monyakrohnert436 Жыл бұрын
I just want to say that using the towel and water as you do to create steam was a GAME CHANGER for me! Thank you so much!
@christopherdaniello73433 жыл бұрын
I've tried this with my last three loaves in a dutch oven and yes the results are excellent. Really upped my game with some beautiful loaves. This defies every baking instruction I've ever seen. Thanks for the video!
@13c11a11 ай бұрын
I've used the Dutch oven technique but I prefer the Steam Heat Off. I'm a jam person, so it's just right for me. Thanks for the demo and the intro to the steaming tray. I've just always thrown in lots of ice cubes, but your method is more elegant and steady. Thanks.
@gregoryspeth82253 жыл бұрын
The one you call "sad" still looks pretty good to me! I'm happy when my loaf turns out sad. I guess I need to up my game.
@thebybeau2 ай бұрын
I did steam one with oven off, it turns out so well...thank you
@joannauczak71712 жыл бұрын
I didn't try actually turning off my oven as it's a small one that only heats up to 240 degrees, so I'm afraid it would lose too much temperature. But I tried something different also inspired by your experiment and it works super well. First I heat up the oven for an hour with the pizza stone inside, then I change the heat setting for 15 minutes to bottom heat only to let the bread rise and only then I put the heat back to both bottom and top heater. I used to heat on both ends throughout the baking time and I think as the top heater is very close to the bread, the crust was forming too quickly before the sourdough could give the bread a kick. Now it's rising very nicely, though far from your over spring. Thank you again for helping me on my breadmaking journey!
@amandar5082 Жыл бұрын
after I moved into a new house with a gas oven, my steam oven technique did not work as the oven would vent the steam if it sensed there was any inside. I used to be able to bake 4 loaves extremely fast with that method so now i'm going to try again with this technique of turning off the oven to prevent it from venting the steam. Great idea!
@ima73333 жыл бұрын
Can you compare baking the bread in cold dutch oven & hot dutch oven to start?
@thaejsooriya33133 жыл бұрын
I could be wrong but I think he has, and if not Bread Code might have
@enigmawyoming52013 жыл бұрын
Some of my best loaves regarding open crumb were discovered by accident when once I was rushing around doing stuff and put my cold fermented loaf in an unheated Dutch oven and threw it in the ‘almost hot enough’ oven because I didn’t have time to wait. I thought “oh well, I’ll see how it turns out”. I was amazed! Now when I want a very open crumb, that’s what I do. In general, house bread isn’t so open crumb because I use a lot of cracked grains and our bread is mostly for sandwiches and French toast. That’s my experience, but I’d love to see the pro do it. Unfortunately, a lot of my best loaves were accidents and “see how it turns out” that I can’t replicate as well as this one.
@ima73333 жыл бұрын
@@enigmawyoming5201 mine too, which is the reason for continuing learning.
@rlwalker22 жыл бұрын
I like that you stay with your standard simple recipe for experiments. That makes it very convenient for us.
@Foodgeek2 жыл бұрын
Thanks ❤️
@primitivedaisy3 жыл бұрын
I tried this method with my recent sourdough bake, and it turned out amazing! The crumb was soft, with plenty of holes, but not too much. The crust was golden and no burnt parts ( I know it’s ok to have a bit of burnt parts on the crust and bottom, but I don’t like it). I will be using* this method from now on.
@bradymom103 жыл бұрын
I'm with you re: the burnt part.
@jennynoel692 ай бұрын
Thank you!!! Great video to show different effects on SAME dough. Love it!
@davidpeacock9683 жыл бұрын
I can't believe it works so well, but it does. I tried it this morning. Thanks for all the great tips.
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
🙌🙌🙌🔥
@lafayettesmyre10943 жыл бұрын
At what temperature did you preheat your oven?
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
@@lafayettesmyre1094 230-250C works fine
@davidpeacock9683 жыл бұрын
@@lafayettesmyre1094 500 f then 450 when turning back on.
@jklin29873 жыл бұрын
I tried this without expecting success. However, this is my new best practice. I'd never ever turn the oven off. I thought the oven had to be hot hot hot all the time. Thank you for the wonderful tip.
@joysgirl3 жыл бұрын
I can't wait to try this method. You take the anxiety out of experimentation. Thank you!
@enigmawyoming52013 жыл бұрын
A lot of my ‘experiments’ are due to mistakes. Some turn out great, but I can’t replicate them nearly as well as I screwed them up in the first place.
