Sourdough Pain De Campagne Recipes

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PAIN DE CAMPAGNE



Pain de Campagne image

Pain de Campagne (literally Country Loaf) has become the staple bread in my house. I make it every week and keep enough around to last until I bake again. If you need a source of sourdough, here's the easiest solution: Visit your local artisan baker and ask if they might spare a walnut-size knob of sourdough to get you started. You can also make a culture yourself, though it takes about a week or so to get a lively and stable fermentation.

Provided by Food Network

Time P1DT1h25m

Yield 2 loaves

Number Of Ingredients 21

Bowl
Rimmed baking sheet
Rectangular baking stone
Plastic dough scraper
Colander and kitchen towel, in which the loaf can rise
Baking peel or cutting board, to move the loaves to the oven
Single-edged razor blade, lame, or knife
Instant-read thermometer (optional)
Cooling rack
100 grams unbleached organic all-purpose flour
30 grams organic whole-wheat flour
100 grams water
20 grams ripe starter
200 grams starter
400 grams water (plus another 50 grams added in increments)
70 grams organic whole-wheat flour
70 grams organic whole-rye flour
460 grams unbleached organic all-purpose flour
13 grams sea salt
Olive oil, to grease the bowl
Semolina and flour, to dust the baking peel

Steps:

  • Morning, First Day: Mix all the levain ingredients together and let it ferment for 8 to 10 hours, until the starter has domed but not collapsed. There will be extra starter left over once you remove 200 grams for the dough. Use this remaining starter as a base to refresh your leaven. (To refresh, mix 20 grams of the remaining starter, 75 grams water, 50 grams whole wheat flour, and 50 grams white flour; let it ferment 2 to 4 hours at room temperature and then place it back in the refrigerator.)
  • Evening, First Day: Mix the dough. In a bowl, mix the starter and 400 grams water until the starter is dissolved, though lumps here and there are fine. Add the whole wheat and rye flours and stir until combined. Then add the white flour and mix for 1 to 2 minutes, until the flour dissolves and forms a shaggy mass.
  • Make an indentation on top of the dough and add the salt and 25 grams water into this well, so that the salt can begin to dissolve. Cover the bowl and let it sit for 30 to 40 minutes.
  • Moisten your hands, then shake off the water. Stretch and fold the dough by pulling the dough out from the edges and folding in toward the middle. You want to stretch the dough out to strengthen the gluten but ideally don't rip the dough. You can also pinch the dough between your thumb and fingers to further incorporate the salt. Stretch and fold the dough in a circular pattern, pulling the dough out, then folding the edges toward the middle 10 to 12 times. Turn the dough over, so that the seams are facedown and the smooth side is on top. This entire process should take about 2 minutes. At this point you can add the remaining water, letting it sit on top of the dough until the next round. Cover and let the dough sit for 30 minutes.
  • Repeat the stretching and folding for another round. Pinch the dough with your thumb and fingers to help incorporate the additional water. By this time, you should feel some tension in the gluten, but be careful not to rip the dough. Once this process is complete, turn the dough over so the smooth side is on top. Let the dough sit for 30 minutes.
  • Having completed two rounds of stretching and folding, the dough should be elastic. You may, however, add one more round of stretching and folding to further develop the gluten, after allowing it to rest for 30 minutes.
  • Remove the dough and clean and lightly oil the bowl, or move the dough to a lightly oiled container. Cover and let sit for another 30 minutes, then place it in the refrigerator or in a cool basement room ideally no warmer than 55 degrees F (13 degrees C). Let the dough rise for 8 to 12 hours, though it can rise for as long as 24 hours. However, the longer this first rise lasts, the more sour the flavor will be.
  • Second Day: Place a rimmed baking sheet on the bottom of the oven and a baking stone on a rack in the middle. Preheat the oven to 500 degrees F (260 degrees C).
  • After letting the dough rise in the cool environment, you should see fermentation bubbles, and the dough should have at least doubled in size. If it hasn't, let it warm at room temperature for another hour.
  • Dust the counter lightly with flour and gently remove the dough with a dough scraper, letting the smooth top of the dough fall onto the counter. The sticky underside will now be face up. Cut the dough in half (You can make two loaves simultaneously if they fit into the oven. Or refrigerate the remaining half the dough, then remove it and shape it into a second loaf after the first loaf is out of the oven.)
  • Preshape the dough. Stretch the four sides of the dough out and let them fall into the center. They can overlap. Then turn the dough over so that these seams are facedown. Dust with flour, cover with a light cloth or towel, and let the dough rest for 20 minutes.
  • Dust the counter with flour very lightly, then turn the dough over again so the seams are face up and the smooth side is on the counter. Stretch and then fold the edges in toward the center, so that you have an approximately round shape, which should take 6 to 8 folds. Apply light pressure in the center so the folds seal. Turn the dough over, so the smooth side is now face up, and, cupping your hands around the dough, use the outer edges of your palms and pinkies to stretch the skin of the dough and tuck it under the bottom, moving the dough in a circular motion so that you end up with a round shape. Try not to compress the loaf tightly, though the goal is to have a taut skin. (This last action takes time to master so don't worry if it doesn't come out perfect on your first attempt-there will be many more loaves to come.)
  • Let the loaf sit while you prepare a colander lined with a floured towel. Then using the dough scraper to loosen the loaf from the counter, pick up the loaf and place the smooth side face down on the floured towel in the colander. The seams will be face up. Cover with a towel and let the loaf rise for about 90 minutes, or until the loaf springs back slowly when you lightly press it with your finger. If it snaps back into shape quickly and leaves no indentation, it is not done rising, so give it another 20 minutes and try again. This is a judgment call, but it is better to err on slightly underproofing the loaf rather than letting it rise until it collapses on itself.
  • Dust a peel or cutting board with semolina and flour or just flour. Turn the loaf out on the peel or board, so that the smooth side, which was on the towel, is now face up. Using a razor blade or bread knife, score the loaf with one cut, or in an X pattern, or in a square pattern, about 1/4 inch deep. Angle the blade while you slash the loaf with swift, sure cuts. Don't dawdle, fuss, or repeat the action.
  • Transfer the loaf to the hot stone and close the oven. Then open the oven and pour 1/2 cup water into the baking sheet and close the oven, trapping the steam. Turn the oven down to 460 degrees F (240 degrees C) and bake for 30 minutes. Open the door briefly to release the remaining steam. Then turn down the oven to 420 degrees F (215 degrees C) and continue baking for another 10 to 15 minutes, or until the crust is dark brown. Turn the oven off and prop open the door slightly with a wooden spoon, leaving the loaf in the oven for another 5 to 7 minutes. Ideally, the loaf will have a hollow knock when you remove it from the oven, signaling that moisture has adequately dissipated in the loaf. Alternatively, stick an instant-read thermometer in the bottom of the loaf. The center of the loaf should read at least 205 degrees F (96 degrees C).
  • Let the loaf cool on a bread rack for at least one hour before cutting into it. Since this loaf is made with sourdough, it will last a long time. For the first two days, I simply keep it wrapped in a towel or in a paper bag, the cut side facedown. If there's anything left after that point, I keep it at room temperature in a plastic bag.

