WHOLE GRAIN SPELT SOURDOUGH CIABATTA

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Whole Grain Spelt Sourdough Ciabatta image

Whole grain spelt ciabatta offers the complex flavors and powerful nutrition of the ancient spelt wheat. With high hydration and careful handling of the dough, this bread has the rough, chewy crust and open tender crumb of a white flour ciabatta.

Provided by Melissa Johnson

Categories     Recipes

Time 1h18m

Number Of Ingredients 10

Autolyse
275g whole grain spelt flour (~2 cups)
200g water (1 scant cup)
Starter
275g all-purpose flour starter, ~120% hydration, mature and floating
OR
275g whole grain spelt starter, ~120% hydration, mature and floating
Additional Ingredients
12g olive oil (1 Tbsp)
7g salt (1 rounded tsp)

Steps:

  • Note: This recipe is for one large slipper. The photo gallery below shows two versions of the recipe being made at once, hence two slippers. If you want two (or three smaller) slippers, double the recipe ingredients.
  • Sourdough Starter
  • Build a 100% or higher hydration sourdough starter over a couple of days until it is more than 275g in weight, about 2 1/4 cups volume, active and floating.
  • There are numerous, equally effective ways to get this amount of active starter. I fed my starter and refrigerated it at about 1 cup in volume. On baking day, I put 110g of starter in a large bowl, fed it 75g of all-purpose flour and 90g of water. In volume, this is approximately 1/2 cup starter, 1/2 cup flour and 3/8 cup of water. Several hours later, it was over 2 cups in volume and it floated.
  • Autolyse
  • At about the same time you do the last feeding of your starter, combine the whole grain spelt flour and water in a large bowl and cover. This will help build the gluten structure and enhance the flavor. If the dough seems too dry to incorporate all the flour, pause for a few minutes, mix again. Add 10g more water if there is still any dry flour.
  • Mixing
  • When the starter is ready (for me this is about 4 hours after feeding), add it, the olive oil, and the salt to the autloysed dough. Mix by hand until incorporated and continue to develop the gluten for about 2 minutes or until the dough passes the windowpane test. Use one hand to turn the bowl and the other hand to scrape, scoop, and pull the dough around the bowl. Because of the autolyse, this mixing takes less time than what I recommend in the white flour ciabatta recipe.
  • Here is a video of mixing the dough with the all purpose starter from beginning to end in under 2 minutes, and here is a video of the last 30 seconds of mixing the dough with the whole grain spelt starter. Both videos show the windowpane test.
  • After mixing, mark the time and room temperature if you like to track fermentation this way.
  • Bulk Fermentation / Stretching and Folding
  • Cover and let the dough rest for 30 minutes.
  • Do three gentle stretch and folds, spaced 25-30 minutes apart. Use damp fingertips to pull the dough from the sides of the bowl and fold it over (four sides, twice around). Cover after each stretch and fold.
  • Let ferment until puffy and roughly doubled. This was about 3 hours from mixing at 74F for me.
  • Shaping and Proofing
  • Heavily flour your countertop, then scrape or pull the dough out of the bowl onto it.
  • Flour your hands repeatedly and gently slide your fingers under the dough from all sides to pull it outward into a square shape about 1/2 an inch thick. Both versions of this dough are more delicate than white flour ciabatta dough, so work slowly until you get a feel for it.
  • Using a bench scraper, fold the dough in half. Brush off the extra flour on the top, then fold it in thirds (see gallery below). Let the dough rest about 20 minutes.
  • Prepare a piece of parchment paper, on a floured couche or tea towel, on a small flipped over cookie sheet. The couche/towel should be floured in case it touches the top of the slipper when you cover the slipper. The cookie sheet is under the towel to be a flat surface if you want to proof in the refrigerator.
  • Fold the preshaped dough in half as it will have spread while resting. Consider a second fold for the all whole grain dough which spreads more.
  • Using a bench scraper, transfer the slipper to the parchment paper.
  • Dust the top of the slipper with more flour, and loosely cover it with the tea towel or couche.
  • Let it proof for 30 minutes to 1 hour at room temperature, or 1+ hour in the refrigerator.
  • Oven Prep and Baking
  • If you have a baking stone, put it in the oven. You can also cook the slippers on a metal cookie sheet or upside down cast iron pan. (Do not use a dark non-stick surface because of the high oven temperature.)
  • Prepare to create steam early in the baking process. You can put a cast iron pan on the shelf under the baking stone. Or you can create a drip system by putting an aluminum pan with a pinhole in the oven under the stone, and a metal cookie sheet on the base of the oven. When making the pinhole, test over your sink that water drips through it about 1-2 drops a second. This system was devised by Breadtopia community member @peevee. My heating element is exposed on the bottom of my oven, so the aluminum pan drips onto the bottom of the oven rather than a cookie sheet, which works fine too. (See gallery for photo of setup.)
  • Preheat your oven and stone to 500 F for 30 minutes before the dough finishes proofing. If you are baking on a cookie sheet, a 15 minute preheat should be enough.
  • When proofing is complete, remove the tea towel from under the parchment paper and slipper, and slide the parchment paper and slipper onto your preheated stone. You can use a pizza peel or the same upside down cookie sheet to transfer the paper and slipper.
  • Immediately pour a cup of water onto the aluminum tray or cast iron pan that is under your stone, and quickly close the oven door to trap the steam.
  • Bake at 500 F for 10 minutes. Then remove the parchment paper and rotate the slippers 180 degrees if your oven seems to brown unevenly.
  • Bake an additional 8-10 minutes at 450 F.
  • Important After baking, turn off the oven, crack open the door a couple of inches, and leave the slippers in the oven for another 5 minutes. This will make the crust crunchier.
  • If you make rolls or larger slippers, adjust your cooking time accordingly. Internal temperature should be about 205 F.
  • Let cool on a rack for at least 1 hour before slicing.
  • For most purposes (olive oil and tomatoes, butter and blue cheese, BBQ pulled meat), I like to slice a slipper horizontally and then into roll-size pieces 3-4 inches wide.

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