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
Just leave the house for first 20 minutes or you’ll be tempted to turn it back on 🤣
@enigmawyoming52013 жыл бұрын
@@SimpleSourdough - not me. I’m retired. I’m not tempted to do anything until the alarm on my phone makes me think about what the hell is going on. Then I look for reasons to ignore it…. and go back to KZbin if I can justify it.
@massimoparisi41493 жыл бұрын
Its nothing new really. In Rofco ovens we bake this way and there is an explanation. When the oven is on the top and bottom element are on and this helps in forming the crust earlier even if steamed. So better turn off the oven or lower the heat for 20 minutes and afyer release steam and increase heat til finished baking.
@jetcarddude2 жыл бұрын
Tried it and I was happily surprised as I just stared at the beautiful rise I had gotten. Thank you so much for sharing......
@Susan539403 жыл бұрын
I love the shirt!! I vote for steam oven off 👍
@stevencea67612 жыл бұрын
I will definitely try this technique. I like the idea of using less energy with the oven off method.
@Foodgeek2 жыл бұрын
Yes, it works great. So does two-stage baking where you steam and brown at the same time when doing multiple loaves :)
@zoltrax3 жыл бұрын
Cool! I always turn the upper resistance off in the first part. I'll try turning it all off. Tks.
@ProstMahlzeitNZ2 жыл бұрын
I use baking paper under my loaf in the DO. I wet the paper and crunch it up before putting the bread on. I also use the oven turn off method. Since I’m doing both methods I’m really happy with my oven spring!
@guynakash3 жыл бұрын
That is an interesting one, I wonder what's the reason. If I had to guess I'd say it's the gradually lowering off the temperature, the dough is initially blasted with 250c which heats up the water in it, starting the baking process, and with the oven turned off the temperature is rapidly dropping, the crust is not setting so this maximizes the oven spring... but, it's just a guess. Thanks for another great video Sune.
@ericbecker5735 Жыл бұрын
I will have to try the oven off method this weekend! I this is the first video of your I have seen, nicely done straight forward and concise I like the four way comparison at the end too 👍
@mettenel3 жыл бұрын
It works. I have used it for a while, even when baking I my Challenger.
@wpng19523 жыл бұрын
I tried it with open bake. It worked very well. I got better oven spring and more open crumb. Thank you Sune!
@andrewcribb67103 жыл бұрын
Seems like a variation on the "cold bake" theme. Makes sense - the bread has time to expand to maximum capacity before the crust sets hard. I get similar results baking from a cold start in a lidded baking vessel (usually a romertopf). Says something for not baking at high temperatures - until you want to finish the crust. Pork crckling works in a similar manner!
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
Exactly 👌
@JCPerez-jz5cv3 жыл бұрын
@andrew, do you start from cold oven, cold vessel? Or preheated oven, cold vessel?
@ipedros73 жыл бұрын
@@JCPerez-jz5cv I think cold bake here refers dough straight from fridge to hot oven. To help scoring sometimes I even set dougn in freezer for 15 minutes, then score and straight to oven. Note: my oven is a fan only oven (worst thing for 1st stage) and I don't have a challenger nor similar (big pirex roaster) big enough. So I need all the tricks, like baking 2 loafs at same time for extra steam.
@0826adams2 жыл бұрын
@@JCPerez-jz5cv cold oven, cold vessel, cold dough I mist a little water before putting on lid. convection 425F nonfan 450 f 50min then take lid off to brown to way you like it. Works like a charm.
@jvallas2 жыл бұрын
I just tried this with a cloche covering the non-heat portion (& I use a countertop oven that only gets to 450°). This was a yeast bread from leftover baguette dough I had in the fridge overnight and which I dumped into an oval banneton to rise a bit before baking. Despite all the differences to your recipe, I was so pleased with the end result! Thanks, Sune! 😍
@wanderingstar27173 жыл бұрын
wow ! Since I am still learning I don't yet have the courage to try this method (I am happy when I get a decent bread)! However as I am finding the quantities and also flours that suit me most things are improving. So as soon as I feel my bread game is up to the standard I want I will definitely try this approach. Thanks again for the interesting videos.
