My fear has been realized. This bread is stuck to the cloche and won't come out. I hope that changes as it cools, but I'm not counting on it. If it pops out later, I'll show it.
The thing that made me think it might work is that I regularly put exceedingly wet dough into screaming hot cloches and they pop right out. The difference here is this dough was proofed in the cloche and it was brought up to temperature with the oven. That meant as it proofed it had time to become one with the cloche. Even the lid was stuck. It eventually pried off with a bit of leverage and that gives me hope of salvaging the loaf. I do hope so because that would be awesome.
I did not check the loaf after it's last proof of ten hours. I just turned on the oven and let 'er rip, so I have no way of knowing if the cloche worked to produce oven rise. As you can see, it did not produce a customary dome. It smells fantastic.
Yay! It came out. *glees* Boy, I'm sure not going to ever do that again. Whew.
Here's the deal I've been saving for this moment:
This batch began life as the remnant dregs of a previous batch. A teaspoon was salvaged, approximately. That teaspoon contained 50/50 whole wheat/all purpose flour along with salt from the bread and trace olive oil from the bowl. It was doubled with w-w flour and water, its bulk not even filling the bottom of a mason jar, proofed, then doubled again, proofed, doubled again, and so on until the mass was built up to a serviceable bulk.
This batch began life as the remnant dregs of a previous batch. A teaspoon was salvaged, approximately. That teaspoon contained 50/50 whole wheat/all purpose flour along with salt from the bread and trace olive oil from the bowl. It was doubled with w-w flour and water, its bulk not even filling the bottom of a mason jar, proofed, then doubled again, proofed, doubled again, and so on until the mass was built up to a serviceable bulk.
The starter for the batch of bread that was the origin of this starter had its own genesis, of course, already shown in a previous post. Interesting in itself, I believe, it is the same technique used throughout history since the beginning of wheat cultivation through millennia right up to the present era whereupon the powerful, virile, and fast single-organism yeast cell, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was isolated and cloned at the time of second world war. The same technique used including those periods when bread was associated with beer, as the barm skimmed from beer that was used for bread also developed directly from grain. (Ultimately from the air, but that's a whole 'nuther argument and a different demonstration.) |
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