SOURDOUGH PAIN DE CAMPAGNE



Sourdough Pain de Campagne image

Enjoy this traditional French country sourdough loaf with a lovely blend of red fife, rye and bread flours. The recipe is easy to follow, employs best practices from some of our bread experiments here at Breadtopia, and the hydration is manageable, helping even beginners shape the dough with ease and achieve a nice crumb.

Provided by Melissa Johnson

Categories     Bread

Time 2h5m

Yield 1 loaf

Number Of Ingredients 6

300g bread flour (2 1/4 cups)
80g home-milled red fife wheat berries or whole grain red fife wheat flour (1/2 cup + 1 Tbsp)
20g home-milled rye berries or whole grain rye flour (2 1/2 Tbsp)
310g water (1 1/3 cups)
80g sourdough starter (1/4 cup)
8g salt (1 1/2 tsp)

Steps:

  • Autolyse
  • Mix the flours and water until incorporated. Cover and set aside 30-90 minutes (see notes).
  • Adding Starter and Salt
  • Sprinkle about half the salt on your dough, fold the dough over itself and then sprinkle the other half of the salt on the dough. Finally, fold the dough again and add your starter to the top and around the dough.
  • Work the salt and starter into the dough with both hands by gently pressing, stretching and squeezing. Pause if the dough starts to tear. Cover when finished.
  • Gluten Development and Bulk Fermentation
  • Let the dough rest 20-30 minutes after mixing in the starter and salt.
  • Then perform at intervals of 30-60 minutes: 1 round of coil folding, 1 lamination, and 2-3 more rounds of coil folding. (See videos of coil folding and lamination after the recipe instructions.) The dough should begin to feel bubbly and crackly by the final coil fold. If you prefer traditional stretching and folding, that will work too. However, if you are going to laminate the dough as suggested, do it relatively early in the process.
  • From the point of mixing in salt and starter, my gluten development was spread over 4 hours, and the dough only fermented for an additional 40 minutes after the last coil fold. My kitchen temperature was in the high 70s, though, and depending on your starter strength and room temperature, you may need more or less time.
  • Preshape, Bench Rest and Shaping
  • Using wet fingers or a dough scraper, remove your dough from the bowl and onto a lightly floured counter.
  • Shape the dough into a ball, cover and let rest about 25 minutes.
  • Lightly flour your proofing basket.
  • Flour and flip over your relaxed dough, and then shape it into a batard or boule (or oblong batard).
  • Place the dough in your proofing basket seam-side up.
  • Final Proof
  • Numerous proofing strategies are valid. For this loaf, I proofed at room temperature for 45 minutes, and then in the refrigerator for 9 hours.
  • Baking
  • Preheat your oven and baking vessel to 500F for 30 minutes.
  • Flip your dough from the proofing basket onto parchment paper (or directly into your hot baking vessel). Score the top of the dough, and lift the parchment into the baking vessel.
  • Bake for
  • 20 minutes at 500F covered
  • 8-10 minutes at 450F covered
  • 5-10 minutes at 450F uncovered
  • The internal temperature of your finished bread should be over 205F.

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