Barm
3 ingredients
56 steps
Ingredients
- 3 1/2 cups (16 ounces) unbleached high-gluten or bread flour
- 2 cups (16 ounces) water, at room temperature
- 1 cup (7 ounces) seed culture (page 229)
Directions
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1Stir together the flour, water, and seed culture in a mixing bowl (you can discard the remaining seed culture or give it to a friend to build into his or her own barm).
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2Make sure the seed culture is evenly distributed and all the flour is hydrated.
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3It will make a wet, sticky sponge similar to a poolish (see page 232).
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4Transfer this sponge to a clean plastic, glass, or ceramic storage container twice as large as the barm.
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5When transferring the barm into the container, repeatedly dip your hand, spatula, or bowl scraper in water to keep the barm from sticking to it.
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6Cover the container with a lid or plastic wrap and ferment at room temperature for approximately 6 hours, or until the barm is bubbly.
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7The plastic wrap will swell like a balloon, as will a plastic lid.
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8When this happens, open the lid or release the plastic to let the gas escape (try not to breathe it as it escapesthe carbonic gas mixed with ethanol fumes will knock you across the room!).
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9Replace the cover and refrigerate overnight before using.
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10The barm will be ready to use the next day and will remain potent for 3 days.
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11After that, or if you use more than half during the next 3 days, you will need to refresh it as described next.
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12The standard refreshment for barm is to double it at least.
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13However, you can also quadruple it, as the organisms in the barm are capable of feeding on a large refreshment and converting it into starter.
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14I double the barm at each feeding if I want a very sour bread, but I triple or quadruple it when I want a less sour flavor.
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15Remember, it takes longer for the bacteria to work than the yeast, so while a larger feeding dilutes both the bacterial and the wild-yeast communities, the yeast bounces back faster than the bacteria, creating a strong, but less acidic, leavening sponge.
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16Eventually, the bacterial fermentation does catch up, by the second or third day, and the sponge becomes quite acidic and sour (with a pH level of about 3.5).
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17It is important to understand what happens when you refresh the barm.
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18After 4 to 7 days, the acids and protease enzymes in a barm that has not been refreshed break down the gluten, turning what was at first a strong, stringy sponge into a protein-weak, potato-souplike consistency.
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19There are still plenty of live organisms to leaven and flavor bread, but they will make a flaccid dough.
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20For this reason, it is advisable to feed your barm 3 days or less before you plan to use it (ideally, the day before).
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21If you have a lot of barm but havent fed it for a while, discard all but 1 cup and refresh it with 4 cups of flour and 2 1/2 to 3 cups water, stirring until all the flour is hydrated.
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22If you have been using and feeding your barm regularly, you do not necessarily have to discard any.
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23However, what you do not want to do is, for example, use 1 cup of barm from your supply to make some bread, then refresh the remaining barm with only 1 cup flour and some water.
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24You must always at least double the remaining barm.
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25You can do this by either throwing or giving some away before you refresh it, or using up more before refreshing it (remember, you have a 3-day window before you need to feed it again).
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26If you do not plan to use the barm for a while, do not throw any away until you plan to refresh it again, and follow the guidance given above to refrigerate or freeze it in a tightly sealed container.
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27Since you do not want to freeze a glass or ceramic container, you should transfer the barm to a zippered freezer bag that has been misted with spray oil (allow enough room for expansion and gas development).
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28Use high-gluten flour for the refreshments (except in the case of a rye barm), as it has more gluten than in bread flour to withstand the acid and enzymatic degradation.
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29You can refresh in two ways.
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30One is to weigh the amount of barm you plan to refresh and the other is to eyeball it.
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31I use both methods and find that as long as you stay in the doubling to quadrupling ballpark, you will have no problem keeping your mother strong, active, and clean tasting.
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32By clean tasting I mean that no off-flavors develop, such as a musty or cheesy flavor caused by overfermenting at warm temperatures or by leaving it out too long.
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33This allows unwelcome bacteria to join the party or for the yeast to create too much alcohol, resulting in what we think of as a yeasty flavor.
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34The flavor is a combination of alcohol and glutathione, an unpleasant-tasting amino acid released by yeast as it dies.
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35The weighing method is simple: Weigh the barm and calculate how much flour and water it will take to double, triple, or quadruple the weight (the easiest way is to figure equal parts water and flour).
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36Thus, if you plan to refresh 1 pound of barm, you can build it to 2 pounds by adding 8 ounces each of flour (1 3/4 cups) and water (1 cup); or you can quadruple it by adding 1 1/2 pounds flour (5 1/4 cups) and 1 1/2 pounds (3 cups) water.
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37The larger the refreshment, the longer the fermentation time, usually 4 to 6 hours, depending on the size of the refreshment and how cold the barm was when you started.
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38If you are using a cold barm just out of the refrigerator, warm the water up to about 90F to compensate and to hasten the onset of fermentation.
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39Never let the starter actually be warm, however.
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40It is best for the organisms we want to cultivate, the lactic- and acetic-producing bacteria, if the starter ferments slowly, between 65 and 75F, or at room temperature.
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41When the starter is bubbly and foamy, put it in the refrigerator overnight before using it.
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42Technically, though, you could begin using it as soon as it foams up, but I wait for the overnight development because I believe it gives the bread more complexity of flavor.
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43Either way, with a ripe and ready barm, you are ready to move on to the next build.
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44Opinions are divided as to whether the pineapple juice is really necessary after Phase 1.
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45It probably is not, but it wont hurt to use it during Phase 2 and may, in some instances, serve as insurance against the appearance of leuconostoc bacteria.
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46The full flavor of the barm will not develop until it has been refreshed 2 or 3 times over a 2-week period, during which time the organisms indigenous to your region will gradually take charge of it.
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47(This is why a starter made from a seed culture imported from Egypt or Russia will, over time, produce bread that tastes like a starter made locally from scratch.)
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48When the barm reaches its peak flavor, you will be able to maintain that flavor with periodic refreshments.
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49However, you can begin using the barm the day after it is made.
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50The leavening power will be strong from the first, since the wild yeast ferments the barm at a faster pace than the bacteria produce their flavorful acids.
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51If you want to save the barm but do not plan to make bread for a while, you can refrigerate it for at least 2 months in an airtight container, and then refresh it by discarding all but 1 cup and building up from there.
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52Or, you can freeze the barm for up to 6 months and then defrost it in the refrigerator 3 days before you need it.
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53When it has thawed enough to use (the next day), discard all but 1/2 cup and refresh as described at left.
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54Then refresh again the next day, building back to about 4 to 6 cups barm.
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55The following day you will have a strong, ready-to-use barm.
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56Of course, you still have 2 more days of dough building to accomplish, as described in the formulas.
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