@dalton71452 жыл бұрын
Love the guitars behind you. I partake myself in both playing and cooking/baking. Thank you for the video/recipe. ✌
@tstfhayden3 жыл бұрын
I use my Dutch oven by default -You may have watched The Bread Codes’ video where he looks into the initial oven temperature and concludes that rather than starting at 250c, 230c gets better spring. It’d be interesting to know what temp your oven drops to in those first 20 mins. Also consider using a cold Dutch oven lid so as not to dry out the top before it can fully rise (though I’m sure that wouldn’t work with the challenger pan)
@timtyndall40252 жыл бұрын
I would assume the cold lid would retard steam production. 🤷🏼♂️ Only one way to find out.
@aliciaramos59202 жыл бұрын
Very interesting!!… I’m a neophyte but getting good results ( most of the time!).. I’ll definitely try the next one turning the oven off! Thank you for experimenting! Greetings from Orlando Florida
@danrist43703 жыл бұрын
A bit skeptical, but got my best ovenspring using the cold oven technique today. Added a bottle of warm oatmeal stout in place of water. Thanks for all your helpful tips and the experiments you run!
@Foodgeek3 жыл бұрын
I was skeptical too, but those are the best experiments :)
@cathleenfarmer99792 жыл бұрын
I have had great success with this method of baking. I make sandwich loaf bread with my starter and my loaves are picture-book beautiful! Thank you.
@MysteryMan1593 жыл бұрын
Very very interesting. I might have to try this in my Dutch oven ...
@beningarfield6545 Жыл бұрын
Wow that was amazing. I wouldn't have believed you without the experiment
@TheVOTN2 жыл бұрын
I started sourdough baking in the summer of 2021, so am very much still in thelearning process. Proper bread flour is not readily available here in Norway so I've been experimenting with many alternatives but I recently found som bread flour in a local discount store. I used this trick, turning off the oven for the first 25 minutes, with oven preheated to 230 degrees (cast iron dutch oven). WOW! best results I've had so far, despite my dough being a bit too stiff and, therefor, difficult to work with. Next time I'll increase from 80% to 85% hydration and see if results are even better. Thanks to you and The Bread Code for all you do, the two of you have taught me so much.
@juliasmelange2 ай бұрын
I wonder if this method would work with an enamel roaster as it doesn’t retain heat like cast iron.
@bernhardbarth29373 жыл бұрын
Interesting experiment. I like the ear of your control method bread best - and besides the aesthetics, that would come with extra taste and crispiness.
@ileencuccaro2 жыл бұрын
Very nice all bread, I never get good oven spring, will try these and see what happens, love that baker, already went on their to look around, thanks for this viseo
@ndpitch3 жыл бұрын
Wow. Amazing spring and crumb with the oven off and steamed! Very nice! Interesting that you had some tunneling on the Dutch oven with the oven off. I often get tunneling and I haven’t been able to figure out what’s causing it!
@Foodgeek3 жыл бұрын
I think it may have been trapped air during shaping 😊
@peterplantec79116 ай бұрын
Yes, more experiments! I love when I get exceptional oven spring and often do not understand why.
@juliafisher18703 жыл бұрын
Hi Sune! When you showed all four in one shot, which one was the bottom right?
@paulharding1621 Жыл бұрын
I’m new to sourdough and struggling with oven spring, I’m using a built in steam and fan setting on my oven at 190c if I use a temp of 220c or higher my bread browns without rising . At the 190c setting I’m getting some spring, I’ll try turning the oven off for the first half of the bake as you described.
@ImForgivenToo3 жыл бұрын
you experiment, so we don't have to !!! THANK YOU ! LOVE YOUR VIDEOS, so HELPFUL and WELL DONE !!!
@Paulo37580 Жыл бұрын
As a bread person like me, all of them just look amazing. Congrats on the experiment. Greetings from Brazil.
@maboo736 Жыл бұрын
Would actually love to see you do this trick and compare it with cold oven baking (no preheating)! It seems to work well with creating oven spring too. But which is better?
@typower92 жыл бұрын
I have wondered myself for quite a while whether or not it might be a good idea to have the oven off at the start. Now I know. Thanks!
@eunicebrothers19502 жыл бұрын
Hi Sune, really appreciate all the time, energy and hard work you put into your videos to keep us educated and informed. Perhaps I missed it but I watched the video 3 times but couldn't find out the temperature you used to preheat the oven initially. And after you turned the oven off during the first bake, then at what temperature did you use for the second bake? Would you mind sharing those details...preheat temp, and second bake temp? Also I think you had the oven off for 25 minutes and on for 20 minutes, is that right? Again, thank you for all you do! Really appreciate you. 👍🏆👏❤️
@@Foodgeek thank you so much for your quick reply. So appreciate you. 👍
@baxterenrife2 жыл бұрын
@@Foodgeek Unfortunately my oven only goes to 230 fan. Would that be enough for the preheat do you think?
