My sister wasn’t lying when she said bread
baking is a labour of love. Sometime around 15 days or so ago—could be more,
certainly not less—I went over to her kitchen bubbling over with anticipation
(that’s a sourdough starter pun, for y’all uninitiated). “It’s sourdough day!”
I texted her first thing in the morning. Of course, I was a little disappointed
when I realized our first “sourdough day” consisted of adding some flour to
some water, stirring it, and then watching approximately 19
episodes of ER.
However. We persevered.
This was days and days ago it seems |
Well rather, Bailey persevered. She
dutifully fed the starter every day. She took its photo, tended to its
temperature, sniffed it often, and generally cared for it with at least as much
attention as one would give a newborn. After a week, it was “sourdough day”
again.
Unfortunately, we picked a weeknight for
baking and I made the grave error of getting the sponge going at 5:30 in the
afternoon. By 9:30, after what in hindsight seems like the most grievously
hasty leavening ever attempted, we thought we’d just give it a go and throw it
in the oven.
TBF.
If you don’t know what that is, you’re not
ready to make bread. You’re probably not even ready for the starter. You need to go read Pollan’s book.
So we fed the starter again, cooed to it,
coaxed it, and decided to wait until a Sunday for our next attempt so that we
could truly devote an entire day to the process.
Unfortunately, we read ever so slightly too
late that the sponge should sit overnight, and that even after that, there are at least six hours between making dough
and turning on the oven. So we were thwarted on Sunday night, and instead let
our shaped boules sit in the fridge until Monday.
Which is probably for the best. At this
point, we had been working on the bread for about thirteen hours straight, not
including starter cultivation of course. Every bowl Bailey owned was either
filled with starter, a back-up sponge, a water float test, rising boules, or
some other manner of living, breathing, goddamn finicky business. Our flour was
long gone. Like addicts, we shook the last of the white powder from the
crevices of the bag. “Just another gram or two is all we need,” our inner
monologues hissed with the fervor of the obsessed.
And so finally, after a seemingly
interminable wait, we were able to finally put the loaves into a blazing 500 degree
oven and await the next bout of dejection in a long and bitter process.
And yet……
It smelled like bread at the end. It had a
crispy and golden exterior like bread. A noticeable crumb, and even a
pleasantly toothsome texture. This, by God, was really bread. “So we will keep
the starter?” We asked ourselves. “Let’s not throw it out after all.”
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