@gnawbabygnaw2 жыл бұрын
Works well for me! And I am using and loving your one handed stretch and shake and fold. BIG stretch! Thanks Sune
@robfj34143 жыл бұрын
While I’m not a huge fan of an open crumb for everyday baking, I’m definitely going to give this a try as an experiment. There is no doubt that it makes for a very pretty loaf of sourdough!
@nickwebborn13372 жыл бұрын
Great tip. Tried this and in addition to the nice rise and open crumb, the crust is not so hard and easier to cut while remaining crisp.
@bobcrane99453 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. It seems that the steam allows the bread to expand before the hard crust limits it and the hard crust forms in the second bake. I noticed that you steamed for 20 minutes but how long did you bake in the second stage when the oven was turned back on to finish the baking?
@3mealaday6903 жыл бұрын
Amazing sharing! Excellent job my dear friend ! Can't wait to watch your next upload! I love the steam normal way better, the bakery looks very tempting and the color is so beautiful!
@laurierappl45493 жыл бұрын
There was no card to link to your Danish colleagues' website or channel. Cool experiment. It's hard to believe that the retained heat in the cast iron was affected so much by turning the oven off that it changed the bread. There are so many fine variables in bread baking.
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
👋☺️
@Foodgeek3 жыл бұрын
I checked it. It's there. Maybe cards are not supported on the platform you are watching? :)
@laurierappl45493 жыл бұрын
@@Foodgeek I'm on Safari. Usually cards show up. Can you put it in the "Show More" under the video? Where you have links to perch and recipe, etc. Yours is my go-to channel for sourdough. Your master recipe is the easiest and most reliable recipe I've used. I have been doing boules in my Dutch oven, recently started baking batards on a baking stone with a roasting pan inverted over it. Bingo!!
@Foodgeek3 жыл бұрын
@@laurierappl4549 It's in the description now :)
@spqr7012 жыл бұрын
Sune. I used to bake yeasted bread (French Rustic) long ago and one of the recipes I had at the time said to toss a few ice cubes in the oven just as you put the dough in to bake. It worked wonderfully....
@mikekofMorrison3 жыл бұрын
I got great oven spring this time by scoring the dough with my lame held more horizontal as I'm scoring. I will try the oven off method as well. I wonder if starting at a higher temp, say 500 F before turning the oven off would result in higher spring. I love your experiments, Sune!
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
Hi Mike, I tested this theory today. We shape 200 loafs at a time with a quite accurate precision. We did this for 4 loafs. We tried with even higher temp. Results: Too High temperature and the crust would set too fast, if the steam evaporered too early. 250degrees celcius had the best result with the best oven spring on our home oven :-) 280 was too high and 220 was a little too low. Some people also do the ‘5 minute rule’ Bake for 5min and then turn off oven. This is very helpful if you have a wet dough or if dough is a little or much overfermented. Then you want a faster crust :-) Hope this helps!
@mikekofMorrison3 жыл бұрын
@@SimpleSourdough thank you! That's very helpful. I'll give it a try next time.
@chuckymcdeel98693 жыл бұрын
Thanks Sune. I had almost given up on sourdough... But have inspired me start my sourdough journey once again.
@markascott15083 жыл бұрын
@@SimpleSourdough For those of us who bake in a preheated dutch oven maybe the same result might be achieved if the dutch oven was not preheated and not turning down the oven temperature. I tried your method last night and my oven spring was disappointing , not sure why it did not work but I will keep trying.
@soniaclarkson3766 Жыл бұрын
I like the experiments you did. I love the results of the oven off on both instances
@palmchord3 жыл бұрын
Hi Sune, thank you for this interesting video. So how exactly did you bake the bread: what was your preheat temperature? Did you bake your bread longer than usual? Or did you only use the different heating method in the second part (convection)?
@annerowenachee17492 жыл бұрын
Interesting experiment! I saw the video Peter mentioned about off the oven for 20 minutes for great oven spring! This is something to ponder😍
@youngus3 жыл бұрын
In hindsight, this makes sense to me. You turn the oven off so there's no additional heat and fan. This in turn would allow the bread to rise but the crust won't harden as quickly, allowing more oven spring to happen. And of course, the steam moistens the outside to help with the oven spring too. From my personal experience, I found that using the steam/spritz/water-in-pan method only work to a certain degree for steaming; it doesn't work as well as a commercial combi oven with a proper steam function. Fortunately, the Dutch oven steams well because the tight seal traps the steam that's evaporating from the bread (the dough has a lot of moisture after all). I've never tried steam heat-off method before so I'm gonna try it next time I make sourdough at home!
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
Spot on👌 It’s a cool method
@timtyndall40252 жыл бұрын
I’ve often spritzed the dough after loading in the oven on a pizza stone to increase humidity. It seems to help. But I just ordered a combo cooker/Dutch oven, and am scared to spray the cast iron. I could spray the dough on the peel, but would that hinder the dough sliding off easily? I might need semolina or corn meal instead of rice flour. 🤷🏼♂️I’ll find out in a week or so when it comes in.
@kingdoz3 ай бұрын
Thanks for that. I noticed best flavour is 2 nights in fridge but it only works well if I do the only 25% increase before shaping. If I do the at least double method then it becomes over proofed in fridge and no ear and little spring. So depends if you have 12 hours or 24 hours available in fridge if this 25% proofing works, also reducing heat in Dutch oven really does work. Final tip, if using low hydration like 60% which is much easier to shape, then use an ice cube in the Dutch oven, if 70% or more hydration no need f9r that ice cube. Thanks.
@markandrews12193 жыл бұрын
My thoughts immediately spring to traditional baking in wood fired ovens. As soon as the items being cooked/baked are loaded, the oven temperature drops and continues to lower. I realise there are some exceptions to my statement as people may refuel the oven and there are some old wood fired ovens that allow for continues fuel. It would also depend on the thermal properties of each real mass etc. A few thousand years of humans baking in wood fired ovens says oven spring can happen if you turn off a modern oven. I imagine there is are important relationship between total temperature/rate of change of temperature and hydration of the loafs being baked.
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
Nice correlation :-) That’s true . Also a higher hydration will require faster and higher heat to get a good bread with a nice rise. 😊
@pamelanelson-munson67302 жыл бұрын
I'm a new convert t. Great crumb. Raising dough in cold dutch oven.. then putting into cold oven and turning it up to 450F to bake. Great rise! Uses half the energy. No going back.
@tastysourdough14023 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this trick. Does this work for a claypot aswell?
@CrystalAnatta3 жыл бұрын
That i wonder. I use the clay pot and going to try thos method some day.
@Appregator4 ай бұрын
What is your initial oven temperature before you put in the dough and turn it off ?
@julie55hope3 жыл бұрын
That was great! I'm going to try try turning my oven off for the first part of the bake now. I've learned to turn my temp down, about 465 degrees F when I bake or my bottom burns. Don't have fan option on oven but may try the steam method too! Thanks again for doing and sharing all your experiments and experience with us, Sune! 😃 Bless you.
@SimpleSourdough3 жыл бұрын
The ovens without fans are the best! 👏🔥
@AJTR6112 жыл бұрын
I had the same issue with the bottom burning, until I was given a tip to put a baking sheet on the lower rack while cooking in the Dutch oven. No more burnt bottom!
@fanofactionflicks2 жыл бұрын
wow that's pretty neat, thanks for showing dutch oven, with oven off as well, i'll try this out with 100% rye.
@haytguugle86563 жыл бұрын
Informative experimentation is fun and extremely valuable. And it was very interesting to see the final results. Spring was definitely amazing! That said; I prefer to be able to put stuff on the bread (sandwich style). So though many people may prefer the baking success of superior rise, my choice would be #3 as there is much more usable surface to spread the mayo, mustard, cream cheese, peanut butter, butter, etc... It's also much heartier for eating with a chunk of bread in one hand, soup spoon in the other, occasionally dunking the bread into the soup/stew along the way. In short, I think I enjoy the bread part more than the air-filled holes. :-) But again, I always enjoy a fun, interesting experiment.
@BliffleSplick2 жыл бұрын
Imagine it as a bun, though, the crust would keep everything contained and it's portable!
@azannah2 жыл бұрын
Me too. I do not like big holes in my bread. But I have just started making bread so what do I know?
@haytguugle86562 жыл бұрын
@@azannah hehe! As I noted; my thinking is, holes are air - not actual bread. So it's really hard to spread butter onto the air between the bread areas. There's plenty of air to breathe everywhere. When I want to eat bread, I would rather have it be mostly the bread part! ;-) Maybe that's just me. (or maybe you too.)
@ariesyeo5297 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting experiment, will definitely give that oven off steam method a go.
@gattamom3 жыл бұрын
What is your thought about the concept that adding steam actually cools the baking sheet or stone since the temp of steam is lower than the preheated stone temperature?
@ravibindra5653 жыл бұрын
Water turns to steam at 100C but the steam gets heated up to the 230 C of the oven very quickly.
@ipedros73 жыл бұрын
Putting dough from fridge (say 5C) onto steel/stone, will cool it more than anything else. If anything that immediate steam would keep temp from dropping too much. I don't believe it's any of that. Steam is to keep crust moist and not set too fast. Same as adding dough from fridge gives more time. So, with oven off, you stop adding heat, and thus extend the rise period further.
@Earthling39963 жыл бұрын
That's cool! I'm going to try it. Thanks for showing us the experiment! I'm learning a lot form your channel! 😊🍞👍
@PaulTMaack03 жыл бұрын
I love your channel, and have watched MANY of your videos. Thank you kindly for the wonderful content! I think a lot of the issues people have with bread and a lot of the methods people use are to compensate for irregular heating. I'd be interested to see what the result would be if you have a large thermal mass in the oven below the bread to help diffuse the heat. So what I'm suggesting is that you have a rack on the bottom, just above the heating elements, with the steel plate you used, then on the rack above that (with a small air gap) you put the challenger pan (or another steel plate or pizza stone) then proceed as normal. I've seen a bunch of people mention that you should throw some ice in with the loaf in the challenger pan also to get some long-lived steam action. I'm interested to see how that stacks up against your towel with boiling water. Is there such thing as too much steam? Where's the limit? The issue with electric ovens is that they go through huge ranges when cooking where the elements get super hot for a bit, then shut down. That cycling can have enormous effects on the product, and providing a barrier with some thermal mass between the bread and the elements is great, but having a second barrier might help even more! I'm curious to see how the convection setting would affect it.
@AbsenceLacksNothing3 жыл бұрын
His has made a very noticeable difference to the rise of my bread. Thanks so much for the tip.
@peterdavis22332 жыл бұрын
Nice experiment. I wonder if the type of baking vessel might also affect oven spring? I just bought a large glass (borosilicate) casserole dish and baked a couple of loaves with the oven left on during the first baking phase and the spring was noticeably better than I normally get with my Le Creuset dutch oven. Could this be because the glass casserole has a tighter fitting lid and therefore the steam remains inside longer than the Le Creuset? Next, I will try baking loaves in the glass dish with the oven turned off as you did in this video. I'll let you know what happens. Thanks.
@marywest93962 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. I give it a try. Thanks for experimenting and showing us how to improve our bread.
@londonviking38013 жыл бұрын
That is pretty amazing - interesting results. I will be trying this out with my IKEA pyrex dutch oven. Tusind tak!
@londonviking38013 жыл бұрын
Having tried this on a few occasions since your video - I get really good results (oven spring) when I turn oven off. Recommend this method for extra oven spring if using a dutch oven type vessel to bake your bread in. Works even better if you spray water over the bread before putting in the oven. Tusind tak Sune!
@chezmanya3 жыл бұрын
I wish I could add a picture to this comment. I got the best looking loaf of my life this morning using this method. Thank you so much, Sune!
@77goanywhere3 жыл бұрын
Interesting method. It makes sense that reducing the heat would help with the initial oven spring. That seems to be the idea with baking in a cold dutch oven or clay baker placed into a pre-heated oven.
@massimoparisi41493 жыл бұрын
Its not only that. When the oven is on the 2 elements are on and that makes the crust forming earlier even if steamed.
@JingleAllthePixels5 күн бұрын
I have just begun my journey and the spring is what is getting me. I do the traditional dutch oven steaming and no matter how I score, location, angle, etc... 1 out of 10 loaves comes with a great spring and a good looking ear. The rest are flat like that. I just can't see making a whole batch of loaves turning my oven on and off all the time.
@pjfreeman47893 жыл бұрын
So interesting. I’m baking two loaves in the morning. Usually I bake the two loaves at the same time in Dutch ovens. I will bake them separately tomorrow, one with the oven off and see what happens. Thank you for the demonstrations.